Russian Official so Sure of Ukraine Win, He Picked New Apartment: WaPo


  • The Washington Post obtained Russian comms intercepted by Ukraine and other countries.
  • They include a senior officer appearing to pick the Kyiv apartment he wanted before the invasion started.
  • Russia was so sure of a quick win that it picked Ukrainian accommodation for its personnel, officials said.

A top Russian security official appeared to have picked the Kyiv apartment he wanted to live in before the Ukraine invasion even started because he was so sure of a swift Russian victory, The Washington Post reported.

Igor Kovalenko, who was identified by Ukraine as a senior officer in the FSB, Russia’s security service, spoke to a subordinate on February 18 in an exchange that suggested he had picked out an apartment in Ukraine’s capital, according to intercepted Russian communications seen by The Post.

Russia’s invasion started on February 24, six days after the conversation.

Russia had expected a quick victory that involved taking Kyiv and installing a new government, but was met with unexpectedly staunch Ukrainian resistance. Russia retreated from Kyiv in April and has since focused on the country’s east and south.

The Post reported that the apartment was in “Kyiv’s leafy Obolon neighborhood, overlooking the Dnieper River.”

In the intercepted communications, Kovalenko also identified an apartment that already had an FSB informant living in it, and asked for the address and informant’s contact details, The Post reported. The subordinate then gave him the details, The Post reported.

The communications seen by The Post were intercepted by Ukraine and other countries’ security services, the newspaper said.

Kovalenko dealt with Ukraine for years in his FSB role, The Post reported. He is a senior officer in the FSB’s Ninth Directorate of the Department of Operational Information, which works to try keep Ukraine close to Russia. He worked with Ukrainians who were secretly being paid by Russia, The Post said.

Ukrainian authorities told The Post that Ukraine detained and questioned the unidentified informant when it intercepted Kovalenko’s communications.

Ukrainian officials told The Post that the informant admitted the FSB told him in the days before the invasion that he needed to leave his apartment — to pack his things, leave Kyiv, and leave his keys behind so that he would stay safe as the invasion began.

Ukraine’s security service then monitored…



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