Igor Sergun
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Igor Dmitrievich Sergun (, ; 28 March 1957 – 3 January 2016) was a Russian military officer who was a director of
GRU Gru is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the ''Despicable Me'' film series. Gru or GRU may also refer to: Arts and entertainment * Gru (rapper), Serbian rapper * Gru, an antagonist in '' The Kine Saga'' Organizations Georgia (c ...
, Russia's military intelligence service, from 2011 until his death in January 2016. He was promoted to
colonel general Colonel general is a military rank used in some armies. It is particularly associated with Germany, where historically General officer#Old European system, general officer ranks were one grade lower than in the Commonwealth and the United States, ...
on 21 February 2015.


Biography

Igor Sergun was born on 28 March 1957 in
Podolsk Podolsk ( rus, Подольск, p=pɐˈdolʲsk) is an industrial city, center of Podolsk Urban Okrug, Moscow Oblast, Russia, located on the Pakhra River (a tributary of the Moskva River). Population: History The first mentions of the vill ...
,
Moscow Oblast Moscow Oblast (, , informally known as , ) is a federal subjects of Russia, federal subject of Russia (an oblast). With a population of 8,524,665 (Russian Census (2021), 2021 Census) living in an area of , it is one of the most densely populate ...
. He completed the Moscow Suvorov Military School and the
Moscow Higher Military Command School The Moscow Higher Combined Arms Command School ''" Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR"'' (; abbreviated to MVOKU) is a higher military educational institution of the Russian Armed Forces. Alumni of the school have served with the Soviet Army and the Russi ...
. He was in active military service from 1973, in the GRU from 1984. There is no information in the public domain on him participating in the Soviet military campaign in
Afghanistan Afghanistan, officially the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, is a landlocked country located at the crossroads of Central Asia and South Asia. It is bordered by Pakistan to the Durand Line, east and south, Iran to the Afghanistan–Iran borde ...
in the 1980s, or in the Chechen Wars in the 1990s, or any other actual combat. In 1998, Sergun had a rank of colonel and served as military attaché in Tirana, Albania. On 26 December 2011, Sergun was appointed Director of GRU, which had in 2010 received a new official name, the Main Directorate of the General Staff. He also became Deputy Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. He was promoted to Lieutenant-General by a presidential decree on 31 August 2012 and Colonel General on 21 February 2015.Умер начальник ГРУ Игорь Сергун
rbc.ru, 4 January 2016.
In 2014, Sergun was put on the International sanctions during the Ukrainian crisis#Sanctions against Russian and Ukrainian individuals, companies and officials, sanction lists of the EU and the U.S. as a person ″responsible for the activity of GRU officers in Eastern Ukraine″. He was last spotted by media at Bocharov Ruchey, as one of the Russian delegation for negotiations with King Abdullah II of Jordan, on 24 November 2015.


GRU Director


Background

Perceived poor performance of the GRU in the Russo-Georgian War, the rivalry amongst Russia's intelligence services as well as the 2008 Russian military reform, overall reform of the Russian Armed Forces initiated in the late 2000s under the Defence Minister Anatoliy Serdyukov led to the downsizing and reduced standing of the GRU and eventual dismissal of the GRU chief Valentin Korabelnikov in April 2009 over his publicly voiced disagreement with the reforms. In October 2010, the Defence Ministry announced that the GRU Spetsnaz would be subordinated to the operational-strategic commands, in other words it would be transferred from the General Staff to the Russian Ground Forces, Ground Forces Russia's internal security service, the Federal Security Service, FSB, which Vladimir Putin as former head thereof had a special interest in, along with the external service, the Foreign Intelligence Service (Russia), SVR, were encroaching on the GRU's turf. The dismissal of Serdyukov as Minister of Defense in November 2012, after he was exposed as having used the army to build a private road, boosted morale and signaled a return to high military spending; Spetnaz units are believed to have been given priority in making improvements.


Political turmoil in Russia and Ukraine and inter-agency rivalry

The beginning of Sergun's tenure as the GRU chief coincided with the start of 2011–2013 Russian protests, mass protests in December 2011, which were being promoted in online social media and which Vladimir Putin accused the U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton of inciting. The FSB's inability to comprehend high tempo social-media agitation cost it some of the favour with Putin. Although the former head of GRU cyberwarfare was responsible for revealing FSB technical support of Shaltai Boltai (supposed anti-establishment hacking group that exposed the Internet Research Agency) as far as is known the IRA, which dates from the mass 2011–2013 Russian protests and disrupts social media comment threads critical of Putin, had never been run by the GRU. So called "Psychographics" and data mined targeting of advertisements as used by Cambridge Analytica was not practiced by the IRA, and its output in English has been characterized as the stilted product of a "troll farm" although that term has been criticized as failing to convey sophisticated manipulation by a foreign state. With the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation, annexation of Crimea and the speed and efficiency of the "Little green men (Russo-Ukrainian War), little green men" took control, it was taken as evidence that Main Directorate operations, technology, signals, and security had drastically improved. Under the previous GRU Director, Valentin Korabelnikov, there was criticism of a focus on Kinetic military action, kinetic operations rather than gathering intelligence, but as the political situation deteriorated for Russia in Ukraine, and the FSB analysis that rebellion across the Donbas region could be Autarky, autarkical proved faulty, the Main Directorate Spetsnaz troops became an indispensable cadre for the insurgency. Apart from the use of drones for real time reconnaissance and artillery strike, Unit 26165 is thought to have interfered with Ukrainian communications. Sergun supervised the deniable undercover units that America struggled to find an effective response to. The local partisan-proxies and Russian artillery were utilized in a combination of low intensity and siege warfare "to transfer military power into political progress, while obfuscating the associated cost" as in the Second Battle of Donetsk Airport.


