Ten
years ago this month, Russia was rocked by a series of mysterious
apartment bombings that left hundreds dead. It was by riding the
ensuing wave of fear and terror that a then largely unknown Vladimir
Putin rose to become the most powerful man in the country. But there
were questions about the nature of those bombings - and disturbing
evidence that the perpetrators might actually have been working for the
Russian government. In the years since then, the people who had been
questioning the official version of events began one by one to go
silent or even turn up dead. Except one man. Scott Anderson finds him.
The
first building to be hit was the barracks in Buynaksk housing Russian
soldiers and their families. It was a nondescript five-story building
perched on the outskirts of town, and when the enormous truck bomb went
off late on the night of September 4, 01999, the floors pancaked onto
each other until the building was reduced to a pile of burning rubble.
In that rubble were the bodies of sixty-four people - men, women, and
children.
In the predawn hours of last September 13, I left my
hotel in central Moscow and made for a working-class neighborhood on
the city's southern outskirts.
It had been twelve years since
I'd been in the Russian capital. Everywhere, new glass-and-steel
buildings had gone up, the skyline was studded with construction
cranes, and even at 4 A.M., the garish casinos aroudn Pushkin Square
were going full tilt and Tverskaya Street was clogged with late-model
SUVs and BMW sedans. The drive was a jarring glimpse at the colossal
transformation that Russia, its economy turbocharged by petrodollars,
had undergone in the nine years since Vladimir Putin came to power.
But
my journey that morning was to a place in "old" Moscow, to a small park
where a drab nine-story apartment building known as 6/3 Kashirskoye
Highway had once stood. At 5:03 on the morning of September 13, 01999 -
exactly nine years prior to my visit - 6/3 Kashirskoye had been blasted
apart by a bomb secreted in its basement; 121 of its residents had died
while they slept. That explosion, coming nine days after the one in
Buynaksk, was the third of what would be four apartment-building
bombings in Russia over a twelve-day span that September, leaving some
300 citizens dead and the nation in panic; it was among the deadliest
series of terrorist attacks in the world until September 11. Blaming
the bombings on terrorists from Chechnya, Russia's newly appointed
prime minister, Vladimir Putin, ordered a scorched-earth offensive into
the breakaway republic. On the success of that offensive, the
previously unknown Putin became a national hero and swiftly assumed
complete control of the Russian state. It is a control he continues to
exert today.
Where 6/3 Kashirskoye had stood there was now an
orderly grid of well-tended flower beds. These surrounded a stone
monument engraved with the names of the dead and topped by a Russian
Orthodox cross. For the bombing's ninth anniversary, three or four
local journalists had shown up, discreetly watched over by a couple of
policemen in a nearby squad car, but there really wasn't much for
anyone to do. Shortly after 5 A.M., a cluster of perhaps two dozen
people - most of them young, relatives of the dead, presumably -
trooped up to place candles and red carnations at the foot of the
monument, but they retreated as quickly as they had appeared. The only
other visitors that morning were two elderly men who had witnessed the
bombing and who dutifully related for the television cameras how
terrible it had been, such a shock.
I saw that one of the old
men became quite emotional as he stood before the monument, repeatedly
brushing at his cheeks to wipe away tears. Several times he turned and
walked purposefully away, as if willing himself to leave, but he never
got very far. He would linger by the trees at the edge of the park and
then inevitably make a slow return to the shrine. Finally, I approached
him.
I lived very close to here, he said, and I was awoken by
the sound, I came rushing over and... He was a big man, a former
sailor, and he waved his hands helplessly over the flower beds.
Nothing. Nothing. They pulled a young boy and his dog out. That was
all. Everyone else was already dead.
But as it turned out, the
old man had a more personal connection to the tragedy. His daughter,
son-in-law, and grandson had lived at 6/3 Kashirskoye, and they had all
perished that morning, too. Leading me up to the monument, he pointed
out their names in the stone, and desperately brushed at his eyes
again. Then he angrily whispered: They say it was the Chechens who did
this, but that is a lie. It was Putin's people. Everyone knows that. No
one wants to talk about it, but everyone knows that.
It is a
riddle that lies at the very heart of the modern Russian state, one
that remains unsolved to this day. In the awful events of September
01999, did Russia find its avenging angel in Vladimir Putin, the
proverbial man of action who crushed his nation's attackers and led his
people out of a time of crisis? Or was that crisis actually
manufactured to benefit Putin, a scheme by Russia's secret police to
bring one of their own to power? What makes this question important is
that absent the bombings of September 01999 and all that transpired as
a result, it is hard to conceive of any scenario whereby Putin would
hold the position he enjoys today: a player on the global stage, a
ruler of one of the most powerful nations on earth.
It is
peculiar, then, how few people outside russia seem to have wanted that
question answered. Several intelligence agencies are believed to have
conducted investigations into the apartment bombings, but none have
released their findings. Very few American lawmakers have shown an
interest in the bombings. In 02003, John McCain declared in Congress
that there remain credible allegations that Russia's FSB [Federal
Security Service] had a hand in carrying out these attacks. But
otherwise, neither the United States government nor the American media
have ever shown much inclination to explore the matter.
