Having a wonderful time reminiscing about all my past travel (and other) adventures. Hope you’ll share them with me in my blog, “All Roads Led to Russia.”
George Bogen hadn’t done anything wrong; he had simply attended a friend’s wedding in Jamaica in 2019. He didn’t know that some six years later, a picture of him among the other attendees at the wedding would appear on the internet, or that it would be seen by members of the second Trump administration. Or that someone would recall that Bogen had also attended the same friend’s second wedding in 2023.
George Bogen
Whether or not he knew that the groom at those two weddings, Miles Taylor, had published an opinion piece in 2018 critical of Donald Trump — then serving his first term as president — is irrelevant . . . or it should be.
Miles Taylor
But to Trump, no slight — no matter how small or insignificant — is irrelevant, or ever forgotten.
Or forgiven.
Because George Bogen — who had been serving as Executive Director of the Office of Trade Relations at Customs and Border Protection (CBP) — was asked to step down from his post last week because of his alleged connection to Miles Taylor. [William Vaillancourt, Daily Beast, April 25, 2025.]
“I beg your pardon?!!”
That’s right, folks . . . in Washington’s official circles, you are no longer allowed to choose your own friends. Donald Trump takes very seriously the adage that “the friend of my enemy is my enemy.” And he makes no secret of his unquenchable thirst for revenge.
This, then, is the moral compass of the man that more than half of America’s voters trusted to ruin . . . sorry, run . . . their country for them.
I recently asked how you would feel if someone were simply to take your home away from you and give it to a bully who had no legal claim to it, but merely wanted it for his own greedy purposes.
And now I ask: What if it were not just your property . . . but your children . . . who were snatched from your arms, or their beds, or their schools, and whisked off to a secret location to be “re-educated” — indoctrinated into a new way of life, completely alien to anything they had ever known?
Don’t dismiss the idea as some dystopian work of fiction, because it is happening, now, in Ukraine.
Russian “Reeducation Camps” for Ukrainian Children
While Vladimir Putin continues to drag out negotiations for a peace treaty in Ukraine, gaining a few more miles of territory, and taking a few hundred more lives each day; and while Donald Trump continues to placate Putin while accusing Volodymyr Zelensky of having “allowed” the invasion to happen in the first place . . .
. . . while all of this goes on, and on, and on, now into its fourth year . . .
. . . an estimated 20,000 Ukrainian children, kidnapped from their families, are being held prisoner in towns and villages in Russia and in Russian-held Ukrainian territory.
But now, some have been helped by a Ukrainian NGO and others to escape; and one — Vladyslav Rudenko — has spoken out about his nine months in captivity.
Vladyslav Rudenko
In October of 2022, when Rudenko was just 16 years old, three armed Russian soldiers came unannounced to his home in Kherson.
“They came to my apartment and said I had 30 minutes to pack my things, and I had to go with them,” he says. [RFE/RL, April 24, 2025.]
He and hundreds of other young Ukrainians were told they were being evacuated. They were boarded onto buses and transported, with a military escort, to a former health spa in Yevpatoria, in Russian-occupied Crimea. The spa had been transformed into a training camp for indoctrination of Ukrainian youths in all things Russian.
“We were told to get rid of everything Ukrainian, so that there was absolutely nothing Ukrainian, or there would be problems,” Rudenko said. [Id.]
At the Training Camp
During his nine-month stay there, he underwent Russian military training, and intensive studies in Russian language, culture, and patriotic ideology.
He describes the Soviet-inspired regimen as follows:
“First, we woke up to the Russian national anthem. Then we raised the Russian flag. After breakfast, we had an hour of education about what had happened during the evening in Russia. Then we were taken to a cinema to watch Russian films. It was constantly a vicious cycle where nothing changes.” [Id.]
The youngsters were given military uniforms, including the Russian nationalist St. George’s ribbon,** and were made to take shifts standing guard. “This is a very large pro-Russian machine,” Rudenko explains, “and it was very difficult.” [Id.]
** The Ribbon of St. George is a widely-recognized military symbol, consisting of a black and orange striped pattern, commemorating the veterans of the Eastern Front of World War II (known in Russia as the Great Patriotic War).
*. *. *
Not all of the estimated 20,000 children are in camps like the one at Yevpatoria; some have been placed with Russian foster families or in boarding schools. But the camps are described by Mykola Kuleba, Ukrainian Commissioner for Children’s Rights, as a form of “cultural genocide”:
“This is the technique that the Russian Empire used in order to quickly assimilate the population after conquering new territories, to make them obedient to the regime. The main thing is to resettle [them] and start reeducation. That is, to see what needs to be done in order to get these children obedient to the [Putin] regime as soon as possible. Make them ready to live in the Russian Federation and continue to send them to Russia, to families, to boarding schools.” [Id.]