Sergun and his U.S. counterparts

In the opinion of Peter Zwack, who from 2012 until 2014 served as the United States Senior Defense Official and Attache to the Russian Federation, before U.S.–Russia relations deteriorated drastically in early 2014, Sergun made efforts to promote MI to MI contacts between Russia and the U.S., which during 2012 and 2013 included meetings between U.S. and Russian intelligence chiefs from strategic regional and global commands that took place in cities across Russia. In June 2013, Sergun hosted Michael Flynn, then the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Director of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, at GRU headquarters, where Flynn gave a lecture to GRU officers and took questions and was entertained at a formal dinner.Peter Zwac
Death of the GRU Commander
Defense One, 1 February 2016.


Death and tributes

On 4 January 2016, the Kremlin.ru, web site of the Russian president released a short excerpt of President Vladimir Putin's telegram that expressed condolences to Sergun's relatives; the telegram was published by the Interfax news agency, which, citing the Kremlin's press service, also said that Sergun had "died unexpectedly on 3 January 2016, aged 59", without citing place and cause of death. BBC's report on his death said that "circumstances of his death [were] not clear" and quoted experts who credited him with the GRU having "recovered some of its former prestige", which had been reduced by drastic cuts to the service shortly before he took over.Russian GRU military spy chief Igor Sergun dies
BBC, 5 January 2016.
Two publications by the Russian tabloid (newspaper format), tabloid ''Komsomolskaya Pravda'' posted on 4 January, without reference to sources, in their subtitles, cited Moscow and heart attack for place and cause of death. A source in the General Staff cited by the Russian daily ''Kommersant'' credited Sergun with leaving behind an "exceedingly effective and balanced directorate". In May 2016, he was posthumously awarded the title of the Hero of the Russian Federation.


Questions over location of death

Two days after his death, the U.S.-based global intelligence company Stratfor questioned the official version of Sergun's death citing an unattributed report that alleged he had died on New Year's Day in Lebanon. In early March 2016, a similar theory was suggested by the Lebanese daily ''Al Akhbar (Lebanon), Al Akhbar'' that alleged Sergun was killed when on a visit to Beirut in a "complicated secret mission" carried out by unnamed Arab and Middle Eastern intelligence agencies. His death was cited as one in a series of "dozens of high-profile" Russian officials' (as well as Putin critics') sudden deaths, such as Vitaly Churkin's (February 2017), in "the past three years in Russia and abroad in suspicious circumstances" in a publication by ''USA Today'' of 2 May 2017. The Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed such media reports as rumours. During a 24 January 2017 questioning by FBI agents at the White House, then-U.S. National Security Advisor Michael Flynn said "he called Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, Kislyak following Sergun's death in Lebanon". After Flynn's FBI interview summary was released on 17 December 2018, the Russian Defense Ministry issued a denial that Sergun had died in Lebanon, calling the story "conspiracy nonsense".


State awards

*Order of Military Merit (Russia), Order of Military Merit *Order of Honour (Russian Federation), Order of Honour *Medal for Battle Merit *Medal "In Commemoration of the 850th Anniversary of Moscow" *Jubilee Medal "60 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR" *Jubilee Medal "70 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR" *Medal "For Impeccable Service", 1st class * Medal of the Order "For Merit", 2nd class * Medal "For strengthening of the state system of protection of information", 2nd class * Awards and emblems of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation, "Medal "Participant of Operation ''March-Shot'' Bosnia-Kosovo 12 June 1999"


See also

*List of Heroes of the Russian Federation


Notes


References


External links


"Official biography of the Chief of the New Russian Military Intelligence, Igor Sergun"
official website of the Russian Ministry of Defence]
(webarchive)

Путин соболезнует в связи с кончиной начальника ГРУ Игоря Сергуна
TASS 4 January 2016 {{DEFAULTSORT:Sergun, Irgo Russian colonel generals GRU Chiefs Russian diplomats 1957 births 2016 deaths Recipients of the Order of Military Merit (Russia) Recipients of the Order of Honour (Russia) People of the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery Military attachés for Russia Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia alumni Heroes of the Russian Federation Russian individuals subject to European Union sanctions