This
apparent disinterest now extends into Russia as well. Immediately after
the bombings, a broad spectrum of Russian society publicly cast doubt
on the government's version of events. Those voices have now gone
silent one by one. In recent years, a number of journalists who
investigated the incidents have been murdered - or have died under
suspicious circumstances - as have two members of Parliament who sat on
a commission of inquiry. In the meantime, it seems that most everyone
whose account of the attacks ran counter to the government's version
now either refuses to speak, has recanted his earlier statements, or is
dead.
During my time in Russia this past September, I approached
a number of individuals - journalists, lawyers, human-rights
investigators - who had been involved in the search for answers. Many
declined to speak with me altogether. Others begrudgingly did so but
largely confined their statements to a recitation of the known
inconsistencies in the case; if pressed for an opinion, they allowed
only that the matter remained "controversial." even the old man in
Kashirskoye park ultimately underscored the air of unease that hovers
over the topic. After readily agreeing to a second meeting, at which he
promised to introduce me to other victims' families who doubted the
government's account, he had a change of heart.
I can't do it,
he said when he called me back a few days later. I spoke to my wife and
my boss, and they both said that if I meet with you, I will be finished.
I was curious what he meant by "finished," but the old sailor hung up before I could ask.
No
doubt part of this reticence stemmed from recalling the fate of the man
who made proving the conspiracy behind the bombings a personal crusade:
Alexander Litvinenko. From his London exile, the rogue former KGB
officer had waged a relentless media campaign against the Putin regime,
accusing it of all manner of crimes and corruption - and most
especially of having orchestrated the apartment-building attacks.
In
November 02006, in a case that riveted the world's attention,
Litvinenko was slipped a lethal dose of radioactive polonium,
apparently during a meeting with two former Russian intelligence agents
in a London hotel bar. Before the poison killed LItvinenko - it took an
agonizing twenty-three days - he signed a statement placing the blame
for his murder squarely at Putin's feet.
But Litvinenko had not
worked alone on the apartment-bombing case. Several years before his
murder, he had enlisted another ex-KGB agent in his search for answers,
a former criminal investigator named Mikhail Trepashkin. The two men
had a rather complicated personal history - in fact, back in the '90s,
one allegedly had been dispatched to assassinate the other - but it had
actually been Trepashkin, working on the ground in Russia, who had
uncovered many of the disturbing facts in the case.
Trepashkin
had also run afoul of the authorities. In 02003 he had been shipped off
to a squalid prison camp in the Ural Mountains for four years. By the
time of my visit to Moscow last year, however, he was out on the
streets again.
Through an intermediary, I learned Trepashkin had
two young daughters, as well as a wife who desperately wanted him to
stay out of politics; combining these factors with his recent prison
stint and the murder of his former colleague, it seemed likely that my
approach to him would go as badly as had my conversations with other
former dissenters.
Oh, he'll talk, the intermediary assured me. The only way they'll stop Trepashkin is by killing him.
On
September 9, five days after the blast in Buynaksk, the bombers struck
Moscow. This time it was an eight-story apartment building on Guryanova
Street, in a working-class neighborhood in the city's southeast. Rather
than a truck bomb, the device had been stashed on the building's ground
floor, but the result was virtually identical; the explosion brought
down all eight floors and killed ninety-four residents as they slept.
It
was with Guryanova Street that the general alarm first went out. Within
hours a number of Russian-government officials strongly suggested that
terrorists from Chechnya were responsible, and the nation was sent into
a state of high alert. As thousands of police fanned out to question -
and in several hundred cases, to arrest - anyone resembling a Chechen,
residents of apartment buildings throughout Russia organized themselves
into neighborhood-watch patrols. Calls for retaliation rose from all
political quarters.
At Trepashkin's request, our first meeting
took place at a crowded coffee shop in central Moscow. One of his aides
showed up first, and then twenty minutes later Trepashkin arrived in
the company of his bodyguard of sorts, a muscular young man with a
crewcut and an opaque stare.
Trepashkin, while short, was
powerfully built - a testament to his lifelong practice of a variety of
martial arts - and still very handsome at 51. His most arresting
feature, though, was a perpetual amused grin. It gave him an aura of
instant likability, friendliness, although I could imagine that anyone
who sat across an interrogation table from him back in his KGB days
might have found it unnerving.
For a few minutes, we chatted
about everyday things - the unusually cold weather in Moscow just then,
the changes I'd noticed since my last visit - and I sensed Trepashkin
was trying to figure me out, deciding how much to say.
Then he
began to tell me about his career at the KGB. He'd spent most of his
years as a criminal investigator who specialized in antiques smuggling.
He was, in those days, an absolute loyalist to the Soviet state - and
most especially the KGB. Trepashkin was such a dedicated Soviet that he
even supported a group that attempted to thwart the ascent of Boris
Yeltsin in favor of preserving the Soviet system.
I could see
that this was going to be the end of the Soviet Union, Trepashkin
explained in the coffee shop. But even more than that, what would
happen to the KGB, to all of us who had made it our lives? I saw only
disaster coming.
