Wednesday, August 25, 2010
The Souther-Orlov Famous Unknown Spy
His father was a middle-class businessman. His parents divorced when he was four years old, and he was raised by his mother. In 1975 he studied at a university, but after six months dropped out. Upon joining the USN he studied at the The Naval Marine Intelligence Training Center (NMITC)'s Photography Interpretation School under gaining command, at the end of which was assigned to the 6 th Fleet U.S. Navy.
From 1977 to 1982, Glenn Souther served in a FICLANT unit (Fleet Intelligence Command Atlantic) of the 6 th U.S. Navy based in Italy, handled the public relations, and was the personal photographer to the fleet commander Admiral Crowe. He served on the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, then on the command and control ships USS Albany and USS Puget Sound.
From 1983 to mid 1986 Souther was studying for his commissioning at the University of Old Dominion ROTC in Norfolk, and also served as a reservist at the U.S. Naval Base in Norfolk, where he had access to materials related to US space program.
Since his youth Souther was interested in the culture of the Soviet Union, loved to read Vladimir Mayakovsky, and read Marx. He has formed his own view of the world, which he wished was ruled by justice, equality, supremacy of collectivism over individualism.
In accordance with his convictions in 1980 Souther asked the Soviet embassy in Rome for help in obtaining Soviet citizenship. He did not ask for political asylum, did not indicate any harassment by U.S. authorities. Boris Solomyatin, the KGB resident in Rome, recalls how he recruited Souther: "No, he did not nurture the decision to betray his country - he wanted to find a new one. Souther did not even consider the nature of his service in the U.S. Navy to be secret.
Souther went on to serve on the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, and other warships, and he handled top secret secret documents and imagery. Therefore, the Soviet intelligence services were very interested in Souther and offered him help in obtaining citizenship in exchange for secret information. However, after he flatly refused material compensation for their services, they suspected him to be really working for U.S.
Information received from Glen Souther was genuine, sensitive and extremely important.
In Moscow my friends have found a treasure trove of US Naval documentation whith acronyms and serial numbers pointing to the commands and to the time frame of Souther's access. Note this as a catalog of publications turned over to the KGB:
More to follow, of course.
Souther was placed under surveillance, which lasted about a year, but has not produced success. He has repeatedly briefed at a local FBI office, where he first talked about his views on the world, the USSR, the Soviet culture. Later he was summoned for more questioning, which also yielded nothing. Souther was asked to undergo lie detector test, conducted according to the standards of the FBI, not the Navy's more scrupulous methodology. Because of the threat of arrest June 9, 1986 Souther booked a flight on an Alitalia flight, with a return ticket to the USA, flew to Rome, where the Soviet secret service transferred him to Moscow.
Life in the USSR
By the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on October 2, 1986 he was officially granted Soviet citizenship. He chose a new name of Michael E. Orloff. The application for citizenship Souther wrote: "With all the responsibility that the U.S. government will never do nothing of sincere and honest intentions to establish peace on earth until, until you are firmly convinced of its total military superiority. U.S. contempt has taken and continues to endanger the fate of other nations.
Orlov-Souther was the only foreign-born agent of Russian intelligence service who received the official title of a KGB officer. He was conferred the rank of a Major. He was given an apartment in Moscow and a dacha in the suburbs.
June 22, 1989 as a summer cottage Orlov wrote several suicide notes, went into the garage, shut all doors and windows and started the engine. His wish was to be buried wearing the uniform of a KGB officer. In honor guard at the funeral were the leaders of the KGB, including the Committee's chairman. Orlov was buried in the cemetery Novokuntsevskom Moscow, next to the grave of Kim Philby.
In a letter written before his death, addressed to fellow spies, Orlov wrote: "I do not in any way regret our relationship. They were long and helped me grow as a person. All were tolerant and kind to me. I hope... you forgive me for what I did...or for not going to the last battle."
This echoes his earlier letter in 1988: "Russia was for me the place where I have lived in their dreams - a country fascinated me, despite the fact that I was sometimes difficult and lonely."
More reading:
* Michael Glenn Souter. Foreign Intelligence Service of Russia. Retrieved April 26, 2010.
* Nicholas Poroskov He gave Russia a thousand nuclear goals. Foreign Intelligence Service of Russia (15 June 2006). Retrieved November 17, 2008.
* William Plummer, Chris Phillips A Moscow Suicide Reveals Glenn Souther's Double Life as a US Sailor Spying for the K.G.B. (English) (July 17, 1989). Retrieved November 17, 2008.
* Esther B. Fine Defector to Moscow Is Dead; Work for K.G.B. Is Lauded / / New York Times: Newspaper. - New York: June 28, 1989.
* David Johnston Ex-Sailor, a Suspected Spy, Granted Asylum by Soviets / / New York Times: Newspaper. - July 18, 1988.
