A book in English telling about "secret activities" of the FSB is to be released in the West in September. A book written by journalists of the KGB website "Agentura", Soldatov and Borogan, will not be sold in Russia. It is intended by the FSB solely for the use in the Wes, which knows about the crimes of the terrorist gang of FSB much more than the authors write, and serves to conceal these bloody crimes with "exposures" of minor delicts.
As a result, major crimes such as the massacre by the terrorist gang of the FSB of 96 Poles on 10 April 2010 under the orders of Medvedev and Putin, is blurred over and creates a fibbed picture that the bloody gang is engaged only in peaceful bribery and theft. That tactics was always used by the KGB for its propaganda to the West, which was not intended for the internal dissemination on the territory of the USSR.
The book which was not yet published has been widely publicized by the KGB in Russia: from KGB agents playing the role of Communists to KGB agents playing the role of liberals and democrats, in respective publications, while not a single (!) media outlet in Russia dared to report simply about the fact that the majority of Poles and Westerners assume that the 4/10 plane crash near Smolensk has been the work of the KGB/FSB.
As the British newspaper The Guardian writes, based on a study by Russian-speaking authors, in recent speeches by Putin in Sochi before the gang members of the "discussion club Valdai" and by Medvedev in Yaroslavl at a gathering called "the world political forum", the words sharply contradict the way the Russian government really works.
Particularly indicative was extremely hypocritical and stupid, as always, the speech by Medvedev, who tried to convince political scientists that "Russia is moving steadily towards democracy and there is no totalitarian regime here", as evidenced by the "Russian democratic opposition" which is thoroughly penetrated by FSB agents.
The FSB authors of book about the FSB tell that under Putin, "a new gentry", as they affectionately refer to their gang, became more a powerful and influential organization than its predecessor, the KGB.
The KGB journalists briefly recalled, noting that it is not supported by the facts, the testimony by FSB colonel Litvinenko, poisoned by Putin with polonium-210, that Putin was behind the bombings of two apartment buildings in Moscow in 1999. The explosion claimed the lives of about 300 Russians.
Putin, appointed by Yeltsin to the post of the "prime minister", accused in the bombings Chechen Mujahideen, and proclaimed a manhunt on them. This allowed Putin to become a national hero and take over power in Russia.
As the KGB journalists point out, the KGB/FSB infiltrated every area of Russian society - the media, business and the Internet. The FSB agents Soldatov and Borogan came to a conclusion that the FSB differs from the KGB in two important aspects: political control over special services disappeared, and the KGB/FSB generals became millionaires who own lands, real estates and business.
In 2006, the KGB journalists write, a certain Alksnis, Russian state duma MP and a KGB officer, who envies his bosses, found that the KGB country of Russia allocated to some individuals 99 acres of land in a Moscow noble city district of Rublevka. As it turned out, the land was divided into 90 plots, 38 of them were given to former and current senior official staff chiefs of the FSB terror gang. The rest presumably went to secret agents. The KGB generals built on the plots palaces with columns incomparable with rather modest cottages of the party leaders of the former Soviet period.
Studying these transactions, the KGB officers Soldatov and Borogan discovered that FSB generals were not called in the documents by name and title, but it the documents, it was simply stated that they were dedicated themselves to the service in the gang for more than 15 years . As The Guardian writes, the book has a lot of such examples about who really owns power in Russia.
The gang was formed in June 1995 simply by changing its previous name from "the Federal Counterintelligence Service of the Russian Federation".
A bandit "law expanding the powers of the FSB" came into effect this summer. According to their own "law", the FSB terrorists have now the right to "make warnings to individuals on inadmissibility of actions that create conditions for committing crimes", which the gang is engaged in. The law is aimed against the opposition and became the basis for the persecution of the dissent.
According to human rights activists, terrorists from the gang of the KGB/FSB, along with terrorists from the gangs of "ministry of internal affairs economic crimes department" and "federal drug control service", are leaders in taking bribes. FSB officers and generals are involved in racket, steal businesses from citizens, and extort money, cars and real estate, The Guardian writes.
Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center