And that disaster came. With the disintegration
of the Soviet Union, Russia plunged into economic and social chaos. One
particularly destructive aspect of that chaos stemmed from the vast
legions of Russian KGB officers who suddenly entered the private
sector. Some went into business for themselves or joined on with the
mafiyas they had once been detailed to combat. Still others signed on
as "advisers" or muscle for the new oligarchs or the old Communist
Party bosses who were frantically grabbing up anything of value in
Russia, even as they paid obeisance to the "democratic reforms" of
President Boris Yeltsin.
Of all this, Trepashkin had an intimate
view. Kept on with the FSB, the Russian successor the the KGB, the
investigator found it increasingly difficult to differentiate
criminality from governmental policy.
In case after case, he
said, there was this blending. You would find mafiyas working with
terrorist groups, but then the trail would lead to a business group or
maybe to a state ministry. So then, was this still a criminal case, or
some kind of officially sanctioned black operation? And just what did
‘officially sanctioned' actually mean anymore, because who was really
in charge?
Finally, in the summer of 01995, Mikhail Trepashkin
began work on a case that would change him forever, one that placed him
on a collision course with the seniormost commanders of the FSB and,
Trepashkin says, would lead at least one of them to plot his
assassination. As with so many other incidents that exposed the
malevolent rot in post-Soviet Russia, this one centered on events in
the breakaway southern republic of Chechnya.
By December 01995,
rebels fighting for the independence of Chechnya had fought the Russian
army to a bloody and humiliating stalemate after a full year of war.
The Chechens' success was not as simple as mere force of arms, however.
Even during the Soviet era, Chechen mafiyas had controlled much of the
Russian criminal underworld, so when Russian society itself became
criminalized it played beautifully to the Chechen rebels' advantage.
For their steady supply of sophisticated weapons with which to fight
the Russian army, the rebels often had only to turn to corrupt Russian
army officers who had access to such weaponry, with the funds for such
"purchases" supplied by the Chechen crime syndicates operating
throughout the nation.
Just how high up did this cozy
arrangement go? Mikhail Trepashkin got his answer on the night of
December 1, when a team of FSB officers stormed a Moscow branch of Bank
Soldi with guns drawn.
The raid that night was the culmination
of an elaborate sting operation, one that Trepashkin had helped
supervise, designed to finally bring down a notorious bank-extortion
team linked to a Chechen rebel leader named Salman Raduyev> It was a
huge success: Caught up in the Soldi dragnet were some two dozen
conspirators, including two FSB officers and a Russian-military general.
But
inside the bank, the FSB men found something else. To ensure they
weren't walking into a trap, the conspirators had planted electronic
bugs throughout the building, and those were linked to an eavesdropping
van parked outside. While their precautions obviously needed some
fine-tuning, it begged the question of how the gang got their hands on
bugging equipment.
All these sorts of devices have serial
numbers, Trepashkin explained in the Moscow coffee shop, and so we
traced the numbers back. We discovered that it had all come from either
the FSB or the Ministry of Defense.
The implication of this was
staggering, for access to such equipment was severely restricted. It
suggested that high-ranking security and military officers had colluded
not only with a criminal gang but with one whose express purpose was to
raise funds for a war against Russia. By the standards of any country,
that wasn't just corruption, it was treason.
Yet no sooner had
Trepashkin started down that investigative trail than he was removed
from the Bank Soldi case by Nikolai Patrushev, the head of the FSB's
internal-security department. What's more, he says, no charges were
brought against any of the Russian officers implicated, and nearly all
of those caught in the initial dragnet were soon quietly released.
Instead, Patrushev ordered an investigation of Trepashkin. That
investigation lasted nearly two years, at the end of which Trepashkin
had reached his personal breaking point. In May 01997, he wrote an open
letter to President Yeltsin detailing his involvement in the case and
charging much of the senior FSB leadership with a host of crimes,
including forming alliances with mafiyas and even recruiting their
members into FSB ranks.
I thought that if the president knew
what was happening, Trepashkin said, then he would do something about
it. This was a mistake on my part.
Indeed. Boris Yeltsin, it
turned out, was fabulously corrupt himself, and the letter alerted the
FSB that they now had a serious malcontent on their hands. The very
next month, Trepashkin resigned from the FSB, burn out, he says, but
the harassment he'd been subjected to. But that didn't mean Trepashkin
was going to go quietly into the night. That summer he brought a
lawsuit against the FSB leadership and began filing complaints that
extended all the way to the FSB director himself. It was as if, even at
this late date, the investigator imagined that the honor of the Kontora
(Bureau) could still be redeemed, that some as yet invisible reformer
might step forward. Instead, his persistence apparently convinced some
senior FSB officials that it was time for a permanent solution to their
Trepashkin problem. One of the first people they turned to was
Alexander Litvinenko.
On paper, Litvinenko looked just the man
for the job. Having just returned to Moscow from a stint on the brutal
Chechen battlefield as a counterterrorism operative, he had been
transferred into a new and highly secretive of the FSB called the
Office for the Analysis of Criminal Organizations, or URPO. While
Litvinenko didn't know it at the time, it seemed the URPO had been
formed to serve as a death squad. As reported in the book Death of a
Dissident, by Alex Goldfarb and Litvinenko's widow, Marina, Litvinenko
learned of this when he was summoned by the URPO commander in October
01997. There is this guy, Mikhail Trepashkin, the commander allegedly
told Litvinenko. He is your new object. Go get his file and make
yourself familiar with it.