* Soviet Union The Odd Case of M. Orlov / / Time. - July 10, 1989.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
A GRU dial radio is a typical part of a Soviet (Russian) secret cache
This one is Р-353 "Proton" - the workhorse of GRU's osnaz or KGB's spetznaz. Contains classic Soviet-era tubes, like the famous GU (ГУ) 19. My friends tested the set and found it to produce signals of more than 50 watts. For those who are somewhat familiar with Soviet technology, this set is related to R-350 Orel (or Р-350 "Орел".)
The set is great for transmitting data, especially telegraphy. It contains the typical coder-decoder pair, and a magnetic tape drive. Data transmission is under 1000 baud due to the use of the telephone dial, which ensures precision. Also contained therein are flip-style CW Morse key, comprehensive chart of GRU's and KGB's favorite, alternative, SSB, and other frequencies, discreet night light, even a lanyard with an all-weather pencil. The power supply is ahead of its times (1960's !!!) and challenges modern laptops: it is of the smart type, capable of charging its battery from any outlet and voltage in the 80-240 VAC range, and has an external 12 VDC socket. These rigs are always found packed in thick, well closed plastic bags, and plenty of desiccant packets. They are always ready to transmit. Scary?
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Aircraft sends interesting number message

The typical content of an ACARS message is an estimated time of arrival, a 4-character airport code, and some terse, telegraphic readable content.
Don't ask me how I got this :-)
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
The same Russian in USA obtains a schedule of NATO plans

Russian illegal in US reports on military traffic?


It shows that somebody very loyal to the Russian Federation, and not associated with the Russian Embassy in USA, has easily intercepted US-UK radio traffic. The first message deals with a mysterious emergency search and rescue by NATO in the Atlantic. The second message, stored on an unnamed server, this individual says that he left his recording equipment listening to the 6697 Hz frequency, Upper Side Band, RATT transmission mode. What he picked up is a Nimrod, a British maritime surveillance plane leaving US on the way to RAF Kinloss. The Russian listener appears to be professionally experienced in the US-NATO radio traffic patterns. The telegraphic style of the message is chillingly old school.
Do you see anything consistent with the material in this post?
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Interesting NSA-like spectra of signals caught over Leningrad



In the second screenshot, the Wave application in the Skip One Sample mode shed some light on the high rate transmission session.
The Code300 equipment have been useless. Note the characteristic flower pattern of the SK material. A while later a directional info0matiuon has been obtained, placing the source of the signals somewhere in the environs of the Kirov shipyards, aimed at Russian cruisers scurrying around in the Baltic just east of Poland.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
A comment requested to withhold the BAE spy materials from posting
He strongly recommended that I do not post the BAE letter circulating in Moscow (see the previous post):
I don't know what you do for a living, but if you need to keep making beer money with this blog, it would be in your better interests to avoid publishing the BAE materials. There are people in Russia and UK who know how to black hat your blog till it gets barely a visitor a month.
Thanks you, Mr. Compassionate. Not that I am afraid, I undestand I need to prepare the materials better.
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
BAE secret document
I am not interested in divulging British secrets. The point of the post is to shed light on the extent, the depth and ease of GRU and FSB penetration into Western defense establishment.
Monday, March 31, 2008
Che's hands still at work

What I have been told by my source in Moscow (not from among the ones that provided me with great photo recce of interesting places like the KGB in Minsk , the French Embassy, a radar, and a radio surveillance center) is that they (the Ministry of Internal Affairs) have also
pilfered a supposedly US Federal document (assuming it to be FBI or CIA) claiming that various white collar crimes committed across the USA wherein the fingerprints wherever lifted were identical to Che's.
The source asked me in an e-mail (using a disposable e-mail service) how could that be.
I say it is very simple, knowing the crowd associated with Hutch and Felix Rodriquez. Hutch is notorious for having used the hands he cut off unidentified dead vagrants for high-profile break-ins, the ones that have never become Watergate Scandals.
Has anyone been able to figure out Putin's garbled letter? Since I moderate posting here, I will not publish your messages containing unsanitized information.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Russian list of US codewords, Putin's letter
- Bits and pieces of a Russain classified letter
- Russian-compiled list of US codewords, for evryone's entertainment
I forgot about the adding to the post on the Russian Sigint station on Cuba, and sent out a bot with keywords in Russian (the list that was prepared by a good friend that speaks excellent Voronezh Russian (plus Chinese, Spanish, Tagalog, Persian, Arabic, Japanese, Hebrew [always a shadow of Mossad, isn't there?], German and Norwegian, has American citizenship, was born in a Moslem country and has a perfect Nordic look - all of which make his adventures fun and a great learning experience.
Thereupon I have opened the bot GUI, copy-pasted into the string window about 50(sic!) keywords in Russian, which equivalent to CODEWORD, SIGNATURE, PUTIN, IRAN, AGREEMENT, SECRET, GOLD, DOLLAR, RUBLE, USA, USN, etc (военно-морские силы, код, подпись, связь, валюта, соглашение, секретные)
The bot was out in the wild no more than 600 milliseconds after the 1.2 second it took to reach main(?) servers, when it returned (faster than previously, in the instances of the FSB Directory, or the first results) a harvest that included several raw TXT files, two of which contained live, classified content. First file name was IRANTRANS.DOC which, at the time, I had no patience to unbutton. I have copied unto here the only paragraph containing legible Russian material:
the text also contained the only link next to a military unit designation ("ТЭЧ 979 иап") that pointed to this photo:
characters in purple are of questionable interest ("Marantz" could be intriguing, though: a modified CD recorder?)
