this post was submitted on 11 Jan 2026
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Shortly before Christmas, the new chief of [Secret Intelligence Service ] MI6, Blaise Metreweli, made her first public speech since taking charge. She chose as her subject the multifaceted threat posed by Russia, warning of the growing danger from Vladimir Putin’s regime. “We are operating in a space between peace and war,” she said.

...

The picture Metreweli paints is frightening: a scenario not of overt military strikes, but of covert “grey zone” assaults from every angle. The spy chief did not go into detail. We are all aware of the existence of planned sabotage, assassinations, hacking, cyber crime and drone attacks. Such concepts are well aired and are firmly embedded in the public consciousness. Less familiar, however, according to security experts, is the notion of economic warfare. Key to this, to use their parlance, are non-state actors – not Russian diplomats or entities formally associated with the Russian state, but private individuals, organisations, movements and companies who secretly act in Russia’s interest.

Some are ideologically motivated, while others do it for money, frequently being paid in untraceable cryptocurrency, like Jan Marsalek. Austrian-born Marsalek was COO of Wirecard, the German payment processing firm that collapsed in 2020 after announcing that €1.9bn (£1.65bn) it supposedly held in cash did not in fact exist.

...

For almost a decade prior to its insolvency, Marsalek had been working for the Russian security agency, the GRU. His position at Wirecard gave him access to data and resources that were useful to the Russians. He used his seniority to develop pro-Russian links in Libya, and to encourage a flood of migration to Europe that was calculated to cause social and financial damage – all playing into Moscow’s hands.

After his exposure, following Wirecard’s collapse, Marsalek fled to Russia. In late 2023, Marsalek was named again as the coordinator of a Bulgarian spy ring operating in the UK.

Another example is petty criminal Dylan Earl, the ringleader in an arson attack on a warehouse in east London stocked with aid for Ukraine in March 2024. He was also recruited online by the Russian paramilitary organisation known as the Wagner Group.

...

Harder to crack are the Russians or non-Russians working in the commercial field, in strategic industries critical to Europe’s defence and infrastructure, such as defence and energy, and acting in Russia’s interests, often under orders from the GRU or other Kremlin agencies. Security sources maintain that Moscow considers these actors useful as there is a degree of separation: deniability is fundamental to the strategy.

...

The difficulty of tracking such activity can be seen in the case of Alexander Kirzhnev. The Russian is wanted by the Supreme Anti-Corruption Court in Ukraine, having been accused in absentia of organising a fraud against Ukraine by using a bogus US company to fulfil an order for ammunition.

The Ukraine state-owned firm Artem placed a multimillion-dollar order for 152mm and 155mm shells with a supplier based in Florida. Advance payment was made. All seemed well: a US firm was helping Ukraine’s war effort, no problem there. The trouble was, the Florida company had no ability to fulfil the order.

By diverting precious Ukrainian cash, taking up their time and effort, and making them think much-needed military supplies were coming when they were not, Kirzhnev’s alleged actions – whether under instruction or not – epitomise Russia’s goals in the “grey zone”: deniable private-sector activity that moves the Kremlin closer to its strategic objectives, sowing uncertainty along the way.

...

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[–] rayyy@piefed.social 15 points 14 hours ago (2 children)

These folks may not have noticed but Russia has been at war with the US for a long time utilizing social media and other cyber avenues and they have been successful beyond their wildest dreams.

[–] wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz 7 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Whenever I try raising awareness about kremlin psyops, people make cliché tinfoil hat jokes.

Like, this isn't some bonkers conspiracy theory. It's real, it's well-funded and organized, and it's been going on for a long time...

[–] skozzii@lemmy.ca 5 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

I remember a few years back there was a power outage where one of the major GRU op centers was, and so many Twitter and reddit accounts were dark for half a day when they would normally be active as hell. Some guy actually made a traffic graph with a bunch of the accounts, that really opened my eyes to how extreme it is.

Brexit, Canadian Truckers, MAGA, they amplified all of it to success.

[–] wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz 1 points 4 hours ago

Fuck the GRU. Sometimes I imagine what the world could be like without their manipulation, and it's sad to realize how much the trajectory of history and of human sociocultural evolution has been influenced and shaped by these evil, nefarious, bad actors.

Literally so many problems we have today (the brainwashing and radicalization of the masses, the extreme polarization and divisive rhetoric) can be placed on their shoulders, and they have complete plausible deniability.

[–] Supervisor194@lemmy.world 7 points 12 hours ago

Too true but I think their success, their actual success - as measured by desirable outcomes for Russia and the world it creates for itself to exist in - is far from certain.

Russian leadership has this bizarre sense of manifest destiny, an unflagging idea that destabilizing the dogshit out of everything everywhere (the "success" you refer to - because yeah, they're killing it) somehow can only lead to good outcomes for Russia and not the reverse. That's far from certain. Shit, if history is anything to go by, it's strangely arrogant hubris.