When he did, Litvinenko learned of
the criminal investigator's involvement with the Bank Solid case, as
well as his lawsuit against the FSB leadership; it left him puzzled as
to just what he was supposed to do with Trepashkin.
Well, it's a
delicate situation, Litvinenko quoted his commander as saying. You
know, he is taking the director to court and giving interviews. We
should shut him up, director's personal request.
Shortly after,
Litvinenko claimed his target list expanded to include Boris
Berezovsky, an oligarch and Kremlin insider whom apparently someone
powerful now wanted dead. Litvinenko stalled for a time, making
continual excuses for his inability to carry out the assassination
orders.
According to Trepashkin, at least two attempts were made
on his life during this period: a failed ambush on a deserted stretch
of Moscow highway, and a rooftop sniper who couldn't get off a clean
shot. On other occasions, he says, he was tipped off by friends still
in the Kontora.
In November, the alleged FSB plot against
Trepashkin and Berezovsky was exposed in dramatic fashion when
Litvinenko and four of his URPO colleagues appeared at a Moscow news
conference to detail the kill orders they'd been given. Also in
attendance was Mikhail Trepashkin.
And there, somewhat
anticlimactically, the matter seemed to end. Litvinenko, the ringleader
of the dissident officers, was summarily dismissed but otherwise
suffered no immediate retribution. As for Trepashkin, after improbably
winning his lawsuit against the FSB, he married for a second time and
settled into his new job with the Russian tax police, determined, he
says, to quietly serve out his term until he was eligible for
retirement.
But then, in September 01999, the apartment-building
bombings would shake Russia's political foundations to their core.
Those attacks would also propel Trepashkin and Litvinenko back into the
shadow world, this time with a common purpose.
Amid the near
hysteria that gripped Moscow after the Guryanova Street bombing, early
on the morning of September 13, 01999, authorities were called to check
on reports of suspicious activity at an apartment building on the
city‘s southern outskirts. Finding nothing untoward, security personnel
completed their search of 6/3 Kashirskoye at about 2 A.M. and left. At
5:03 A.M>, the nine-story building was collapsed by a massive bomb,
leaving 121 civilians dead.
Three days later, the target was an
apartment building in Volgodonsk, a city south of Moscow. This time it
was a truck bomb, and it left another seventeen dead.
In the Moscow coffee shop, Trepashkin grew uncharacteristically somber, staring into the distance for a long moment.
It
just seemed incredible, he said finally. That was my first thought. The
country is in an uproar, vigilantes are stopping strangers on the
streets, there are police roadblocks everywhere. So how is it possible
that these bombers are moving about so freely, that they have all this
time to set up and carry out these sophisticated bombings? It seemed
impossible.
Another aspect that Trepashkin had a problem with was the question of motive.
Usually,
this is quite easy to find, he explained, it is money or hatred or
jealousy, but for these bombings, what was the Chechens' motive? Very
few people thought about this.
On one level, this was perhaps
understandable. Antipathy for Chechens is deeply ingrained into Russian
society, and it had grown much worse during their secessionist war in
the '90s. Unspeakable atrocities were committed by both sides in that
conflict, and the Chechen rebels had shown no compunction against
taking their fight into Russia proper or targeting civilians. Except
that war had ended in 01997, with Boris Yeltsin signing a peace
agreement recognizing Chechnya's autonomy.
So why? Trepashkin
continued. Why would the Chechens want to provoke the Russian
government when they already had everything they had fought for?
And there was something else that gave the former criminal investigator pause: the composition of the new Russian government.
In
early August 01999, just weeks before the first bombing on Buynaksk,
President Yeltsin had appointed his third prime minister in less than
three months. He was a slight, humorless main, virtually unknown to the
Russian public, named Vladimir Putin.
The chief reason he was so
little known was that, until a few years earlier, Putin had been just
one more midlevel KGB/FSB officer toiling away in obscurity. In 01996,
Putin was given a position in the presidential-property-management
department, a crucial office in the Yeltsin patronage machine that gave
Putin leverage to grant or withhold favors to Kremlin insiders. He
apparently put his time there to good use; over the next three years,
Putin was promoted to deputy chief of the presidential staff, then to
director of the FSB, and now to prime minister.
But though Putin
was still obscure to the general public in September 01999, Mikhail
Trepashkin already had a pretty good sense of the man. Putin had been
the FSB director at the time the URPO scandal went public and had
personally dismissed Alexander Litvinenko for provoking it. I fired
Litvinenko, he had told a reporter, because FSB officers shouldn't hold
press conferences... and they shouldn't make internal scandals public.
But
equally alarming to Trepashkin was who had been chosen to be Putin's
successor as FSB director, Nikolai Patrushev. As head of the FSB
internal-security department, it was Patrushev who had removed
Trepashkin from the Bank Soldi case and who was now among those
government officials most vehemently claiming a Chechen connection to
the apartment-building bombings.
So what you saw was this
dynamic building, Trepashkin said, and it was the government promoting
it. ‘The Chechens are behind this, so now we must take care of the
Chechens'.
But then something very strange happened. It happened
in the sleepy provincial city of Ryazan, some 120 miles southeast of
Moscow.