пл.Восстания Vosstania Sq., a St. Peterssburg subway station 1
Васильеостровская Vasilieostrovskaya, a St. Petersburg subway station 2
КДПО a KGB/FSB uniut associated with border patrol
Петрополь according to my source - a bar near station 2 frequented by the SpB University's foreign language and middle east studies students
Дрезден Dresden - Putin's foreign service assignment?
КЗакПО,Ленинакан,18П.З a border guard outpost in Armenia
ГУК undetermined acronym
комитетчиком десятого...восьмого "KGB (associate from the) 10th...8th (directorate)"
10th directorate is uncertain, thought the 8th was the crypto and communications department
МГИМО the prominent Moscow State Foreign Relations Insitute
ТЭЧ a Technical Management Unit
Истихбарат Istihbarat, the Libyan Security Agency
ОАПО ПЗКПП ...o.СРЕДНИЙ a border outpost near Srednyy (no time to look up)
СпНГРУ a GRU diplomatic/intelligence/DATT unit
Дальне-Восточный,округ 55 отряд 7 п.з a border guard unit ID in the Russian Far East
105-й a KGB, then FSB or GRU unit associated with DATT service
What is this file? What kind of text is this? A garbled crypto, innocently de-garbled by the bot? Someone said that it is a garbled Cyrillic embedded into Polish. You can only guess. I will have more definite analysis of this material in later posts.
Russian-compiled list of US codewords
The second source's file name is FLOTKODOVO.doc, and it contains many of the codwords in ordiginal English.
After consulting with a friend who is in USN Reserves, I realized that the list is that of US Naval and Coast Guard codewords used by a US Joint Task Force (Four?) in the Caribbean-Atlantic. The Russians, or Russkies, as I like calling them critters on this blog, no offense intended ( it is my Southern charm background shinin' through), must have done a good homework of radio monitoring and put together this rather interesting compilation. Due to translation and formatting, it is non-alphabetical.
The Russian understanding of the meaning was very much off, for example, they could not know that BILLY BUD meant a situation where sexual crime was committed aboard a searchable vessel. A Russian listener associated it almost literally to a billy club ("битой" - with a baseball bat ?!) I s that how they opearate: when in doubt -fudge it?
Many of these were easy for the Russian to know/figure out/ distill out of Google, but there are things like BILLY BUD, where I provide the Russian interpretation and the real meaning used by the US:
RESISTOR сопротивление, resistance - no clue, actually: a non-cooperative boater
CAPACITOR конденсатор, capacitor - really: a vessel with a probable cause for search
DIODE диод, diode - really: Dead in Water, drifting vessel, no way on
COIL катушка, coild, really: suspicious
TRANSISTOR -really: passenger vessel
POWER SUPPLY - no clue, really a vessel with contraband
9-SHOT - неизвестный p. (unknown meaning, no clue) really:port turn
MONITOR неизвестный p. really US Coast Guard
OREO Russians have no clue, but it is P3 Orion
I/O no clue, but it is: INS matter
FUSE no clue, US Customs
BUMP "push", no clue, really: hail someone by a click of an non-secure radio
UTL no clue, but: unable to locate
LL no clue, land line
CAR-LEFT , no clue, - left sideband of CB, non-obvious way of communicating
SOS no clue, but, US Secreatry of State
NCIC "Mational Crime Computer System" almost right: National Crime Information Center
PCW Russian got it right, but it means more: a violation of Pemit to Carry Concealed weapons
PSTIM no clue, possession of stimulants
PDOWN no clue, possession of donwers,
UILT no clue, under influence of liquor or THC
SCARAB Russian:"designer boat", really an innocent boat running scared
CIGARETTE Russian: "designer boat", really a guilty, arrestable boat running away
POPEYE, no clue, but it is am exerienced/retired sailor/boater
BUG no clue, it is an illegal immigrant/stowaway/INS problem
RAM no clue, cargo hold
ROM no clue, radio shack, radio report
C-NOTE Russians: $100, really: 100 gallons. tons
K - Russians: 1000, almost right - 1000 tons, gallons
ANALOG -no clue, really a bulk carrier
DIGITAL - no clue, really a container ship
CYCLE - no clue, really a round trip
HIGHWAY -no clue, really a plotted course
ZIGZAG - Russians: zigzagging course. Almost there: suspicious, avoidance course
BLUE - no clue, US Coast Guard
BLACK no clue, USN
8-BALL - Russians: captured, confiscated. Not exactly: a shootable target
BEERFRAME - no clue, really a confiscation and arrests
PHONE - no clue, really a backtalking subject
CAPTOR - Russians" captive torpedo; really an ex-captain, -military, smart attitude
CAPITAL - no clue, really a captain's personal cash
XPIG -Russians, a very creative guess: an ex-policeman; really a ship's piggy bank
FLOYD no clue, Florida
GEORGE - no clue, really Georgia
