The Wall Street Journal's Evan Gershkovich "never stopped reporting" during his grueling imprisonment inside Russia. On Thursday, his name showed up where he always preferred: as the author of a story, not the subject of one.
Gershkovich penned a first-person account about identifying the man behind the Kremlin spying operation that brought about his ordeal and was there when he was set free.
"When I was arrested by Russia’s security forces in 2023 — the first foreign correspondent charged with espionage since the Cold War — I never stopped reporting," Gershkovich wrote in a story that included collaboration from several other Journal reporters. "On my release I set out to identify the man who had taken me, and to learn more about the spy unit that had carried out his orders."
Working with other Wall Street Journal reporters who were asking similar questions throughout the nearly 500 days he was held prisoner, Gershkovich reported that the "man behind the curtain" was Lt. Gen. Dmitry Minaev, who runs Russia's Department for Counterintelligence Operations, known as DKRO.
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"It is at the very core of Putin’s opaque wartime regime. The story of how it got there reveals much about how Russia’s autocratic system became entangled in a broiling conflict with the West," Gershkovich wrote.
Gershkovich said the DKRO accused him of being an agent of the CIA, a claim that lacked any evidence and was called absurd on its face by the U.S., but it was enough for Russia to hold him indefinitely. The American-born journalist, whose parents are Russian immigrants, didn't know at the time he would immediately become one of the most famous people in the world.
Gershkovich was arrested in March 2023 while reporting in Yekaterinburg, the fourth-largest city in the country. He was eventually taken to the notorious Moscow prison Lefortovo, the site of many executions during the Great Purge under dictator Joseph Stalin and still a place designed to psychologically isolate dissidents and suspects.
"It was at Lefortovo that I came to understand the power of the shadowy force that had taken away my freedom," Gershkovich wrote.
The Journal's reporting revealed the secretive DKRO is key to Russian President Vladimir Putin's repressive regime and behind such moves as arresting Gershkovich, ex-Marine Paul Whelan and WNBA player Brittney Griner to create leverage for retrieving figures like convicted Russian hit man Vadim Krasikov and notorious arms dealer Viktor Bout.
Minaev was present on Aug. 1 when Gershkovich, Whelan and a host of others were freed in a massive, complex prisoner swap involving the U.S., Russia and Germany.
The plight of Gershkovich, who turned 33 in October, received significant media attention throughout his imprisonment, and President Biden even mentioned him during his State of the Union address earlier this year.
Gershkovich was convicted of his spying charges in a closed court in July and sentenced to 16 years in prison, an expected result, before being freed weeks later. Now, less than five months later, he's reporting again, and journalists online exulted in seeing their colleague's name in print where it belonged.
DKRO officials are highly compensated and considered the Kremlin's "most elite security force," Gershkovich reported. Two of his reporter colleagues were stalked while working in Vienna and Washington as intimidation tactics, he revealed.
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At home, the DKRO has arrested hundreds of Russians on spying, collaboration and treason charges to chill opponents of the Putin regime. The Wall Street Journal report also said DKRO was behind a purge of the nation's defense ministry as Russia's invasion of Ukraine faltered, arresting officials for corruption, and intelligence officials warn it is planning malign acts abroad to facilitate the war.
But its focus under Putin is primarily internal, the report said, due to the autocrat's fixation on spies inside Russia.
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"One former Russian intelligence officer described an extraordinary twist: The president at one point established a counterintelligence committee to look for collaborators among the ranks of counterintelligence agencies looking for collaborators among ordinary Russians," The Wall Street Journal reported.