-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.infoburger.freeserve.co.uk/Gangsters%20Paradise.htm
<A
HREF="http://www.infoburger.freeserve.co.uk/Gangsters%20Paradise.htm">Gangster
s Paradise
</A>
-----
ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE EAST - The trammelling of a Superpower and the
cost it inflicted in the name of freedom
By our Russian Mafia Correspondent

Andrei Sergeyev, one of the leaders of the "Velikiye Luki" gang,
murdered in October 1995


GRIGOR is a street-wise Muscovite who sells his ass to anyone for twenty
roubles. There are plenty of takers; many don't bother to pay. Aged a
mere eight years, he roams the streets, railway stations and airport
terminals of this once proud city, his small, angelic face smeared with
grime and distorted by a cigarette jutting from his mouth. Suddenly the
granite like exterior dissolves, his bottom lip trembles and tears track
down his filthy cheeks. "I want to go home." But there is no home for
Grigor to return to - his parents are lost to a world of vodka in a new
land of mayhem, murder and mobsters.

He is one of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of discarded children that
infest the railway stations, bus shelters and wastelands of Moscow
seeking a "quick fix" to suppress their daily misery. Their only crime
was to have been born at a time when a super-power tottered and then
fell into the yawning chasm of poverty.

Russia is a fractured society where the underworld dominates with a
Capone like ferocity. The state has evaporated in all but name.
Corruption, always a feature of communist life, has blossomed out of
control. The new Tsars of the nineties, dressed in sleek Armani suits
and Gucci loafers are today immensely wealthy, bloated with arrogance
and are utterly ruthless.

Within one year of Mikhael Gorbachev's ousting, over 2600 (some
estimates put it as high as 5000) "crime clans" employing over 3 million
criminals had miraculously appeared and spread like wild-fire throughout
the former Soviet empire. Forty of them match or out-number in size the
Sicilian and American Mafias'. Collectively they form the most powerful
criminal grouping in the world.

This lead Boris Yeltsin to warn in 1993 that "Nearly two-thirds of
Russia's commercial structure has ties to the growing criminal world."
Such was their alarming growth that Interior Ministry officials warned
that organised crime would control between 30-40% of the Gross National
Product "In the next few years." This figure has probably been
out-stripped already. How these syndicates came to the fore and achieved
such concentrated power in so short a time remains mystifying.

Yet criminal gangs have been operating in the Soviet Union for decades.
The "Organizatsiya" - the organisation - dates back to Bolshevik times
where it concentrated on political assassination, armed robbery and
other juicy gang-banging enterprises. Courted and used by Stalin for his
own devious purposes the organisation was later outlawed and a great
many of its members ended up in the abominable Gulags. But by then they
had formed a hard backbone of professional criminals who became
impervious to Stalin's cruel and whimsical treatment.

Known as "vorovskoy mir", the "world of thieves" they secretly spread
throughout the whole of the Soviet state becoming a "corporation of
underground establishments." In the same fashion as all other criminal
organisations they were a secret society and developed strict laws that
set them aside from society at large. Transgression of the "thieves'
law" was meted out by a "court" and was always severe. Stealing from a
fellow thief, turning state informer and a host of other offences were
punished by execution. The worst transgression was serving in the State
army and the offending culprit could expect to suffer a bloody and
excruciating death.

The princes of the Russian thieves were the indomitable "vory v zakone"
- "thieves-within-the-code" who presided over national meetings and
developed tactics for each of their clans. Imprisoned by Stalin these
elite criminals were as tough as they come. Not only did they mete out
severe punishment to their underlings but would inflict the most
exquisite pains on themselves. Masochistic in the extreme these acts
were intended to demonstrate to their gaolers that nothing could subdue
their iron wills.

One prisoner, Edward Kuznetov serving 15 years in prison, observed some
of these harrowing and perverse rituals: "I have seen convicts sew up
their lips or eyelids with thread and wire; sew rows of buttons to their
bodies; nail their scrotum to the bed... cut open the skins of their
arms or legs and peel it off as if it were a stocking..." He also
witnessed cases in which they would "... cut lumps of flesh from their
belly, roast them and eat them; or cut off their fingers or nose or ears
or penis..."