SCOTT -no clue, SC
NICK -no clue, really NC
VIRGIL - no clue, really VA
DALE - no clue, really DE
MARLIN - no clue, really MD
FIL - no clue, really PA
NUGENT - no clue (funny!) really NJ
ROSIE - no clue, really: Roosevelt Roads
KAY -no clue, really Key West
MAY -Russians: Mayport Naval Base; really: Miami
MOVIE - no clue, really Hollywood, FL
ESTEE no clue, really Ft. Lauderdale (think cosmetics)
WINNIEPEG - no clue (?) West Palm Beach
CHAPPA-Q no clue (and no chance -editor) Palm Beach (think Kennedy)
VR no clue, Vero Beach
CAPE COD - Russians went for the obvious, but is is Cape Canaveral (think Kennedy)
INDY - no clue - Daytona
MAYNOT - no clue, though it is Jacksonville Mayport NAS
COKE -no clue, really: Pensacola
TSAR - no clue, though they could try: CZAR is St. Petersburg FL
GITMO -Russians git right, it's a no brainer, Guantanamo
AT&T -no clue, it is US BATF
MOUSE - no clue, it stands for a radar report
MODEM -no clue: a secure comm channel
ROTA -US NAS Rota, Spain
PHIBRON -Russians got it right: USN amphibious Squadron
DATT -Russians correct: defense attache system
SIG -Russians went literal: "signal", whereas it is USN NAS Sigonella
AISSO - Russians Googled it: Automated Informations Systems Security officer
WIZZO -no clue: weapons systems officer
TACO - no clue, though they listened to S-3, P-3 talk- it is a tactical air combat coordinator
You never know what these bots would turn up next.
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
spy-curious network locations
Just a couple of days ago we have unleashed a bot that gathered officers' names from Russian Security services internal directory. This time the ICICL bot incessantly shuttled back and forth between a search engine server and a source of any query that asked for any of our own preset ,arbitrary espionage-related keyword, "secret report" for example). The results are interesting. Federal security service of Russian federation is understandable, but the Texas State Transportation Department, Gazsvyaz (gas communication?), Calgary Board Of Education?
bb-hfa
verizon internet services inc.
road runner holdco llc
earthlink inc
*se4-drp*
performance systems international inc.
telstra internet
adsl-go-plus
comcast cable communications inc.
cox communications
federal security service of russian federation
gesti n de direccionamiento uninet
jnec7300i02_consumer
volia subnet
*se3-ptk*
adsl pool - bras7 lsanca.1158477
adsl-fixip-cust
agt
allstream corp. corporation allstream
atx telecommunications services
bezeq international-ltd
bison building materials
bluewin is an internet service provider in ch.
btnl-chn-dsl
buyers united inc. - ucn
cable & wireless telecommunication services gmbh
cable and wireless jamaica
calgary board of education
charlotte bus & rv inc
command data inc.
data link impex
denton wilde sapte
east midlands regional broadband consortium
ezula inc-041105174302
france telecom
gazsvyaz ltd
harris county central technology center
hk cable tv ltd
iinet limited
imported inetnum object for monash
insight communications company l.p.
microsoft corp
netcologne gmbh
paetec communications inc.
pioneer online pvt. ltd.
poyner & spruill
pppox pool - bras15.lsan03-1179372062
pppox pool - bras15.lsan03-1189477562
pppox pool - bras21.rcsntx 011606 0935
pppox pool - mrdnct rback7
pppox pool - rback2.chic01
pppox pool - rback6.ipltin
private customer - sbc internet services
provincia di milano public subnet
proxad / free sas
qwest communications corporation
racetrac petroleum
range2 mansfield /18
rogers cable communications inc.
severen telecom
sevsky network in yalta and chernomorsk
sify limited
smart broadband incorporated
speakeasy network dsl
star broadband services(i) pvt. ltd
suddenlink communications
sympatico hse
telefonica de espana
telenet broadband cable operator network
telenet n.v. residentials
telenet operaties n.v.
telus communications inc.
texas state department of highways and
public transportation
tiscali italia spa
tpg internet pty ltd.
tstt isp
tt adsl-meteksan ttnet dynamic_aci
strange things are floating around on the net
Monday, February 11, 2008
The rest of the AK(47) FSB list
Латышёнок Константин - оперуполномоченный 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, старший лейтенант
Луценко Владимир Васильевич - руководитель ЧОП "Стеллс", генерал-майор действующего резерва ФСБ РФ.
Лысейко Владимир А. - начальник Управления по расследованию ОВД Генеральной прокуратуры.
а. Лысков Анатолий Григорьевич - руководитель аппарата директора ФСБ РФ, генерал-лейтенант.
Лысюк Сергей Иванович - командир отрада "Витязь", агент ФСБ РФ, генерал-майор.
Любочка - старший оперативный сотрудник 3-го отдела ОРУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Мадекин Павел - старший оперуполномоченный 1-го отдела УСБ ФСБ РФ, майор.