Amid the state of hypervigilance that had seized the
nation, several residents of 14/16 Novosyolov Street in Ryazan took
notice when a white Zhiguli sedan pulled up to park beside their
apartment building on the evening of September 22. They became
downright panicked when they observed two men removing several large
sacks from the car's trunk and carrying them into the basement before
speeding away. Residents called the police.
Discovered in the
basement were three 110-pound white sacks wired to a detonator and
explosive timer. As police quickly evacuated the building, the local
FSB explosives expert was called in to defuse the detonator; he
determined that the sacks contained RDX, a explosive powerful enough to
have brought the entire apartment building down. IN the meantime,
roadblocks were established on all roads out of Ryazan, and a massive
manhunt for the Zhiguli and its occupants got underway.
By the
following afternoon, word of the incident in Ryazan had spread across
Russia. Prime Minister Putin congratulated the residents on their
vigilance, while the interior minister lauded recent improvements by
the security forces, such as the foiling of the attempt to blowup the
apartment building in Ryazan.
There the matter may well have
ended, except that same night two of the suspects in Ryazan were
apprehended. To the local authorities' astonishment, both produced FSB
identification cards. A short time later, a call came down from FSB
headquarters in Moscow that the two were to be released.
The
following morning, FSB director Patrushev appeared on television to
report a wholly new version of events in Ryazan. Rather than an aborted
terrorist attack, he explained, the incident at 14/16 Novosyolov Street
had actually been an FSB "training exercise" to test the public's
alertness. Further, he said, the sacks in the basement had contained
not explosives, but rather common household sugar.
Contradictions
in the FSB's account were manifold. How to reconcile FSB headquarters'
sacks-of-sugar claim with the local FSB's chemical analysis that had
found RDX? If this truly had been a training exercise, how was it that
the local FSB branch wasn't informed ahead of time, or that Patrushev
himself didn't see fit to make mention of it for a day and a half after
the terrorist alert was raised? For that matter, why did the
apartment-building-bombing spree suddenly stop after Ryazan? If the
attacks were truly the handiwork of Chechen terrorists, surely the
public-relations black eye the FSB had received over the Ryazan affair
would spur them to carry out more.
But the time for such
questions had already passed. Even as Prime Minister Putin gave his
speech on the night of September 23 praising the residents of Ryazan
for their vigilance, Russian warplanes began launching massive air
strikes on Grozny, the capital of Chechnya. Within a few more days,
Russian armored battalions that had been massed on the border for
months crossed into Chechnya, marking the start of the Second Chechen
War.
Events moved very quickly after that. On New Year's Eve
01999, Boris Yeltsin stunned the nation by announcing that he was
stepping down from the presidency effective immediately, which made
Vladimir Putin acting president until new elections could be held. And
instead of holding them sometime in the summer, as originally
scheduled, those elections would now occur in just ten weeks' time,
leaving Putin's many competitors for the position little time to
prepare.
In a presidential poll taken in August 01999, Putin
had garnered less than 2 percent support. By March 02000, however,
riding a wave of popularity for his total-war policy in Chechnya, he
swept into office with 53 percent of the vote. The reign of Vladimir
Putin had begun, and Russia would never be the same.
For our
next meeting, Trepashkin invited me into his apartment. I was a bit
surprised by this - I'd been told that, for security reasons,
Trepashkin rarely brought visitors to his home - but I guess he figured
all his enemies knew where he lived, anyway.
It was a pleasant
enough place, if a bit on the spartan side, on the ground floor of a
high-rise tower surrounded by other high-rise towers in southern
Moscow. Trepashkin gave me a quick tour, and I noticed that the only
space with even a hint of clutter was the tiny, paper-filled room - a
converted walk-in closet, really - he used as his office. One of his
daughters was home, and she brought us tea as we settled in the sitting
room.
With a vaguely embarrassed smile, Trepashkin offered that
there was actually another reason he rarely had work-related meetings
at his home: his wife. She wants me to stop all this political stuff,
but since she is away this morning... His smile eased away. Well, it's
because of the raids. You know, they came charging in here - he waved
toward the front door - with their guns, shouting orders; the children
were terrified. It really affected my wife, and she is always worried
it will happen again.
The first of those raids had occurred in
January 02002. Late one night, a squad of FSB agents burst in and
proceeded to take the apartment apart. Trepashkin maintains they found
nothing but instead planted enough evidence - some classified documents
from the FSB archives, a handful of bullets - to enable prosecutors to
hang three "pending" charges over his head.
It was their way of putting me on notice, he explained, of letting me know they would come after me if I didn't straighten up.
Trepashkin
had a good idea of what had sparked the FSB's attention: Just days
before the raid, he had started getting telephone calls from the man
regarded by the Putin regime as one of Russia's greatest traitors,
Alexander Litvinenko.
Lieutenant Colonel Litvinenko's fall from
grace had been swift. After his 01998 press conference alleging the
URPO assassination plots, he'd spent nine months in prison on an "abuse
of authority" charge and had then fled Russia as prosecutors prepared
to move against him again. With the help of the now exiled tycoon Boris
Berezovsky, Litvinenko and his family settled in England, where he
joined forces with Berezovsky to expose to the world what they claimed
were the crimes of the Putin regime. A primary focus of that campaign
was getting to the truth of the apartment-building bombings.
