Inside Russia's Secret Campaign of Sabotage in Europe
Briefly

Inside Russia's Secret Campaign of Sabotage in Europe
"By then, Anna was feeling increasingly uneasy about what she'd got herself into. Warrior's profile on Telegram included images of a pistol and ammo cartridges, something that looked like a missile, and a Russian flag. Anna worried that, by helping him, she was somehow aiding the Russian war effort. She contacted her sister, who had a friend who worked in law enforcement back in Ukraine."
"Three days later, Warrior2Alpha sent her a voice message with a new request. He wanted photographs of the bag's contents. Anna opened the bag and pulled out a remote-controlled car still in its box. A bubble-wrap bag containing a bundle of wires was taped to one side of it. She also found several cellphones, charging cables, and a pair of black vibrators."
A Ukrainian woman who had fled Kharkiv to Vilnius was contacted in April 2024 by an acquaintance who asked her to pick up a package. A Telegram user instructed her to retrieve a luggage locker item and then photograph its contents. The package contained a remote-controlled car, a taped bundle of wires, multiple cellphones and charging cables, and sex toys. The recruiter used a profile displaying weapons imagery and a Russian flag, prompting the woman to fear she was assisting Russia's war effort. She sought advice from family and a Ukrainian law-enforcement contact and was told to delete the photo.
Read at The New Yorker
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]