現在地 HOME > 掲示板 > 戦争46 > 818.html ★阿修羅♪ |
|
Tweet |
私事ですがブロッグ立ち上げました。
Counter News
by Fake Terror Watcher
http://counternews.blogtribe.org/
ロンドンに亡命しているユダヤ人財閥、キングメーカー、べレゾフスキーは1999年の連続爆破テロ、FSB関与を暴露。しかし当のべレゾフスキーがチェチェンテロリストとリンクも。プーチンはユーコス、ホドルコフスキー拘束で癌細胞除去手術の荒療治開始(関連 http://www.asyura2.com/0401/war46/msg/782.html、http://www.asyura2.com/0401/war46/msg/785.html)。
そして、べレゾフスキーとともに亡命している元FSBリトヴィネンコに情報提供を行ったとして元FSB職員、トレパシキンが捜査される。そしてトレパシキンがMI5ダブルエージェントだったという証拠をFSB発見、告発を受ける。
FSBは1999年テロFSB関与は偽情報プロジェクトと。(これも復旧的偽情報プロジェクト?)
プーチンが選ばれた頃は少なくともこのような騒動になるとはべレゾフスキーも考えなかったでしょう。べレゾフスキーの暴露はロンドンに情報を提供している人間がいることをべレゾフスキー自身もらしてしまったことだったのかもしれません。1999年のテロは双方仲良く手を取り合っていた頃のなつかしい思い出なのでしょうか。
ということで、以下ガーディアン記事参照あれ。
Former Russian officer accused of being MI5 spy
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1124140,00.html
Nick Paton Walsh in Moscow
Friday January 16, 2004
The Guardian
1999年の連続爆破テロを調査したFSB職員
A former officer in the Russian security services, the FSB, who recently investigated the bombing of several apartment buildings across Russia in 1999 for an independent commission of MPs, has been accused of being recruited to spy for the British security service, MI5.
Mikhail Trepashkin was arrested in October and began trial last month in a sealed courtroom for disclosing state secrets and possession of an illegal handgun and ammunition. His indictment has not been made public because of the strict secrecy in which Russia holds espionage trials.
Yet according to detailed notes taken by Mr Trepashkin of his indictment, seen by the Guardian, he is accused by the FSB of planning to use his privileged access to its archives as a former officer to gather compromising material about the apartment bombings. He denies the accusation.
His wife and friends say he is being prosecuted for exposing evidence of the FSB's involvement in the blasts, which killed 246 and were blamed on Chechen rebels, sparking the second war in the strife-torn republic.
A Moscow court on Monday jailed two men for life for the blasts, in what many saw as an attempt to close the lid on one of the more perplexing and dark episodes of Russia's recent history. Vladimir Putin's tough response to this domestic "terrorism" won him his first mandate in the presidential election of 2000.
Mr Putin's opponents claim that the FSB planned the apartment blasts to get "their man" into power, a theory the Kremlin vigorously denies. Relatives of the blast victims have written an open letter saying that there remain many unanswered questions about the bombings, and demanding to know why Mr Trepashkin was arrested. Mr Trepashkin, who was sacked from the FSB more than six years ago, had claimed to have fresh evidence about the security service's involvement in the blasts.
According to his notes of his indictment, the FSB allege he would then pass this information to another former FSB officer, Alexander Litvinenko, and the Russian tycoon and former Kremlin kingmaker Boris Berezovsky. Both men have political asylum in London and would then pass the information to MI5, the notes say. The FSB conclude that the plan was for a "project of misinformation" implicating it in the blast.
Mr Trepashkin was arrested three months after being summoned by military prosecutors for questioning about his links with Mr Litvinenko, an ally of Mr Berezovsky who has testified of his personal knowledge about the FSB's alleged involvement in the explosions.
Mr Trepashkin's home was searched last January by FSB officers. They claimed to have found numerous confidential papers, up to 15 years old, that he had stored during his time working at the FSB. He was later arrested for illegal possession of a firearm.
His wife, Tatyana, said at the time that the gun had been planted. She said yesterday: "My husband had a mania to keep all his documents from the time he worked at the FSB at home. I thought they were garbage, but [the FSB] found them, and latched on to them."
Mr Litvinenko has previously denied any wrongdoing. Mr Berezovsky was granted asylum in Britain after Scotland Yard was alerted to a possible attempt to assassinate him in the court that was hearing a warrant from Russia to extradite him.
Andrew Stephenson, a solicitor for Mr Berezovsky, said: "If the Russians thought they had evidence of secret confidential information being supplied to Mr Berezovsky, I would have expected that to have been raised during the extradition hearing. It was not."
The details of the 1999 apartment bombings have become part of an ongoing feud between Mr Putin and Mr Berezovsky, who has relentlessly publicised accusations of FSB involvement.