So
this is why he was calling, Trepashkin explained. Litvinenko couldn't
come back to Russia, obviously, so they needed someone here to help
with the investigation.
Easier said than done, for by January
02002, Russia had become a very different place. In the two years since
Putin had been elected president, the once-thriving independent media
had all but disappeared, while the political opposition was being
steadily marginalized to the point of insignificance.
One
indication of this chilling effect was the revisions performed on the
shakiest aspect of the government's bombing story, the FSB "training
exercise" in Ryazan. By 02002 the Ryazan FSB commander who had overseen
the manhunt for "the terrorists" now supported the training-exercise
explanation. The local FSB explosives expert who had insisted before
television cameras that the Ryazan sacks contained explosives suddenly
went silent on the whole matter and disappeared from sight. Even some
of the residents of 14/16 Novosyolov Street who had appeared in a
television documentary six months after the incident to angrily deride
the FSB's account and insist the bomb was real now refused to talk with
anyone beyond allowing that perhaps they'd been mistaken after all.
I
told Litvinenko that the only way I could become involved was in some
kind of official capacity, Trepashkin explained in his sitting room. If
I just went out on my own, the authorities would move against me
immediately.
That official capacity was fashioned at a meeting
held in Boris Berezovsky's London office in early March 02002. one of
those in attendance, a Russian member of Parliament named Sergei
Yushenkov, would organize a blue-ribbon committee of inquiry into the
bombings and make Trepashkin one of his investigators. Another attendee
was Tatiana Morozova, a 31-year-old Russian émigré living in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. Morozova's mother had been killed in the Guryanova Street
blast, and under Russian law that gave her the right to review the
government's records on the case; since Trepashkin had recently
obtained his license to practice law, Morozova would appoint him as her
attorney and petition the courts for access to the FSB's Guryanova
Street files.
So I agreed to both of these ideas, Trepashkin
said, but the question was where to look first. So many of the reports
were unreliable, and so many people had changed their stories, that my
first goal was to get access to the actual forensic evidence.
Also
easier said than done, for a hallmark of the government's response to
the bombings had been a peculiar haste in clearing away the ruins.
Whereas, for example, the Americans had spent six months sifting
through the remnants of the World Trade Center after September 11,
regarding it as an active crime scene, Russian authorities had razed 19
Guryanova street just days after the blast and hauled everything away
to a municipal dump. Whatever forensic evidence had been preserved -
and it wasn't clear that any had - was presumably locked away in FSB
storehouses.
While what he discovered didn't pertain to the
specifics of the bombings, Trepashkin did soon manage to come up with
something quite interesting.
One of the odder footnotes to the
whole affair was a statement that Gennady Seleznyov, the Speaker of the
Duma, had made on the floor of Parliament on the morning of September
13, 01999. I have just received a report, he had announced to
legislators. An apartment building in the city of Volgodonsk was blown
up last night.
While Seleznyov got the basics right - an
apartment building had indeed just been blown up - he had the wrong
city; the blast that morning had been at 6/3 Kashirskoye Highway in
Moscow. Which put the Speaker in kind of an awkward spot when an
apartment building in Volgodonsk was blown up three days later. At
least one Duma member found that puzzling.
Mr. Speaker, please
explain, he had asked Seleznyov on the Parliament floor, how come you
told us on Monday about the blast that occurred on Thursday?
In lieu of an answer, the questioner had his microphone quickly cut off.
To
many observers, it suggested that someone in the FSB chain of command
had screwed up the order in which the bombings were to take place and
had given the "news" to Seleznyov in reverse.
Searching around
nearly three years after the fact, Trepashkin says he determined that
Seleznyov had been given the erroneous report by an FSB officer, though
he won't say how he knows.
But with progress also came the
potential for danger to Trepashkin. One of those who had attended the
London meeting, human-rights activist and Berezovsky lieutenant Alex
Goldfarb, became concerned enough about Trepashkin's welfare that he
arranged a meeting with him in Ukraine in early 02003. The two had
never met before, and Goldfarb found it an odd encounter.
He was
one of the stranger people I've ever met, Goldfarb recounted. He had no
interest in the philosophical or political implications of what he was
doing. To him, this was all just a criminal case. In the back of my
mind, I was thinking, ‘Is this guy crazy? Doesn't he appreciate what
he's up against?' but I finally concluded he was this kind of supercop
- you know, a Serpico figure. He was determined to do the right thing
because it was the right thing to do; it was just that simple. Still,
Goldfarb felt it his duty to at least alert Trepashkin to the deepening
peril, the very little that could be done if the authorities decided to
go after him. The more he pressed on this, though, the more Trepashkin
seemed to bristle.
He didn't care about any of that, Goldfarb
remembered. I think he still believed he was fighting to reform the
system, rather than that he was up against the system itself.
But
as it turned out, the hammer first fell elsewhere. In April 02003,
Sergei Yushenkov, the Duma member who had hired Trepashkin for his
committee of inquiry, was murdered in front of his Moscow home, shot
down in broad daylight. Three months later, another committee member
died under mysterious circumstances. The two deaths effectively ended
the independent inquiry - which also meant that Trepashkin was now
essentially on his own. Still, acting as Tatiana Morozova's attorney,
he soldiered on - and in July 02003, he finally hit pay dirt. It hinged
on another loose end in the case, one that no amount of cleaning up
after the fact could quite tie off.