Макарычев Александр Константинович - зам. руководителя аппарата правительства РФ, в прошлом министр безопасности Кабардино-Балкарии, зам. начальника УРПО ФСБ, генерал-лейтенант.
Макеев Евгений - старший оперуполномоченный по особо важным делам 1-го отдела ОУ ДБТ РФ.
Меркулов - начальник отдела кадров ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Миронов Иван Кузьмич - начальник ОРУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ, генерал-лейтенант.
Налобин Николай Валентинович - зам. начальника УЭК ФСБ РФ, генерал-майор.
Нефёдов Сергей А. - старший оперуполномоченный по ОВД 3-го отдела УЭК ФСБ РФ.
Никитенко Виктор - командир ООН "Витязь", подполковник.
Никишии Александр Николаевич - полковник ВВ МВД РФ, помощник министра МВД РФ, Герой РФ.
Николаев Валерий - старший следователь ОВД Генеральной прокуратуры РФ
Осадчий Александр Ильич - помощник директора ФСБ РФ, генерал-лейтенант.
Осипов И.И. - зам. начальника Московского РУОП.
Павлов - следователь ГВП РФ, полковник юстиции.
Паламарчук Андрей - следователь ГВП, старший лейтенант юстиции.
Пащенко Иван - старший оперуполномоченный по ОВД 3-го отдела УСБ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Писяков - доверенное лицо ФСБ РФ.
Платонов Александр Михайлович - начальник 1-го отдела УБТ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Плохих Олег - старший оперуполномоченный 12-го отдела УУР ГУВД Москвы, майор милиции.
Погосов Сергей - бизнесмен, агент ФСБ РФ, псевдоним Григорий.
Понькнн Андрей В. - старший оперуполномоченный 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, майор.
Преображенский Константин - подполковник запаса КГБ СССР.
Проничев Владимир Егорович - первый зам. директора ФСБ РФ, генерал-полковник.
Рогозин Георгий Георгиевич - первый зам. начальника СБП России, генерал-лейтенант.
Родин Анатолий - зам. начальника 1-го отдела ОУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Рушайло Владимир Борисович - министр МВД РФ (1999-2001), секретарь СБ РФ (с.2001 г.), генерал-полковник.
Савостьянов Евгений Вадимович - начальник Московского управления КГБ-ФСК (1991-1994), зам. руководителя Администрации президента РФ (1996-1998).
Селезнёв Геннадий Николаевич - депутат от КПРФ, председатель Государственной думы РФ (с. 2000 г. ).
Семенюк Вадим Сергеевич - зам. начальника У ФСБ РФ по Москве и Московской области, генерал-майор.
Симаев Владимир - помощник начальника УРПО ФСБ РФ по безопасности, полковник.
Синица - "модельер", сотрудник ГРУ ГШ МО РФ
Скрябин Алексей - начальник направления 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, почётный сотрудник Госбезопасности, подполковник.
Скуратов Юрий Ильич - генеральный прокурор РФ (1995-1999)
Смирнов - зам. начальника Управления кадров ФСБ РФ, генерал-лейтенант.
Смородинский Виктор - агент ФСБ РФ.
Соболев Валентин Алексеевич - первый зам. директора ФСБ, генерал-полковник.
Соловей - старший оперуполномоченный 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, капитан.
Соловьёв Евгений Борисович - зам. директора ФСБ РФ, генерал-полковник.
Старовойтов Александр Владимирович - начальник ФАПСИ РФ, генерал армии.
Степашин Сергей Вадимович - директор ФСК РФ (1994-1995), министр МВД (1998), председатель Правительства (1999), председатель Счётной палаты РФ (с 2000 г.), генерал-полковник.
Стрелецкий Валерий Андреевич - начальник отдела «П» Службы безопасности президента РФ, полковник.
Субботин Сергей Дмитриевич - начальник отдела УЭК ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Сунцов Михаил Васильевич - начальник Оперативно-розыскного бюро РУОП МВД России.
Сурков Владислав Юрьевич - пом. начальника оперативного управления АТЦ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Трофимов Анатолий Васильевич - зам. директора ФСБ РФ, генерал-полковник.
Трубников Вячеслав Иванович - начальник Управления уголовного розыска МВД России, генерал армии.
Филиппов Валерий - зам. начальника отдела экономической контрразведки УФСБ РФ по Костромской области.
Филиппов Владимир Михайлович - министр образования РФ (с.1998 г.)
Хинштейн Александр Евсеевич - журналист газеты "Московский комсомолец", агент ФСБ.
Хохолыюв Евгений Г. - начальник УРПО ФСБ РФ, генерал-майор.
Шевчук Николаи - старший оперуполномоченный 7-го отпела УРПО ФСБ РФ, капитан.
Щеглов Герман - старший оперуполномоченный 7-го отпела УРПО ФСБ РФ, майор
Щербаков Михаил - начальник 6-го отдела ОУ АТЦ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Юмашкин Алексей А. - сотрудник УФСБ по Москве и Московской области, майор.
The A to K part of the bot grab is here. Happy hunting!
