Wedding photos tie Sergei Skripal suspect to Kremlin spying elite - The Times

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October 15, 2019
Wedding photos tie Sergei Skripal suspect to Kremlin spying elite - The Times
Trump’s moves in Ukraine and Syria have a common denominator: Both help Russia - The Washington Post
'The Compatriots' Suggests The Days Of Domestic Politics Are Behind Us - NPR
Russia moves in where US moved out; 'Counterintelligence nightmare'; Time to move Incirlik nukes; Russian spies, revealed; And a bit more. - Defense One
After Khashoggi: nowhere is safe for dissent - Open Democracy

Wedding photos tie Sergei Skripal suspect to Kremlin spying elite - The Times

The Times
Wedding photos tie Sergei Skripal suspect to Kremlin spying eliteAnatoly Chepiga, left, at the wedding of a GRU commander’s daughterNew photographs of a suspect in the poisoning of Sergei Skripal add weight to the allegation that he was a serving officer with Russian military intelligence, increasing speculation of Kremlin involvement in the attack.
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Trump’s moves in Ukraine and Syria have a common denominator: Both help Russia - The Washington Post

The Washington Post
Russian forces are now operating between the Turkish and Syrian militaries, helping to fulfill Moscow’s main aim of shoring up its alliance with Syria and the Russian military port housed there — an outcome Russian President Vladi­mir Putin has sought for years.
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'The Compatriots' Suggests The Days Of Domestic Politics Are Behind Us - NPR

NPR
The Brutal and Chaotic History of Russia's Exiles, Émigrés, and Agents Abroad by Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan Hardcover, 361 pages | purchase Buy Featured Book TitleThe CompatriotsSubtitleThe Brutal and Chaotic History of Russia's Exiles, Émigrés, and Agents AbroadAuthorAndrei Soldatov and Irina BoroganYour purchase helps support NPR programming.
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Russia moves in where US moved out; 'Counterintelligence nightmare'; Time to move Incirlik nukes; Russian spies, revealed; And a bit more. - Defense One

Defense One
Russia steps up on day seven of Turkey’s invasion of northern Syria where American forces just departed the city of Manbij, which was the location where U.S.-backed Kurdish troops fought a key battle against the Islamic State group to recapture the town back in August 2016.
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After Khashoggi: nowhere is safe for dissent - Open Democracy

Open Democracy
This is the second part of a two part series on international law and how diplomatic space becomes a crime scene. Read part one here. Apart from breach of diplomatic immunity, the Jamal Khashoggi episode has reminded us of one more thing: The longstanding but recently rising phenomenon of extra-territorial repression of political dissidents.
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