Blowing Up Russia: Terror from Within (Russian: ФСБ взрывает Россию) is a book written by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky.[1] The authors alleged that the Russian apartment bombings and other September 1999 terrorist acts were committed by the Federal Security Service. Litvinenko and Felshtinsky wrote that the bombings were a false flag operation intended to justify Second Chechen War and bring Vladimir Putin to power.
The book was sponsored by Boris Berezovsky after his flight from Russia. The original Russian language book was published in 2002.[2]
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According to an interview with Yuri Felshtinsky, he started collecting materials about the Russian apartment bombings in 2001 and did not think that FSB has anything to do with the terrorism acts [1]. He was deeply disturbed after discovering that the bombings were in fact committed by the FSB. He consulted with Viktor Suvorov, a writer and former GRU officer. When asked: "Would you personally blow out the building with innocent people after receiving the order?", Suvorov replied: "Of course I would. That is our job. We always follow the order". Then Felshtinsky contacted Litvinenko who he knew from 1998 and who became a coauthor of the book.
On December 29, 2003, Russian Interior Ministry and FSB units seized 4,376 copies of the book intended for Alexander Podrabinek's Prima news agency.[3] FSB lieutenant Alexander Soima said that the book was confiscated as a material evidence in the criminal case No 218 initiated in June 2003 for disclosing state secrets.[4] Podrabinek was summoned by the FSB on January 28, 2004. He refused to answer the questions.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11] In response to FSB's banning their books, the authors granted the right to print and distribute the books in Russia to "anybody who wishes to do so" free of charge.[12]. The confiscated books were kept by the FSB until 2009 and then destroyed [2] because the criminal case against Litvinenko has been officially closed "due to death of the accused".
In December, 2007, investigator Mikhail Trepashkin said that according to his FSB sources, "everyone who was involved in publication of the book Blowing up Russia will be killed," and that three FSB agents have made a trip to Boston to prepare the assassination of Yuri Felshtinsky.[13]
Alexander Goldfarb, the executive director of the Berezovsky-funded International Foundation for Civil Liberties said the book "would haunt Putin the way the image of the killed Tsarevich haunted Boris Godunov."[12]
The Times: "For clues as to who wanted Alexander Litvinenko dead, you need look no farther than his book Blowing Up Russia"[14]
Sunday Times: "A vivid condemnation of the Putin regime"[15]
In a review for The Independent, Anne Penketh said that the book is "a densely written text" and "(f)or those seeking a reason for the killing of Litvinenko, this book contains the possible motive, although it does not mention the role of Berezovsky — sworn enemy of Putin — in bringing it out in the first place."[16]
Viv Groskop for The Observer wrote, the book focuses on the failed Ryazan bombings "in excruciating, rambling detail", but it fails to describe convincingly the involvement of Russian state security services in organizing the Russian apartment bombings and "lack of transparency makes it difficult to read it as more than conspiracy theory.[17]
Andrew Taylor in reviewing the book for The Spectator wrote the book "is essentially a detailed polemic against Putin and the Kremlin's hardliners in their pursuit of power. Most of it was written before Litvinenko's death and for a Russian readership; it was designed primarily as ammunition for Berezovsky's propaganda war".[18]
Eibhir Mulqueen in The Sunday Business Post wrote, "(t)he dearth of acknowledged sources aside, the presentation of this thesis manages at once to be as monotonous as an official police report, while being polemical in tone."[19]
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