Saturday, February 2, 2008
FSB Secret Directory A to K (AK-47?)
And who woulda thought that a seemingly amateurish bot written in U6 would fetch real names like these - they might have come from the SVR and FSB's internal directory. Who knows? And you thought Russkies run a tight ship, with all their information being in Cyrillic. They assumed.
Алёшин Игорь - старший оперуполномоченный 1-го отдела ОРУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ, майор.
Алмазов Сергей Николаевич - начальник налоговой полиции РФ (1992-1999), генерал.
Аминов Вячеслав Маркович - бизнесмен, близкая связь Патрушева, Путина и Иванова.
Андрюшин Николай Аркадьевич - зам. начальника отдела военной контрразведки ФСБ РФ, в/ч 70850, подполковник.
Анисимов Николай - начальник Управления ГВП по надзору за ФСБ РФ, генерал-майор юстиции.
Бавдей Борис - начальник направления 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, подполковник.
Баграев Владимир - прокурор ГВП РФ, генерал-майор юстиции, адвокат группы "Медиа-Мост".
Баев - начальник отдела кадров УРПО ФСБ РФ.
Балдин Виктор - начальник 3-го отдела УСБ ФСБ РФ, полковник.
Барсуков Михаил Иванович - директор ФСБ РФ (1995-1996), генерал-полковник.
Барсуков Сергей Валерьевич - старший следователь по ОВД ГВП РФ, вёл на автора все четыре уголовных дела, подполковник юстиции.
Бобков Филипп Денисович - бывший начальник 5-го Главного управления КГБ СССР (политический сыск), генерал.
Брынцалов Владимир Алексеевич - предприниматель, депутат Государственной думы РФ.
Ваганов Владимир - зам. начальника 3-го отдела УБКК МБ РФ, полковник.
Василищев Василий - начальник отдела УСБ ФАПСИ РФ, полковник.
Виталий - бывший сотрудник московского ОМОНа, осуждён за изнасилование.
Волох Вячеслав Иванович - начальник Оперативного управления АТЦ ФСБ РФ до 1998 года, генерал-лейтенант.
Голованов Виктор - начальник УУР ГУВД г. Москвы.
Горшков Дмитрий - старший оперуполномоченный по ОВД 1-го отдела ОРУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ.
Гриневский Андрей - старший оперуполномоченный по ОВД 1-го отдела ОРУ ФСБ РФ, капитан.
Гудков - офицер действующего резерва ФСБ России в Государственной думе.
Гуща Юрий Андреевич - зам. начальника управления военной контрразведки ФСБ по внутренним войскам МВД; генерал-майор.
Дециев Борис - старший оперуполномоченный по ОВД УЭК ФСБ РФ, подполковник.
Енин Николай В. - зам. начальника 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, подполковник.
Ерин Виктор Фёдорович - министр МВД РФ (1991-1995)
Ермолов Сергей - старший оперуполномоченный по ОВД 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, майор.
Зданович Александр Александрович - начальник ЦОС ФСБ РФ, генерал-лейтенант, с 2002 г. зам. начальника ВГТРК (Всесоюзной Государственной теле-радиокомпании), офицер действующего резерва ФСБ РФ на ТВ.
Зорин Виктор Михаилович - бывший начальник АТЦ ФСБ РФ, генерал-полковник.
Илюхин Виктор Иванович - депутат Государственной думы от КПРФ, председатель Комитета по безопасности.
Ильюшенко Алексей Николаевич - и.о. генерального прокурора РФ (1994-1996),
Индюков Николай - старший следователь по ОВД при генеральном прокуроре РФ, генерал.
Камышников Александр Петрович - зам. начальника УРПО ФСБ РФ, капитан 1-го ранга, отдал приказ убить Березовского Б.А.
Карнаух Владимир - судья московского гарнизонного военного суда.
Катышев Михаил Борисович - зам. генерального прокурора РФ до 1999 г.
Климкин Николай Иванович - начальник Московского РУОП, генерал-майор милиции.
Ковалёв Николай Дмитриевич - директор ФСБ РФ (1996-1998), генерал армии, депутат Государственной думы РФ.
Кожанов - зам. начальника Службы криминальной милиции Москворецкого РОВД, полковник милиции.
Колесников Владимир - зам. генерального прокурора РФ, бывший первый зам. министра МВД РФ, генерал-полковник.
Колесников Евгений Александрович - зам. начальника ОРУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ, генерал-майор.
Комаров Александр - старший оперуполномоченный 1-го отдела ОУ ДБТ ФСБ РФ, капитан.
Коржаков Александр Васильевич - начальник СБП РФ (1991-1996), генерал-майор, депутат Государственной думы РФ.
Костюков - зам. начальника УБКК МБ РФ.
Круглов Алексей - старший оперуполномоченный 7-го отдела УРПО ФСБ РФ, майор.
Куликов Анатолий Сергеевич - министр внутренних дел РФ (1995-1999), генерал армии, депутат Государственной думы.
Кумаев Владимир - внутрикамерный агент, бывший офицер ГРУ ГШ МО РФ.