In the hours just before the
Guryanova Street bombing, the FSB had released a composite sketch of a
suspect based on information provided by a building manager. But soon
after and with no explanation, that sketch had been withdrawn and
replaced with that of a completely different man. This second man had
long since been identified as one Achemez Gochiyayev, a small-time
businessman from the region of Cherkessia, who had immediately gone
into hiding. In the spring of 02002, Alexander Litvinenko had tracked
Gochiyayev to a remote area of Georgia where, through an intermediary,
the businessman steadfastly insisted that he had been framed by the FSB
and had only run because he was sure they would kill him.
It
made Trepashkin very curious to learn the identity of the man in the
first sketch, even more so when, going through the voluminous FSB files
on Guryanova Street, he discovered there wasn't a copy of it to be
found anywhere. As a last resort, he started sifting through newspaper
archives to see if any had run that sketch before the FSB had pulled it
from circulation. And there it was.
It depicted a square-jawed
man in his mid-30s, with dark hair and glasses. Trepashkin was
convinced he knew the man, that in fact he had arrested him eight years
before. He believed it was a sketch of Vladimir Romanovich, the FSB
agent who had manned the electronic-surveillance van for the Raduyev
gang during the robbery of Bank Soldi.
Trepashkin's first
thought was to find Romanovich and try to compel him to reveal his role
in the apartment bombings. Not likely. As far as Trepashkin could
determine, shortly after the bombings, Romanovich had left Russia for
Cyprus and died there in the summer of 02000, killed by a hit-and-run
driver.
Trepashkin then tracked down the original source of the sketch, the Guryanova Street building manager.
I
showed him the sketch of Romanovich, Trepashkin said in his sitting
room, And he told me that was the accurate one, the one he had given to
the police. But then they had taken him to Lubyakna [FSB headquarters],
where they showed him the Gochiyayev sketch and insisted that was the
man he saw.
With his bombshell, Trepashkin planned a little
surprise for the authorities. the FSB had long since released the names
of nine men they claimed were responsible for the Moscow and Volgodonsk
bombings. Ironically, considering that the bombings had been the chief
pretext for embarking on the Second Chechen War, none of these suspects
were Chechen. By the summer of 02003, five of those men were reportedly
dead, and two others remained at large, but the trial for the two in
custody was slated to begin that October. As attorney for Tatiana
Morozova, Trepashkin intended to attend the trial and introduce the
Romanovich sketch as evidence for the defense.
He took an added
precaution. Shortly before the trial's tart, he met with Igor Korolkov,
a journalist with the independent magazine Moskovskiye Novosti, and
described the Romanovich connection in detail.
He said, ‘If they
get me, at least everyone will know why,' Korolkov explained. He was
apprehensive, tense, because I think he already knew they were coming
for him.
Sure enough, shortly after meeting with Korolkov,
Trepashkin was picked up by authorities. while he was being held, the
FSB conducted another raid on his apartment, this one involving a whole
busload of agents.
I understand it was very exciting for the
neighbors, Trepashkin said with a laugh, the biggest thing to happen
around here in a long time.
They brought him up on an old FSB
standby - possession of an unlicensed gun - but the judge, apparently
familiar with that tired cliché, immediately dismissed the charge.
Prosecutors then turned to the charges they still had pending on
Trepashkin from the raid two years earlier and the classified he
maintains were planted. It wasn't much, but it was enough; tried in a
closed court, trepashkin received a four-year sentence for "improper
handling of classified material" and was shipped off to a prison camp
in the Ural Mountains.
In his absence, the two men tried for the
apartment bombings were found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
Declaring the matter officially closed, the government then ordered all
FSB investigative files on the case to be sealed for the next
seventy-five years.
My last question to Mikhail Trepashkin was something of a throwaway.
We
were standing on the sidewalk outside his apartment building, and I
asked him if, in looking over the trajectory of his life for the past
fifteen years, he would have done things any differently.
It was
a throwaway because people in Trepashkin's position, those who have
waged battle against power and been crushed, almost invariably say no:
In the pursuit of justice or liberty or a better society, they explain,
they'd do it all again and in just the same way. It's what such people
tell themselves to give their suffering meaning.
Instead, Trepashkin gave a quick laugh, his face creasing into his trademark grin.
Yes,
he said, I would have done things very differently. I see now that one
of my flaws is that I am too trusting. I always thought the problems
were with just a few bad people, not with the system itself. Even when
I was in prison, I never believed that Putin could actually be behind
it. I always believed that once he knew, I would be released
immediately. Trepashkin's grin eased away; he gave a slow shrug of his
powerful shoulders. So a certain naïveté, I guess, that led to mistakes.