All good things come to an end and it was no different for vorovsky mir,
whose rigid disciplines began to crumble in the wake of World War 11. By
1950 they had begun to court foreign crime syndicates, convening a
European "congress" in the small city of Lvov. Leading Mafia's from
Italy, Poland and elsewhere attended. At home in mother Russia the
thieves began re-establishing links with the eminently corruptible
communist functionaries. Over the course of the next four decades they
were irrevocably bonded by a super-glue of self interest and greed.

Operating in quiet collaboration with the Sicilian and American Mafia's,
the Japanese Yakuza, Chinese Triads, Turkish and Balkan crime
syndicates, the Russian gangsters understood that the Soviet empire
possessed massive natural wealth. Besides having the world's largest oil
reserves, the Soviet republics have more timber than the Amazon as well
as a vast reservoir of gold, gemstones and other mineral wealth.

In addition there was an immense stockpile of weapons waiting to be
plundered and millions of acres of additional land that could be put to
work for the already burgeoning narcotics industry. The problem for the
crime Barons was how to tap into and exploit this vast array of riches.
With that special Russian flair for Chess, a strategy developed that was
so complex that it became practically invisible and was always two or
three moves ahead of law enforcement. Ultimately it was to lead to the
most spectacular criminal "coup" ever devised.

Commencing with a scam that would've made Ian Fleming's "Goldfinger"
blanch in admiration, the Russian Mafia, along with outgoing Communist
Party officials, "heisted" thousands of tonnes of gold bullion from
Russia's reserves. Valued at $35 billion, Russia's gold reserves were
estimated to be 100 million troy ounces - just under 3000 tonnes. Then
in September 1991, a palpitating Grigory Yavlinski, the economic
supremo, revealed to delegates at the Group-of-Seven industrial
countries meeting in Bangkok, that a mere 240 tons were all that was
left. Two months later, in November, even that had disappeared. "Not a
gram of gold remains; the vaults are empty," said Victor Geraschenko,
chief of Gosbank, the Russian Central Bank.

In one operation valued at $4 billion, over 300 tons were secretly
shipped to Switzerland, some of it subsequently arriving in London.
Unlike Britain, the Swiss authorities do not keep records of gold
imports which makes it a favourite centre for disguising the point of
origin - a very effective method of laundering suspicious transactions.
The bullion, some sources now believe, was used as collateral in a
secondary scam that set-out to vacuum-up all the available Rouble
bank-notes in existence at the time and sell them at knock down prices
to organised crime syndicates from around the world.

Still shrouded in fear and secrecy, 280 billion Roubles - valued at
hundreds of billion of dollars at the official commercial rate of
exchange - were being offered for sale by shady wheelers and dealers to
leading figures in the world of organised crime. In one suspect
transaction during January 1991, 140 billion Roubles were hawked by
Russian middle-men, for an estimated $7.7 billion but was foiled by the
KGB. Six months later; just a few weeks prior to the abortive coup that
unseated Mikhail Gorbachev, a suspiciously similar transaction for 140
billion Roubles was struck and eventually netted $4.5 billion -
demonstrating how quickly the currency had been devalued.

At about the same time another shadowy character was bidding for "100
billion clean, clear, good, legal, bundled, counted, verified, packed
and stamped Russian Roubles" on offer from a questionable Liechtenstein
based company. Purchased at a fraction of the true price, as low as 8
cents on the dollar, Colombian cartels, Mafia hoods and the planet's
criminal fraternities were stampeding to snap up the banknote bargains.
In part to launder their dirty narcotic revenue and also to reap a giant
profit by repatriating the currency in exchange for bargain basement
priced commodities, the Rouble proved to be the currency of choice
during 1990 and 1991.