Кумарин-Барсуков Владимир Сергеевич-уголовный авторитет из Санкт-Петербурга.
Курганов Игорь - начальник 3-го отдела УЭК ФСБ РФ, полковник.
The rest of the names, L- to-Yu, we'll see later.
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Bot harvests FSB secrets
("recce, FSB, проксимити-пропуск, секретныe сведения," etc.)
hereunder are the results:
[Alexey Kondaurov, (ret.) FSB General]
Александр Купряжкин, генерал-лейтенант ФСБ начальник Управления собственной безопасности (УСБ)
[Alexander Kupryazhkin, leut.general FSB, director of the USB]
Александр Бортников, главa экономического департамента ФСБ
Alexander Bortnikov, the Chief of the FSB Economics Department
Отметка органов ФСБ России о проведении проверочных мероприятий для оформления допуска по третьей форме
[FSB authorities grading ("white paper", grade"?), of vetting procedures for filing clearance applications]
Журнал учета выдачи справок о допуске
[Log of clearance inquiries]
Номенклатура должностей работников,подлежащих оформлению на допуск к особой важности, совершенно секретным и секретным сведениям
[List of positions that must apply for a Special Importance, Top Secret and Secret clearances]
Sunday, December 30, 2007
More Siteseeing of Russian Secrets
- A well-defined, staggered pattern ABM site housing Gazelle missiles, 55°34'39"N 37°46'15"E
- Federal State Unified Facility, officially an establishment similar to U. S. General Services Administration, comprising of a concrete plant, miscellaneous warehouses and numerous sheds - except it is under the FSB command, 55°33'55"N 37°45'24"E
- GRU's OSNAZ (ЦРПУ) unit 309 is based at the Military Detachment 34608 here 55°22'8"N 37°28'45"E
- Recently declassified village of Berezki, containing a secret communication facility that has since passed on to Rostelecom for an unspecified use, 55°14'53"N 37°31'10"E
- summer cottages for KGB's 15 & 16 Departments, 55°15'1"N 37°25'22"E
- GRU and SVR summer cottages, 55°14'50"N 37°24'45"E
- A seemingly abandoned site known only as "UTK" that is reported to be an engineering reconnaissance training center, and guarded by armed roaming patrols, 55°11'27"N 37°39'17"E
- Rostelecom satellite communications support facility, with huge, dome-enclosed satellite dishes 55°45'31"N 38°39'34"E
- Former ammunition depot, the traces of which is visible in the tell-tale pattern, the rectangular off-limits perimeter now serving as a training center for armored corps 55°56'37"N 38°28'47"E
- Military Base, a Military Detachment, detachment number undisclosed 55°48'36"N 37°55'31"E
- FSB Training Center and Military Detachment No. 2056, also home to the Border Guard training center; an off-limits, well-guarded Microbiology Research Facility is located less than 1 km NE of the military base, at 54°58'23"N 37°13'25"E
- Headquarters and Operations Center for the important Early Missile Detection (Warning) Strategic System, including a Don or Dunay phased array, at Kurilovo, 55°4'1"N 37°2'45"E
- Military Detachment No. 64035, (Long Distance Communication Unit), together with the General Staff Communication Center, all inside the formerly classified city of Chekhov-3, 55°8'50"N 37°16'50"E
- Declassified town of Zarya, 55°45'31"N 38°4'56"E, associated with the Strategic Air Defense Headquarters 4.5 km WNW at 55°46'37"N 38°1'15"E
- One of the first and few baseball diamonds in Russia, at 55°47'45"N 38°1'2"E, which unwittingly served as a recce scale reference for metrics on the nearby Severniy-2 (55°47'47"N 38°1'26"E) classified town converted into summer cottages for the Defense Ministry's flag officers, and for the Strategic Air Defense Headquarters, see above, one of the terminal stations of the Moscow's secret subway.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Secret Russian Facilities, An Eye On Gold
- Russian Air Force Materials Research Center (ВИАМ) 55°45'50"N 37°40'39"E
- A Military Transport Park 55°36'51"N 37°27'45"E
- The SVR Headquarters 55°35'1"N 37°31'2"E
- A C-300 Missile site E. of Moscow 55°47'47"N 38°21'28"E,
- next to C-25 55°47'54"N 38°20'58"E
- High Command College For The Lines of Communications and Engineering Corps (MVKUDIV) Training Center 55°57'57"N 38°23'51"E
- Makarov Missile Support Center 55°59'43"N 38°20'14"E
- The 51st Kilometer Testing Grounds 55°58'20"N 38°16'59"E
- An antenna Farm, officially as a Mayak radio station, 56°3'50"N 37°56'50"E
- An off-limits part of a reservoir, classified, recent bathing unempeded 56°1'53"N 37°48'0"E
- An ABM site (Про А-135) a base for relatively new Gazelle and Gorgon missiles 56°10'51"N 37°47'13"E
- The modified Don 2NP large multifunction phased-array radar at Pushkino 56°10'18"N 37°46'14"E
- A Military Shooting Range, formerly tank, allegedly sniper, 56°10'40"N 37°11'46"E
- Early Warning System Command Center near Solnechnogorsk, 56°14'29"N 37°0'49"E
- The rebuilt Aquarium, the famous GRU headquarters, 55°46'55"N 37°31'24"E
- The Ministry of Defense Auto Pool 55°46'38"N 37°32'26"E
- The President's Transportation Support Facility 55°46'3"N 37°31'16"E
- US Embassy's Summer Cottage 55°47'15"N 37°24'49"E
- The Military History Archives 55°46'4"N 37°41'7"E
- The Bauman College, or Moscow State Technical University, for Special Technologies (satellites, missiles, warheads and ammunition) 55°46'11"N 37°41'26"E
