
Civilians injured in Ukrainian strike in southern Russia (VIDEO, PHOTOS)
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Russia Today
a day ago
- Russia Today
Ukraine's top spy admits to employing prostitutes
Kiev employs prostitutes to gather information from men, Kirill Budanov, the head of Ukraine's military intelligence agency (HUR), has said. In an interview with Ukrainian journalist Ramina Eshakzai published on Tuesday, he was asked if Kiev uses prostitutes to gather information – a practice which the reporter said is common in British intelligence. 'A normal method, isn't it? Do you know how often men share stories to show how powerful they are, as they say?' Budanov said. Ukrainian intelligence has been able to receive 'several unique pieces of information' from men in relaxed circumstances, he added. 'It's just about things that we couldn't have found out about at all, in principle.' According to Budanov, 'a very high percentage' of personnel serving in the HUR are now women. Ukrainian spies commonly use 'entrepreneurial activity, journalism, and sociology' as cover jobs while on assignment, while some work under 'full cover,' living double lives in Russia, he said. Ukraine has increasingly turned to assassination and sabotage in Russia as its forces have been beaten back on the battlefield. Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) has warned that Ukrainian intelligence has increased recruitment efforts within Russia to carry out assassination and sabotage plots. The FSB regularly reports that it has thwarted these types of activities. Moscow has said Ukraine is morphing into a 'terrorist' organization, accusing Kiev of carrying out killings of Russian officers, journalists, and other key figures.


Russia Today
2 days ago
- Russia Today
Ukrainian plot to assassinate Russian defense industry leader derailed
Russian agents have arrested a man accused of plotting to assassinate a general director of a defense industry enterprise on behalf of Ukraine, the Federal Security Service (FSB) has said. The suspect also reportedly admitted he had been spying on the Russian army since last summer. In a statement on Tuesday, the FSB said that a Russian national had made contact with a representative of an unnamed pro-Ukrainian terrorist group via Telegram. He was ordered to travel to Bryansk Region which borders Ukraine, to recover a drone-dropped cache containing firearms and explosives, the agency said. The weapons were intended for use in an assassination attempt on the head of a defense industrial facility in Belgorod, the FSB said. The suspect is now charged with high treason and faces up to life in prison. The FSB also released a video in which the man confesses that since June 2024, while serving with Russian forces on the conflict frontline in Ukraine's Kharkov Region, he relayed to Kiev data on the whereabouts of Russian army personnel and hardware as well as positions of electronic warfare and air defense systems. In addition, he confessed to coordinating Ukrainian missile and artillery attacks and transmitting photographs and contact information of Russian military personnel. The footage released by the FSB also shows the agency's operatives driving up to the suspect in a minivan in a rural area. Within moments, the man, who is carrying a large backpack, is seen being pinned to the ground. Another part of the video shows a forest stash containing what appears to be explosives and a handgun. Russian authorities have accused Ukraine of organizing multiple sabotage and assassination attempts on Russian territory in recent months, including attacks targeting military commanders and other high-profile figures.


Russia Today
2 days ago
- Russia Today
Moscow lists countries whose citizens took part in Ukrainian incursion into Russia
Foreign nationals from over ten countries took part in Ukraine's incursion into Russia's Kursk Region, according to the head of the Investigative Committee of Russia, Aleksandr Bastrykin. Bastrykin told the media on the eve of the anniversary of the incursion that investigators identified individuals from Brazil, Colombia, Denmark, Georgia, Norway, Paraguay, Peru, Sweden, the UK, and other nations as having fought alongside Ukrainian troops in the Western-supported raid. Russian forces fully repelled the incursion in April, claiming that the attackers suffered around 76,000 casualties during the fighting, in which Ukrainian troops employed Western-supplied heavy weaponry. Bastrykin said 331 civilians were killed and another 553 injured due to Ukraine's actions in Kursk Region. The Investigative Committee has opened over 600 criminal cases related to the incursion, with around a third already referred for trial. Moscow maintains that the incursion was an example of Kiev's use of terrorist tactics, citing claims by captured soldiers that they were encouraged to use violence against civilians. Ukrainian officials have acknowledged that part of the goal was to apply pressure on the Russian public. He detailed a range of alleged abuses, from a case in which unarmed civilians were beaten to death, to occurrences in which US-made HIMARS multiple launch rocket systems were fired at civilian targets which Kiev allegedly knew held no military value. Since the escalation of the conflict with Russia in 2022, Kiev has called on foreign nationals with military experience to join its armed forces, passing legislation to accommodate them. Moscow does not recognize the fighters as lawful combatants, classifying them instead as mercenaries subject to prosecution. In May, Bastrykin reported that the Russian authorities charged 902 people with acting as mercenaries under Ukraine's command; 97 individuals from 26 different countries have been convicted.