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How State-Sponsored Blackmail Works in Russia

The art of kompromat

Overview

In January 1999, Prosecutor General Yury Skuratov was summoned to the Kremlin by then-President Boris Yeltsin’s chief of staff, who showed him a videotape of “a man who looked like” Skuratov frolicking in bed with two prostitutes. Then he asked Skuratov to resign, even though the prosecutor was in the middle of investigating Yeltsin’s administration for taking bribes from a Swiss firm trying to secure lucrative contracts for Kremlin renovations. It was a grainy tape and Skuratov would later say it was fake, but he submitted his resignation nonetheless.(Excerpt)

Why is this important?

A strong and enlightening piece from the Atlantic about how the Russians have repeatedly used blackmail to force powerful people to resign as a result of scandals triggered by weaponized postings on the net. With some heavy implications – as The Atlantic points out quite consciously – for the future of Donald J. Trump. – Joel Garreau

Creator

Julia Ioffe

Publication Date

January 11, 2017