And, of course, to forget who they truly are, where they came from, and that they once had blood relatives who loved them.
A Young Ukrainian Family
* *. *
Thus far, according to Yale Humanitarian Research Lab estimates, more than 8,400 Ukrainian children have been relocated to more than 50 known facilities . . . 13 in Belarus, and 43 in Russia and Russian-occupied territory . . . clearly making Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko complicit in yet another of Vladimir Putin’s crimes against humanity. [Id.]
Only about 1,300 children have been returned to Ukraine by various means.
A recent statement released by the office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said:
“ . . . without the return of the children abducted by Russia, the war cannot truly be considered over.” [Id.]
While President Zelensky has made previous public demands for the return of the children, and it most likely has been a subject of discussion in the ongoing ceasefire negotiations, it is unclear whether the matter has been given priority by the members of the Trump team. We hear plenty about land rights, security guarantees, rare minerals, and NATO membership.
As important as those issues are . . . don’t the lives of these children matter even more?
Being “Evacuated”
If their immediate, safe return hasn’t been made a non-negotiable condition of any settlement with Putin, it damn well should be.
I count myself among the fortunate people who have never been a victim of crime . . . although a Russian street thug did once try to get his fingers into my cross-body bag on a crowded plaza in St. Petersburg, Russia, in broad daylight. I began yelling at him in Russian, threatened to call for the police, and he ran off. He thought I’d be an easy mark; he hadn’t counted on the one “helpless little lady” tourist who actually knew what she was doing.
Kristi Noem
But I’m quite certain that if I had ever been unfortunate enough to lose, say, a purse to a thief — whether here or in another country — I would never see that bag, or its contents, again. My complaint to the police would be added to a mountain of similar cases, and I would be left with a promise that they would do their best, and a patronizing lecture on being more careful in the future.
However, things are different if you’re the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, and you’ve been careless enough to leave your bag on the floor below your table in a crowded Washington, D.C., restaurant while you’re busily engaged in conversation with your family.
To begin with, that was no ordinary handbag. It was a “high-end Gucci bag,” containing a “Louis Vuitton Clemence wallet, . . . driver’s license, medication, apartment keys, passport, DHS access badge, makeup bag, blank checks, and about $3,000 in cash.” [Josh Campbell and John Miller, CNN, April 27, 2025.]
Surely not this obvious?!!
With that number of contents, the bag must have been fairly sizable. And even medium-size Gucci bags sell for — not hundreds — but thousands of dollars. So that thief knew what he was doing. And when he opened it, he must immediately have thought he was the luckiest petty thief in town . . . because the Louis Vuitton wallet alone could run upwards of $600, not to mention the $3,000 inside.
So this was no longer petty theft; it was theft on a grand scale. And what the thief probably did not know — at least, until he looked at the remaining contents of the bag — was that he had chosen as his victim du jour a high-level federal government official.
Forget the police; this was a case for the U.S. Secret Service. And since they already had egg on their faces for having allowed the theft to occur under their very noses, they had, shall we say, added incentive to solve the crime. Which is what they reportedly have done, within just a week’s time.
Today’s report does not mention whether the bag and any or all of its contents were recovered; but there is a fair amount of detail concerning the thief and his modus operandi. Though he is not identified by name, he is obviously not a novice at his trade.
Security footage at the restaurant showed him “purposefully moving closer to Noem as he zeroed in on her Gucci bag near her feet . . . dressed in dark clothing, [he] sat down at an empty table next to Noem with his back facing her and used his left foot to slide the bag away . . . He surveyed the restaurant before eventually picking up the bag, covering it with his jacket and leaving.” [Id.]
So, my earlier fantasies of his possibly having cartwheeled through the restaurant, or rappelled down from the ceiling, were way off the mark. He is just a very practiced sneak thief, unnoticeable in a crowd, who happened to choose his Easter Sunday victim very well. Not everyone walks around with $3,000 in cash.
As for a description of the perpetrator, Noem posted on X that he is a “career criminal who has been in our country illegally for years. Unfortunately, so many families in this country have been made victims by crime, and that’s why President Trump is working every single day to make America safe and get these criminal aliens off of our streets.” [Id.]
What the hell . . . ??!!!
