An open-source investigation has found that a top Russian military intelligence officer coordinated last year’s Salisbury chemical attack from a London hideout using his phone and a few messaging apps.
The award-winning website Bellingcat said late Friday that its joint analysis with the BBC helps establish the command structure Moscow’s GRU network of foreign agents used to poison former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and conduct other attacks. London and Washington identify the GRU as Russia’s main security threat to Western interests abroad.
Russia denies involvement in the Skripal case and calls other allegations against the GRU -- including its attempted hacking of the world’s chemical weapons watchdog in The Hague last year -- politically motivated.
The findings “shed light on the likely chain of command for this (and other) GRU overseas operations, with one coordinating senior officer communicating with headquarters in Moscow while the team on the ground receive limited to no new instructions,” the Bellingcat report said. “Evidence obtained by us on other international operations involving the same team suggests that this is a stable GRU operational model.” Britain’s Metropolitan Police said it could not comment on an “ongoing investigation”.
British officials have identified the two Russians suspected of delivering the nerve agent to Salsbury as GRU agents Alexander Mishkin and Anatoly Chepiga. Both men entered Britain using false passports and were captured on CCTV footage walking around the southern English town shortly before Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found slumped over on a park bench.