In another case, a massive TIR truck was driving the highways and byways
of Italy, loaded to the ceiling with Russian banknotes looking for a hot
home. Information on this scam was gathered by phone taps authorised by
Italy's Antimafia Commission. Santo Pasquale Morabito, a notable Italian
narcotics dealer single-handedly purchased 70 billion Roubles. Costing a
paltry $4,6 billion, Morabito stumped up cash, anticipating a quick
killing. His agent, a member of the Turkish Mafia attempted to sell them
on but chose a Swiss undercover operator who brought the matter to the
attention of Swiss authorities. Meanwhile, another TIR truck load of
notes being transported across Europe under the protection of KGB guards
was kept under surveillance by intelligence operatives. Cash was
draining out of Moscow at such a phenomenal rate that it caused panic in
the gold-capped spires of the Kremlin.

So great was the concern that Prime Minister Valentin Pavlov announced
to a startled world that he had uncovered a "plot by Western banks to
flood the country with roubles and topple President Gorbachev." Pavlov
went on to claim that banks in Switzerland, Canada and Austria were
involved but could not or would not name them, but added that this was a
"financial war" and feared what would happen as the billions of
banknotes were dumped back on the market over-night "creating
hyperinflation, and destabilising the economy."

Adding that "Quite simply Mr. Gorbachev is getting in someone's way," he
outlined a scenario in which the Soviet Union was threatened with a loss
of economic independence in a kind of "annexation, quiet and bloodless."
Largely derided in the west for his comments, the Kremlin none the less
viewed the matter seriously enough to order the recall of all 50 and 100
Rouble notes in circulation. It is now known that reputable western
banks were involved in this shady business. One "solid European bank"
was discovered to have offered a well-heeled and cash rich American
investor a block of one billion Roubles complete with "official letters
guaranteeing their re-entry into the Soviet market."

At the time no one could understand why the world's leading gangsters
were forming a disorderly queue to buy vast quantities of what was in
effect little more than coloured paper - with hard cash. These were
criminal entrepreneurs who possessed sharp business minds honed by
decades of greed and power, and were not known for squandering their
wealth. We now know that behind this ploy lay an even more audacious
plan. The Soviet Union was to be asset-stripped.

And the assets were stripped. To the bone and back again. Gradually it
became clear that the massive quantities of exported Roubles weren't
just coloured paper. Almost worthless on the international market they
were repatriated through some of the 260 Mafia controlled banks that
sprung-up around the country. Having gone full cycle from export through
to repatriation, the laundered Roubles, now viewed as inward
"investment", were used to capitalise and finance the explosion of
crooked Joint Venture companies that had mushroomed in the meantime.
There followed a massive spending spree that continues to this day.

Russia has been recently described by Italy's Antimafia Commission as "a
kind of strategic capital of organised crime from where all the major
operations are launched." Wasting no time, the now Rouble-rich Mafia's
set about plundering Russia's abundant natural treasures. Platinum,
gemstones, oil, lumber, strategic raw materials; non-ferrous metals, -
cobalt, copper, bronze, titanium even caterpillar tractors and other
high value equipment; all went under the hidden hammer.

Transformed into a world of grab-it and prosper, Moscow began to wilt
under the bizarre influx of plundering crime Barons and opportunists.
One enterprising soul who now banks and has residence in Monte Carlo -
reputedly itself a hot-spot for money-laundering and medallion wearing
Mafiosi - was Artjom Tarasov. With entrepreneurial flair Tarasov
acquired 4 million tons of crude oil at an equivalent price of $5.00 a
ton. On-selling at $140 a ton the deal netted a cool half a billion
dollars, less expenses, commissions, "kick-backs" and a healthy
share-out to his swindler partner, the American Marc David Rich. Rich,
the senior man of Marc Rich & Co., the giant commodities trading firm,
is currently wanted by the FBI who have posted a $750,000.00 reward for
his capture. Tarasov, meanwhile, became Russia's first
multi-millionaire.

Immensely more profitable, however, is the illegal trafficking in
narcotics and weapons and with prodigious profits derived from asset
stripping and other scams, these two enterprises were set to undergo a
meteoric rise. Russia has recently been estimated to have in excess of 2
million drug addicts, a figure that far outstrips the rest of Europe
combined. Globally the narcotics industry is thought to generate in
excess of $1000 billion annually.