Did this unnamed suspect just hand the Trump administration a huge gift of propaganda material to support their ongoing purge of immigrants? Is this suspect the actual thief . . . or was he simply arrested in a roundup of the “usual suspects” — i.e., one of Noem’s “criminal aliens”?
The report states that, aside from the one person in custody, “multiple additional arrests are expected in a theft ring recently targeting Washington, DC’s, Penn Quarter area.” And a Secret Service representative has said that “the defendant is a serial offender.” [Id.]
So . . . stay with me here . . . if he has been in the country illegally for a number of years; and if he is indeed a serial offender; and if he is possibly part of a theft ring operating in D.C.; and if neither he nor any of the other members of the purported “ring” have been apprehended until now; then how is it that he was so easily identified and taken into custody this week?
Could it be because the victim — Homeland Security head Kristi Noem — was a person of substance . . . a government official . . . a Trump ally? Because the incident was an embarrassment to the Secret Service, and had to be rectified? Or because the Secret Service acted more quickly and efficiently than the D.C. Police Department might have done if the stolen goods had belonged to you or me?
Whatever the case, the truth is that — despite the promise of the Constitution that we are all considered equal under the law — we are not.
There was a soap opera that ran on CBS-TV for an incredible 54 years, from 1956 to 2010, called “As the World Turns.”
I’ve never been a fan of soap operas in general; but it appears that the entire world, myself included, is living one now, in real time. It’s only been running since January 20th of this year . . . but it seems an eternity. And it could aptly be named, “As the World Comes to a Screeching Halt.”
But this is no tale of all-American families coping with the vagaries of daily life. This is disaster after disaster . . . day after day . . . never letting up long enough for us to catch our collective breath. And if that’s not enough, the people calling the plays keep moving the damned goalposts.
Like Donald Trump. (You knew that was coming, didn’t you?) Well, he did it again yesterday.
After weeks of stomping on Ukrainian President Zelensky, while double-jointedly kissing the backside of Russian President Putin, he suddenly came up with the following mind-blowing comments following meetings with Zelensky and with French President Macron and British Prime Minister Starmer . . . while in the Vatican for the funeral of Pope Francis, no less:
“They [Russia and Ukraine] are very close to a deal, and the two sides should now meet, at very high levels, to ‘finish it off.’ Most of the major points are agreed to. Stop the bloodshed, NOW. We will be wherever is necessary to help facilitate the END to this cruel and senseless war!” [Molly Nagle, Alex Ederson and Hanna Demissie, GMA, April 26, 2025.]
In the Vatican: President Macron, P.M. Starmer, Donald Trump, President ZelenskyOne-on-One in the Vatican
But the real shocker came when Trump posted on his social media platform Truth Social: “There was “no reason for Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns, over the last few days. It makes me think that maybe he doesn’t want to stop the war, he’s just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently, through ‘Banking’ or ‘Secondary Sanctions?’ Too many people are dying!!!” [Tim Lister, Catherine Nicholls and Sophie Tanno, CNN, April 26, 2025.]
“Just tapping you along”? Really?!! You’re just now figuring that out??!!!
And Zelensky, thanking Trump for the “good meeting,” posted on social media:
“We discussed a lot one on one. Hoping for results on everything we covered. Protecting lives of our people. Full and unconditional ceasefire. Reliable and lasting peacethat will prevent another war from breaking out. Very symbolic meeting that has potential to become historic, if we achieve joint results.” [Id.]
Well, if that isn’t a complete 180 from what he’s been told until now . . .
Suddenly, Trump is talking tough to Putin, and holding out hope to Zelensky . . . the man he recently demolished with a shameful verbal attack in the White House. And in view of all of this, I’d like to request:
“Will the real Donald Trump please stand up.”
Because there is never any way of knowing what he means, or what he might say next. For that matter, we don’t know what’s being discussed in his phone calls with Putin, or in the meetings between Putin and real-estate-investor-turned-negotiator-without-portfolio Steve Witkoff. What surprises might they have in store for Zelensky?
*. *. *
And speaking of that last Putin-Witkoff meeting in Moscow, how does the U.S. negotiator walk alone . . . by himself . . . unaccompanied . . . into a meeting with the Russian president and two of his top advisers — Yuri Ushakov and Kirill Dmitriev — with only a Russian interpreter, and none from the U.S., present?
[The following photos are screen shots from a CNN broadcast.]
