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In a preceding report on the investigation into the two suspects in the Skripals poisoning case, Bellingcat and its reporting partner the Insider disclosed the identity of one of the two suspects. The person travelling under the alias of Ruslan Boshirov was identified as GRU’s Col. Anatoliy Chepiga, recipient of Russia’s highest state award.
Bellingcat can now report that it has conclusively identified the second suspect, who travelled to Salisbury under the alias Alexander Petrov. We already produced evidence that “Alexander Petrov” is not an authentic persona, but an undercover alias for an officer of a Russian security agency. In a later report, we established that “Petrov” was specifically working for Russia’s military intelligence, the GRU.
We have identified “Alexander Petrov” to be in fact Dr. Alexander Yevgeniyevich Mishkin, a trained military doctor in the employ of the GRU. Furthermore, multiple witnesses familiar with Alexander Mishkin and his family have confirmed to us that he, like Col. Chepiga, is a recipient of the Hero of Russia award, which is bestowed by a special decree by the Russian President.
While Alexander Mishkin’s true persona has an even smaller digital footprint than Anatoliy Chepiga’s, Bellingcat has been able to establish many key facts from his background.
originally posted by: RussianTroll
a reply to: bastion
and what's there? Two men are walking, they go into the subway and so on. On these grounds, any Englishman traveling around the world can be caught.
You have not provided any evidence for your words, unfortunately.
originally posted by: RussianTroll
a reply to: bastion
and what's there? Two men are walking, they go into the subway and so on. On these grounds, any Englishman traveling around the world can be caught.
You have not provided any evidence for your words, unfortunately.
originally posted by: RussianTroll
a reply to: bastion
Want to see a real video with all the evidence?
Watch. This is American diplomat Parker Wilson who stole a railway pointer from Ostashkov station in Tver Oblast. He loaded the device into a car with embassy plates and drove away. However, he was caught on video and soon his identity was established by Russian police.
Lie to you typical evidence of sabotage. And your video shows only two men walking, and that's it))))
Again, highly likely. I asked for the same evidence that I provided in the article. And you provided a propaganda article with a bunch of assumptions and hints, and the BBC is a state corporation owned by the British government.
originally posted by: Oldcarpy2
a reply to: Kurokage
I can just imagine Putain sat stroking a white cat: "This Organization does not tolerate failure...."