Russian Federation

En paramillitær gruppe som ble etablert i Norge i 1940 i strid med Straffelovens § 104a, samt Straffeloven § 128. Det het seg at de skulle forhindre inntrengere, men det er nonsens. Deres oppdrag var å skjule, forhindre at KGB agenter og nettverket Stay Behind, ble avslørt.

Russian Federation

UNREAD_POST KGB acid » Tir Sep 03, 2019 5:10 pm

Norge og Russland storkoste seg på Kirkenes med å feire liksom friheten nylig.

ALLE blir fortalt hvor fritt Norge ble. Men hva skjedde egentlig?

Jo, det som INGEN aviser eller radio og Tv vil si høyt- massemorderen Stalin stjal Norge ifra oss - i 1944- det er sannheten. Og her kan dere se bevisene hvor Prins og forræder Olav V signerte dokumentene som er stemplet hemmelig.

25_10-1944 -- Olav_x kapitulerer.mp4 [ 11.4 MiB | Vist 1614 ganger ]



Nå vet dere sannheten om den grusomme massemorderen Stalin som drepte 62 millioner av sine egne for å besfeste makten over hele vesten- nå vet dere resten!

Og her ser dere statskupp dokumentene som Stalin fikk overrakt på Storskog 25. sept 1945- hvor statsborgerlovgivningen ble endret til det ugjenkjennelige. Han dro ikke hjem, før han hadde fått disse i hende på Storskog.

http://bmonline.no/html/1945.html



Dette er opplysninger som ingen ønsker å snakke om i NRK, Tv2, Dagbladet eller Vg og Aftenposten. Vet dere hvorfor? Jo, de har fått 10 milliarder kroner pr år for å holde tett om landssvikerne, les pressestøtten.

Har vi således fri ytringsfrihet og pressefrihet i Norge??
NOPE! Dette er betalt med våre skattepenger-.

Kan vi stille det betimelige spørsmålet, sover de på jobben?

Svaret overrasker nok ingen, de har ennu ikke våknet!!
Vedlegg

011.mp4 [ 11.4 MiB | Vist 561 ganger ]

KGB acid
 

Re: Russian Federation Agents

UNREAD_POST BmOnline » Søn Nov 03, 2019 2:07 pm

VLADIMIR PUTIN

Russian President Vladimir Putin was a KGB agent for 15 years before entering politics and assuming the country’s highest office.

After studying law at Leningrad State University, Putin joined the KGB and spied on expatriates in St. Petersburg. In the early 1980s, he move to the KGB’s foreign intelligence division in East Germany, where his job was to identify East Germans — professors, journalists, skilled professionals — who had plausible reasons for traveling to Western Europe and the United States and send them to steal intelligence and technology from Western countries.

Biographies of Putin suggest that his KGB career was relatively mediocre: Even after 15 years of service, Putin rose only to the rank of lieutenant colonel and never stood out. In a rare comment to a journalist about this period in his life, Putin said he hadn’t wanted higher-level positions in the KGB because he did not want to relocate his elderly parents and two young children to Moscow.

Putin returned to Russia at the end of the 1980s and worked as a university assistant for a year, which was really a cover for clandestine work with the KGB. His days as an official KGB agent came to an end when he became an advisor to St. Petersburg’s mayor — another career stint considered lackluster.

In 1998, Putin rather suddenly and inexplicably became the director of the FSB, the domestic successor to the KGB, and then the head of the Russian Security Council. The next year, Boris Yeltsin chose Putin to become the next Russian prime minister. You know the story from here: The former KGB wallflower is now the most powerful man in Russia.

Critics say that as both prime minister and president, Putin has relied on KGB tactics to keep a tight rein on opposition (just this month, Russian police have repeatedly detained, beaten, and interrogated activists). As one Russian writer told the Washington Post in 2000, Putin is a standard KGB type. “If the snow is falling, they will calmly tell you, the sun is shining,” the writer explained.

ALEXANDER LITVINENKO

Litvinenko made headlines for what some call the courageous whistleblowing — and others, the reckless bravado — that may have earned him an ugly, untimely death.

Litvinenko joined the KGB in 1988 and worked as a counter-intelligence spy until the Soviet Union dissolved. He then joined the most secret division of the FSB, fighting terrorism and organized crime in Chechnya. But things started to fall apart in 1998 after Litvinenko made a public statement accusing an FSB official of ordering him to assassinate Boris Berezovsky, one of Russia’s most powerful oligarchs.

It wasn’t long before Litvinenko found himself in an FSB prison for “exceeding his authority at work.” After two rounds of charges and acquittals, he escaped to London to dodge a third criminal case, later receiving a sentence in absentia.

From London, Litvinenko published two books — Blowing Up Russia: The Secret Plot to Bring Back KGB Terror and Lubyanka Criminal Group — both of which blame the FSB for ongoing crimes against the Russian public and, in the case of the second book, for training al Qaeda militants and playing a role in the Sept. 11 attacks.

In November 2006, at the age of 43, Litvinenko died from “a mysterious illness.” Investigations into his death revealed that he was poisoned by a radioactive isotope, which was ironic considering that Litvinenko had gone on the record with the New York Times in 2004 to allege that the FSB was behind the poisoning of Ukrainian presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko.

The radioactive cadaver reminded the world that the KGB’s tactics just might have survived the agency.

BORIS KARPICHKOV


Karpichkov, another KGB spy who found himself at odds with the Kremlin, ended up as a double agent and still lives like one in London, where he keeps a low profile and is always looking over his shoulder even though he retired long ago.

The Latvian-born Karpichkov was approached by the KGB in 1984 while he was working as a mechanical engineer in an aerospace parts factory. The agency sent him to a KGB academy in Minsk, Belarus where he was trained in the art of killing, according to an interview he gave the Guardian in February 2012. Karpichkov became a major and worked in Latvia in the Second Directorate, an elite counter-intelligence division of the KGB.

When the Soviet Union fell, however, Karpichkov found himself in an independent Republic of Latvia that was antagonistic to the Kremlin. He quickly joined the country’s intelligence agency — while still working for Russia. As a double agent, Karpichkov ran disinformation operations against the CIA and, on one occasion, broke into the British Embassy in Riga to plant a listening device.

But by 1995, Karpichkov was growing disenchanted with the corrupt FSB, which he claims wasn’t paying him. After the Latvian intelligence agency found out he was working for the FSB, he briefly returned to Russia before sneaking out of the country in the late 1990s. He entered Britain using a fake passport from his KGB days and never looked back.

These days, the Guardian‘s Luke Harding explains, Karpichkov “writes, stays in touch with events in Russia, and vanishes now and again on mysterious trips whose purpose he declines to explain.” On occasion, Karpichov says he finds listening devices and cars with the same Russian diplomatic plates turning up outside his apartment, and even death threats. He worries about the safety of his wife and children, even though they’re adults now.
Brukerens avatar
BmOnline
Admin
 
Innlegg: 2605
Registrert: Ons Nov 05, 2008 2:44 pm
Bosted: Norge, som kunne vært det vakreste sted på jord
Norsk er best: 0


Gå til STAY BEHIND

Hvem er i forumet

Brukere som leser i dette forumet: Ingen registrerte brukere og 3 gjester

cron