Witkoff Entering AloneMeeting the Russian InterpreterThe Russian Side of the Table
That’s three experienced, diabolically savvy politicians against one businessman with zero background in politics or diplomacy who, like his boss, takes whatever Putin tells him as gospel.
Can you say “set-up”?
All we can do is tune in tomorrow for the next episode in the continuing drama of:
Earlier this month, Russian film critic Yekaterina Barabash appeared in a Moscow court, where she was sentenced to two months of house arrest for allegedly spreading lies about Russia’s war against Ukraine.
Yekaterina Barabash – In a Moscow Court
Upon leaving the courtroom, she said that her arrest had been a surprise:
“The doorbell rings and [you expect] a kind person, you open the door and there are men in masks.” But she added, “at least I’ll have two months of freedom.” [Ray Furlog, RFE/RL’s Russian Service, April 22, 2025.]
What she meant by the second comment was not entirely clear; she may have been anticipating that further charges would be forthcoming, or she might have been thinking of making a run for it. At some point earlier this month, she was designated a “foreign agent” by the Russian Justice Ministry — a commonly-used moniker for those who speak out against official government policy.
My Image of a “Foreign Agent”
When authorities went to her home on April 13th to carry out a routine check, they found that she was not at home . . . a clear violation of her two-month sentence. On April 21st, the Russian prison agency issued a statement to that effect, after which a Moscow court changed her sentence, making her subject to a term of up to ten years in prison. A warrant has now been issued for her arrest.
*. *. *
But what had she really done?
When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Barabash condemned the action, saying that Russian forces had “bombed the country, levelled [sic] whole cities to the ground.” [Id.] As Russian authorities maintained that no state of “war” existed, and that the action was merely a “special military operation,” not targeting civilians, such comments were deemed illegal . . . and grounds for prosecution. But she continued to speak out, even appearing on RFE/RL’s Russian Service programs and criticizing the Kremlin’s authoritarian rule.
Russia’s Idea of a “Special Military Operation” – Kyiv, April 2025
*. *. *
Bravely, Barabash’s friends and other supporters stand behind her. Author Anna Berseneva wrote that “millions of decent people think the same as Yekaterina Barabash.” And critic Andrei Plakhov has said that she is “an honorable, principled person — a serious risk factor right now.” [Id.]
And Plakhov could not be more correct. You only have to consider the growing list of journalists and others now in prison for similar “offenses” . . . and the many who have already fled the country.
For her sake, I hope that Yekaterina Barabash has been able to do the same.
Just sayin’ . . .
*. *. *
While Yekaterina Barabash remains missing, she (happily) does not qualify to be added to our list of hostages. But we continue to remember and support those who still languish in Russian prisons and penal colonies on spurious charges:
The Azov 12 David Barnes Ales Bialiatski (in Belarus) Gordon Black Andrei Chapiuk (in Belarus) Antonina Favorskaya Konstantin Gabov Robert Gilman Stephen James Hubbard Sergey Karelin Ihar Karney (in Belarus) Vadim Kobzev Darya Kozyreva Artyom Kriger Uladzimir Labkovich (in Belarus) Michael Travis Leake Aleksei Liptser Ihar Losik (in Belarus) Daniel Martindale Farid Mehralizada (in Azerbaijan) Nika Novak Marfa Rabkova (in Belarus) Igor Sergunin Dmitry Shatresov Robert Shonov Eugene Spector Valiantsin Stafanovic (in Belarus) Siarhei Tsikhanouski (in Belarus) Laurent Vinatier Robert Romanov Woodland Vladislav Yesypenko (in Crimea) Yuras Zyankovich (in Belarus)
. . . and any others I may have missed.
We haven’t stopped pressing for the safe return of each and every one.
Was there ever any doubt the Russians would blame Ukraine for yesterday’s car-bomb killing of General Yaroslav Moskalik? In fact, on the very day of the bombing, the Kremlin had already said that “[Kyiv] continues its involvement in terrorist activities inside our country.” [Frances Mao, BBC News, April 26, 2025.]
No surprise there . . . not really. But it is mind-boggling to note how quickly they managed to apprehend someone they identify as “Ukrainian special services agent Ignat Kuzi [for]plant[ing] explosives in a Volkswagen Golf” . . . which were then allegedly detonated remotely from Ukraine. [Id.]
According to the FSB (Federal Security Service), Kuzi was a spy who had been recruited by Ukraine in 2023, and had arrived in Moscow by car in September of that year. He has supposedly been in Moscow, spying for Ukraine, for nearly two years without detection; but within 24 hours of allegedly committing this crime, he has been identified, apprehended, and given a full confession.
