Analysts
say Kiev authorities in fact team up with Islamic State
Tamara ZAMYATINA
14
October, 2015
MOSCOW,
October 14. /TASS/. Publication of personal data about Russian air
pilots participating in the operation against the Islamic State in
Syria on Ukraine’s Mirotvorets (Peacemaker) website in fact
signifies that those behind the provocation have teamed up with IS
terrorists, polled experts have told TASS. The provocation’s
mastermind is Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine’s interior
minister. Just recently he issued a call for publishing the personal
data of Russian pilots operating in Syria on the Internet.
The
next day the Peacemaker website published information about nine
Russian military officers, their ranks ranging from lieutenant to
major-general, in three languages - Russian, English and Arabic. It
is noteworthy that earlier the same website gained notoriety by
disclosing the home addresses of Ukrainian journalist Oles Buzina and
Ukrainian parliament member Oleg Kalashnikov. Both would soon be
killed near their homes.
The
president of the association providing social support for retired
military Otechestvo (Fatherland) Air Force Major-General Aleksandr
Tsalko, is very articulate and to the point, just as a career
military should be. He has told TASS that the call for making public
personal data of Russian air pilots in Syria was an "act of
meanness," and that Gerashchenko was a "rascal who will
surely wind up badly." Russia’s Investigative Committee has
already launched criminal proceedings against Gerashchenko under the
article of the Criminal Code setting punishment "for making
public calls for terrorist activity or for public justification of
terrorism," Tsalko recalled.
"Gerashchenko
and those Ukrainians who publish in the Internet personal data about
Russian pilots who are fighting against terrorists in Syria in fact
identify themselves as IS militants, put an equation mark between
themselves and the terrorists, and consider the latter as almost
their brothers. It is not accidental that Ukraine’s President Petro
Poroshenko in a recent interview to the BBC in fact put in a word for
the Islamic State militants, saying that Russia’s operation was
shaking loose global security. Such statements indicate that the
authorities in Kiev connive with terrorists," Tsalko believes.
He
remarked, though, that the Ukrainian ‘informants’ - Gerashchenko
and his likes - have no reason to rejoice, for their idea has not
reached its aims. "Russia is capable of ensuring the safety of
its military servicemen. The Defense Ministry had taken precautions
in advance to ensure my colleagues - military pilots who have been
dispatched to Syria - and their families should feel protected from
any threats," Tsalko said.
"Russian
air pilots and their families reside in guarded garrisons. When I was
on active service myself, I was in charge of such a garrison for a
sometime. A stranger had not the slightest chance of getting inside.
When I was on an assignment in Afghanistan in the 1980s, the Taliban
first declared a standard award for my capture or my death - $10,000.
Then the reward started growing fast to eventually reach $8 million.
I am a very ‘valuable’ person, but there have been no attempts on
my life in Russia," Tsalko said.
Yet
the Russian media and society are anxious how come the personal data
of Russian pilots flying combat missions in Syria have ended up in
the hands of Ukrainian hackers. Russia’s former high-ranking
intelligence officer, General Yuri Kobaladze, believes the risk of
leaks of personal information about Russian military is extremely
low. "That’s really hard to believe. Air pilots never mention
their names in radio exchanges. It is very unlikely that they may
mention the numbers of their military units or home addresses in the
social networks either. It may turn out the whole affair is just a
phony," Kobaladze told TASS.
"If
one imagines that the Russian pilots’ personal data published on
the Ukrainian websites are real, then it’s an act of outrageous
meanness - to expose people who are performing their duty and
fighting against a menace that threatens the whole world,"
Kobaladze said.
And
the president of the National Strategy Institute, Mikhail Remizov,
believes that the legislation of many countries leaves no room for
connivance with terrorism. "This call by an adviser to the
Ukrainian Interior Ministry for publishing personal data of Russian
air pilots in Syria and the reaction of social networks’ members
that followed need close scrutiny by human rights activists. Such
action deserves the international community’s condemnation,"
Remizov told TASS.
From the horse's mouth
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