- Federal State Unified Facility "Salyut", a jet engine factory supplying AL-31F powerplants for Su-27
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Cialis and the Real Chamber of Secrets
Monday, August 27, 2007
On Hash, Security, and Retirement
The word is, after the long absence, is distributed hash table. DHTs may have been used for file sharing networks, but I hope the gentlemen in grey suits, if they are not already a subcontractors for the company, figured out that Pastry and Tapestry are more than for academic hashing. They may have already went beyond the 160-bit string workspace. They have been used for closed, one-way, public key system exploitation because their k-bucket and distance calculation is an incredible tool for that very purpose. I2P, an anonymous network, is for the Moscow's SVR fairhair boys disguised as videogame and Emule addicts. Next time, find time just to create an image with pertinent information - do not steganograph it - and let the Kad system generate the hash for you. Copy and distribute the file's unique hash. The possibilities are limitless.
Funny how Google yields zeroes when searching for Mukasey (read this in Russian) hte KGB illegal. Is he still virtually illegal and unknown to the US Intel community? I don't know much outside FICLANT and AIC. Though back in late 1930's Mukasey used a Soviet ship to smuggle another illegal out of USA. More on the Russian illegal's adventures, read Drozdov, Vartanian. Mukasey, according to our calculations, has become a centenarian.
Monday, August 20, 2007
Of stegasaurs and steganosources
the solution - next week. The hint is Dostoyevsky.
Thursday, August 9, 2007
Numbers stations, CPU signals, Russian poker
The numbers station have been outdated. The new smart and wily kid on the block is actually the old cyphertext. Not only does the text look innocent, having been encrypted with NORVA, but it also serves as a vehicle for unrelated, second purpose messaging.
Thus, a message in NORVA
LITTLE JENNY TAKES SAWFLY LINE LEAF RISES SUNNY DAY
Besides conveying a message the likes of
DO NOT SEND DATA CHANNEL BRAVO KEEP GOLF OPEN
The secondary meaning of the NORVA is
573917739
which could stand for anything, unrelated to the plaintext.
It is also possible to distinguish various behaviors of CPU and memory operations. This is observed for artificial cases, like cycles of various CPU instructions, as well as for real-life cases, like RSA decryption.
A low-frequency acoustic source yield information on a much faster CPU in two ways. When the CPU is working on a long operation, it creates a characteristic acoustic spectral signature. Second, the temporal information about the length of each operation is obtained, and this can be used to launch a timing attack, especially when a cryptomaster can affect the input to the operation.
The valuable acoustic information lies above 10KHz, whereas typical noises, including computer fan noise, are found at lower frequencies and can thus be filtered out by proper equipment. In a task-switching systems, different tasks can be distinguished by their different acoustic spectra. When several computers are present, they can be told apart by their unique acoustic signatures, since these are dictated by the hardware, the component temperatures, and other environmental conditions. Very similar to working submarine passive sonar. Here is when SALWISS comes in handy.
The CPU instruction that is the least difficult to detect is the 80x86 HLT instruction. This instruction puts the CPU into a low-power sleep phase until the next hardware interrupt. Modern CPUs temporarily shut down many of the on-chip circuits, thereby significantly lowering power consumption and altering acoustic emissions for relatively long time. The difference between active computation, which never involves HLT instructions, and an idle CPU, where the kernel executes HLT instructions in its idle state, is very distinct. If the only program open is a cryptographic application, then this already suffices to detect the moment the program wakes up for input and when it finishes its cryptographic tasks, and this information can be used to launch timing attacks. There are, of course, other, subtler acoustic cues that carry detailed information.
***********
I hope more of you knew of Alexander Zaporozhsky. He is the one who helped CIA to bust Hansen. The Russians outsmarted Langley by letting Zaporozhsky visit Moscow unencumbered, building up his feeling of a secure status quo. His last visit was a result of his own yearning to come, entirely oblivious to the intensive operation culminating with his arrival in Moscow for the last time, putting an end to his cushy life in a Maryland suburb.
It seems (hoping against hope that it is no more than “seems”) that while the US security organizations are preoccupied with politically correct policies reflecting the views of new world order, grand new democracies and nation building, Russia, now rid of ideologies that used to guide USSR and KGB till the point of bankruptcy, has succeeded in streamlining its security operations into a no-nonsense, low-profile, mean, lean spying machine.