That’s some amazing police work!
Russian media say that the FSB has released a video of Kuzi giving a confession, along with footage of his arrest and of the bomb’s components [id.] . . . though I haven’t seen any photographs of the suspect in the news reports as yet. And thus far, there has been no comment on the matter from Ukrainian authorities.
It’s still early days, though, so we will have to wait and see how it plays out . . . or whether it simply gets swept under the proverbial rug.
It isn’t as though the people of Ukraine haven’t enough to worry about. Now — 39 years after the disastrous explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant — they’re grappling with the question of how to repair the massive hole created by a Russian drone attack on the top of the confinement shelter . . . the structure that is the only thing preventing further deadly contamination from escaping into the environment.
Ukrainian Workers Inspecting Russia’s Handiwork
Thus far, there has been no increase detected in radiation levels outside the shield since the drone strike on February 14th of this year. But beneath the shield, the original sarcophagus that was built to encase the debris following the explosion is crumbling. And, according to Shaun Burnie, a nuclear expert with Greenpeace, radiation levels are “ . . . so high next to the actual sarcophagus, the reactor unit, that you can’t work above it. It’s a very, very serious, enormous challenge for Ukraine at a time when it’s faced with so many other challenges, and so the international community really needs to step in and support.” [Stuart Greer and Oleh Haliv, RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service, April 26, 2025.]
The confinement structure was completed in 2019 by a 45-nation cooperative project costing $2.2 billion. It was predicted by the United Nations to “make the reactor complex stable and environmentally safe for the next 100 years.” [Id.]
But the U.N. hadn’t counted on Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine just three years later, or his indiscriminate firing of missiles and drones in all directions.
I’ve written of my experiences in Kyiv in 1993 — seven years after the Chernobyl disaster — when simply breathing the air caused a severe sore throat that persisted until I left Ukraine. I shudder to think of what might happen — not only to the people of Ukraine, but to the entirety of Europe and beyond — if this damage isn’t repaired and the older sarcophagus begins to leak.
Greenpeace’s Burnie points out that repairs will be costly, and Ukraine will need funding from the international community. The damage is currently being assessed, but Burnie says:
“They have to come up with a longer-term plan, which will be very extensive, very complicated, and potentially horrendously expensive.” [Id.]
Since this massive problem is just one more “gift” from Vladimir Putin to the people of Ukraine, I have a suggestion for him:
“You broke it; you fix it.”
And don’t try to whine that Russia can’t afford it. All you have to do is end the war that you started.
Imagine that you own a nice home, long since paid for. It belonged to your parents before you, and your grandparents before them. You grew up in it, then inherited it; you love it; you’ve cared for it; and you are now raising your own children in it.
But your neighbor covets your house and land, even though he has property of his own. He tries to force you to give it to him, threatening the well-being and the very lives of your loved ones. But you take a stand and refuse to move, reminding him that this is your property . . . not his. It has never been his.
Still, he persists, and his threats elevate. So a third party — supposedly neutral — is brought in as an arbitrator. But instead of reaching a conclusion based on the facts and legal documents, he realizes that the bullying neighbor is in a position to do favors for him, while you are not; so he sides with the neighbor, and tells you that if you will simply hand over your property, perhaps you and your family will be allowed to continue living . . . just not in your own home.
Ukrainian War Victims
And neither the neighbor nor the arbitrator seems to understand why you think this is unfair.
*. *. *
And that is precisely the ultimatum that has been presented to Volodymyr Zelensky, President of Ukraine, by Donald Trump and his special envoy, Steve Witkoff.
Following a fourth meeting yesterday between Witkoff and Vladimir Putin in Moscow — also attended by Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov and negotiator Kirill Dmitriev — Ushakov told reporters that the three-hour talk had been “constructive and very useful,” adding:
“This conversation allowed the Russian and US positions to be further brought closer together, not only on Ukraine, but also on a number of other international issues.“ [Darya Tarasova, Ivana Kottasova, Nick Paton Walsh and Sophie Tanno, CNN, April 25, 2025.]
Deciding the Future of a Nation
Thus far, Trump’s proposal would entail Kyiv’s ceding large swaths of territory to Russia, including the recognition by the United States of Crimea as Russian territory — an option considered by Zelensky to be a constitutional impossibility — as well as giving up Ukraine’s ambition to become part of NATO.
Another of Putin’s conditions — in which Trump has also expressed an interest — would be the lifting of sanctions against Russia . . . a move clearly, and understandably, not favored by European allies.