I
wasn't wholly convinced of this. More than naïveté, I suspected his
"flaw" was actually rooted in a kind of old-fashioned - if not
downright medieval - sense of loyalty. At our first meeting, Trepashkin
had given me a copy of his official résumé, a document that ran to
sixteen pages, and the first thing that struck me was the prominence
he'd given to the many awards and commendations he had received over
his lifetime of service to the state: as a navy specialist, as a KGB
officer, as an FSB investigator. As bizarre or as quaint as it might
seem, he was still a true believer. How else to explain the years he
had spent being the dutiful investigator, meticulously building cases
against organized-crime syndicates or corrupt government officials,
while stubbornly refusing to accept that, in the new Russia, it was the
thieves themselves who ran the show?
Of course, it was also this
abiding sense of loyalty that rather paralyzed Trepashkin and prevented
him from learning from his past "mistakes," from living his life any
differently in order to get out of harm's way. For that matter, even
the change of venue of our meeting from his apartment to the sidewalk
outside was kind of a testament to Trepashkin's obduracy; his wife,
returning home earlier than expected, had been so incensed at finding
him meeting with a Western journalist that she'd promptly kicked both
of us out of the house.
Well, what can you do? Trepashkin had whispered as we'd fled, as if he really had no control over the matter.
But
perhaps his wife's edginess that day - September 25 - was rooted in
something else. That afternoon, Trepashkin was headed downtown to meet
with a handful of his supporters, and then at 6 P.M. they would hold a
demonstration in Pushkin Square to demand a new investigation into the
bombings. You should come by, he said with his usual grin. It could be
interesting.
In the five years since Trepashkin had first gone
off to prison, there'd been a lot of changes in Russia - but none of
them particularly auspicious for a man like him. In March 02004,
Vladimir Putin had been reelected with 71 percent of the vote, and he'd
use the mandate to even more forcefully restrict political and press
freedoms. In October 02006, Anna Politkovskaya, Russia's leading
investigative journalist and someone who had written extensively on the
murky connections between the FSB and Chechen "terrorists," had been
shot to death in the elevator of her Moscow apartment building. The
following month, it had been Alexander Litvinenko's turn to be
eliminated.
But perhaps most dispiriting, it appeared the
Russian public saw very little cause for worry in all this. Instead,
with their economy booming on a flood of petrodollars, most seemed
rather pleased with Putin's tough-guy image and his increasingly
belligerent posture to the outside world, the whiff of superpower redux
it conveyed. This image was fittingly captured in May 02008 when Putin,
constitutionally barred from a third term as president (although he
remained on as prime minister), officially handed the reins of state
over to his handpicked successor, Dmitry Medvedev. For the occasion,
the two men donned matching black jackets with Medvedev in jeans,
looking less like co-heads of state than a pair of gangsters as they
strutted about Red Square. Even Russia's ferocious intervention in
Georgia in August 02008, an act roundly denounced in the West, spawned
a new burst of Russian national pride, a new spike in Putin's
popularity.
Perhaps not surprising, then, the rally in Pushkin
Square was a rather pitiful showing. Other than Trepashkin and his
closest aides, perhaps thirty demonstrators showed up. Many of them
were elderly people who had lost relatives in the bombings, and they
stood mutely on the sidewalk holding up posters or faded photographs of
their dead. The small band was watched over by eight uniformed
policemen - and presumably a number of others in plainclothes - but it
seemed quite unnecessary. Of the vast throngs passing on the sidewalk
at rush hour, very few gave the protestors a second glance, and fewer
still took the leaflet proffered them.
Watching Trepashkin that
evening, it seemed there might be another way to understand why someone
like him was still alive while people like LItvinenko and Politkovskaya
were dead. Part of it, no doubt, is that Trepashkin has always shied
away from pointing an accusatory finger directly at Putin or anyone
else in connection with the apartment bombings. This fits with his
criminal investigator's mind-set: that you only make accusations based
on facts, on what is knowable and certain.
But surely another
part of it is his single-minded focus on getting to the bottom of the
apartment bombings, his bringing the same level of dogged tenacity to
that case as he did to the Bank Soldi affair. This was the problem for
Litvinenko and Politkovskaya: They made so many accusations against so
many members of Russia's ruling circle that they gave their enemies
safety in numbers. For Trepashkin, there is really nothing else but the
apartment bombings, and if he is murdered, everyone in Russia will know
why.
The irony, though, is that by continuing to push on with
the case, and by continuing to call for a public investigation,
Trepashkin may also be propelling himself ever closer to the answers
that will destroy him. So long as those behind the bombings are
confident that they have won or that they have at least sufficiently
buried the past, he remains relatively safe. It is when the crowds
start taking his leaflets that the danger to him grows.
That day
may now be fast approaching. Amid the international economic collapse
of the past year, few countries have been more ravaged than russia, and
almost every day brings accounts of new popular protests: against the
oligarchs, against government policies, increasingly against Vladimir
Putin himself. It may not be very long now before the Russian people
start to ask themselves how all this was set in motion and remember
back to the awful events of September 01999.
But it didn't come
on that day in Pushkin Square. On that day, the throngs were still true
believers in the Russian renaissance, and they hurried on past
Trepashkin toward the subway and home, hurried toward the bright, shiny
future their ruler has promised them.
In reviews of an article in the Guardian about the Berlusconi's refusal
to grant political asylum for Litvinenko's family in Italy, distributed
by the Russian Service of the BBC and by Moscow's media outlets, all
negative opinions about Putin have been omitted.
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