In yesterday’s meeting, Ushakov said that there had been a discussion of the issue of direct talks in the near future between Moscow and Kyiv as to a cessation of hostilities:
“As for the Ukrainian crisis itself, the discussion was, in particular, about the possibility of resuming negotiations between representatives of the Russian Federation and Ukraine.” [Id.]
The Homeowner and the Neighbor
*. *. *
Meanwhile, in Rome for the funeral of Pope Francis, Trump wrote on social media that Russia and Ukraine are “very close to a deal” to end the war:
“A good day in talks and meetings with Russia and Ukraine. They are very close to a deal, and the two sides should now meet, at very high levels, to ‘finish it off.’” [Id.]
I don’t know what Donald Trump considers “very close to a deal,” or how he thinks they’re going to “finish it off.” But it seems painfully obvious that someone — in this case, an entire country — is on the verge of losing their home . . . and to hell with facts, fairness, or legalities.
The bully will get his way.
A Family Home in Dnipropetrovsk After a Russian Attack
After three weeks in Canada with her family, Anneesa and son Wesley said a tearful goodbye once more, and made the long flight from Toronto back to Russia, changing planes somewhere in Turkiye.
Saying Goodbye Again
While in Saskatchewan, they obviously did a boatload of shopping, because they had four times the amount of their original luggage on the return trip. She also left her parents in the midst of selling and packing up the house they’ve lived in since she was three years old, which meant saying goodbye to her childhood home as well.
Memories of the Old Homestead
Meanwhile, back at the farm in Nizhny Novgorod, Arend and little Finley had made preparations to drive to Moscow to reunite with the two missing family members. Because of the late hour of the arriving flight, they rented the same house they had stayed in once before, but just for an overnight stay this time, before facing the long drive back to the farm the next day.
Mom’s Coming Home
And after the usual delays involved in getting through security and customs, they were back together — Arend saying that three weeks was the longest they had ever been apart, and that it had felt like losing a part of himself.
Here They Come!Yay! She’s back!Welcome Home
So all of the Feenstras are now back on Russian soil, where they apparently feel they belong. Though I still can’t comprehend their rationale in choosing Russia over Canada, I will say that I have never seen such a close-knit, devoted family.
Hopefully, that will continue to sustain them through the years ahead.
In December, Ukrainian intelligence claimed responsibility for the assassination of Russian Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov by a bomb planted in a scooter outside his apartment building in Moscow.
Thus far, there has been no comment from Ukraine regarding today’s car-bomb killing of yet another senior Russian military officer outside of his apartment building in the Moscow suburb of Balashikha.
The Murder Weapon
As in the earlier incident, today’s bombing was activated by remote control as Lieutenant General Yaroslav Moskalik approached the vehicle. The bomb has been described by investigators as “a homemade explosive device filled with shrapnel.” [RFE/RL, April 25, 2025.]
The Victim: Lieutenant General Yaroslav Moskalik
Moskalik was a key figure involved in the Normandy Format negotiations on Ukraine in 2015 and 2019, and was included in the Russian delegation in 2018 talks with Syria. There has been no public statement as yet concerning his possible role in the current war in Ukraine. [Id.]
The Scene of the Killing
It is too early to tell whether anyone will step forward to claim “credit” for this latest killing, though it is likely that Russian authorities will blame Ukraine in any event.
But these incidents are eerily reminiscent of the car bombing that killed Darya Dugina, the daughter of close Putin ally Aleksandr Dugin, in August of 2022, which was thought to have been intended for her father.
And the plane crash that conveniently rid Putin of the troublesome Yevgeny Prigozhin in 2023.
Yevgeny Prigozhin
Not to mention the suspicious fates of two Russian colonels, reported to have fallen out of windows in the space of two days in February of this year (one died, the other survived). And they are just a small percentage of the total number of individuals — oligarchs, as well as military and other government officials — who have met suspicious ends in recent years . . . a number of whom are said to have “fallen” out of windows.
In the 25 years of Vladimir Putin’s reign, there have been far too many instances of major attacks — a theater hostage situation, a shopping center bombing, the Beslan school massacre, to name just three — that have been officially blamed on various factions, but are suspected of possibly having been instigated by the Russian government itself for purely political reasons.
The individual deaths may or may not be related to the mass murders. There may not be one simple answer; but surely they cannot all be written off as “accidents,” or blamed on outside forces, as the Russian government invariably does.
Unfortunately, we will probably never have all of the facts . . . just a growing list of the dead.