Still the biggest dope peddlers around, the Colombians have cut an
agreement with the Russian Mafias' to import Cocaine for onward shipment
to the rest of Europe - which despite the much vaunted "fortress" label
is wide open to the East. Former Soviet colonies grow prodigious
quantities of dope. Authorities estimate that between them the CIS
states produce more hashhish than the rest of the world put together.
Likewise, prolific quantities of Opium poppies are grown and harvested
under armed guard in Turmenistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and
elsewhere, ultimately destined for world-wide distribution.

The narcotics flow through a sophisticated underground pipeline that
runs through Bulgaria and Romania and other eastern European "portals"
and onwards into the anxious hands of the Sicilian Mafia and Chinese
Triads who refine and distribute the end product. Psychotropic drugs
too, are a favourite item. These include Amphetamines and the immensely
powerful "Krokodil" estimated to be a thousand times more powerful than
Heroin.

Of far greater concern to western law enforcement and intelligence
communities is the widespread trafficking of arms, including weapons of
mass destruction. Plundered from former Soviet arsenals - often with the
willing assistance of former KGB and senior military officers - almost
any item is up for sale.

In one operation that took place in October 1992, police retrieved
thousands of missiles, millions of rounds of ammunition, an armoured
personnel carrier as well as a Mi-8 helicopter gunship. State
industries, now run privately, have also been quick to tread the bonanza
trail and sell the latest Soviet military equipment including Tanks -
sold at $100,000 per ton weight - plus an assortment of rocket launchers
and tactical missiles and fighter aircraft.

Far more worrying though, is the trade in nuclear weapons and material.
A U.S. House of Representatives Republican Task Force reported at the
end of 1992 that three tactical nuclear warheads had vanished. Priced at
$14 million a throw, and with a range of sixty kilometres, warheads were
being stolen to order from army installations in Irkutsk.

Master-minded by two former intelligence operatives - one ex KGB and the
other ex GRU, the intelligence arm of the Soviet military - they were
smuggled into Yugoslavia and then were trucked to Bulgaria, through
Turkey and onwards, it is claimed, to clients in Iraq and Libya

The same network filled an order for 32 kilo bars of plutonium that was
ripped-off from Ukranian storage depots, but were seized by Italian
police before reaching their destination, again in Iraq. Other seizures
in Europe have included quantities of Plutonium-239, Strontium-90,
Cesium-137 and highly enriched weapons grade Uranium. Despite these
police successes it is believed that large quantities of nuclear
materials are reaching their ultimate destinations - those countries
committed to making nuclear weapons.

Meanwhile the economic devastation of Russia continues unabated, a
gruesome testimony of corruption and criminality that is largely ignored
by an introspective and unmindful west. Growing numbers of despairing
Muscovites die from hypothermia on the snow-swept streets where they
have collapsed and huddled, foetal-like, following a mighty vodka binge.
On average twenty or so real-life "stiffs" daily arrive at the morgue
during the long winter months. Privatisation has bequeathed Russia
100,000 millionaires and an estimated 200,000 joint venture companies
that are owned lock, stock and pork-barrel by various "entrepreneurs" -
a word that nowadays has sinister overtones and is generally used as a
code-word for "criminal."

Embracing a free market economy - something the west insisted upon if it
were to grant foreign aid - has left Russia destitute. The old communist
days, as harsh and unyielding as they were, at least provided a staple
diet and free healthcare for the population. Despite being economically
wrecked, Moscow, paradoxically, is now the most expensive business
destination in Europe, overtaking Brussels and Paris in a one-stride
gallop. Quick buck opportunities for the hard-nosed businessman have
spiralled, even while the great majority of Russian citizens now look to
a future of unyielding squalor.

And for Grigor and his friends each dawn is just another day of bitter
hustling. Occasionally some solace is found in music. Gathered around a
smoking fire to ward off the chill, a group of street kids pass a
cigarette butt around and listen, as one of their number strums on a
stolen guitar. It is one of those soulful Russian folk songs that speak
of pain as a way of life. The words, sung by a sixteen year old veteran,
yearn for a day when they can look forward to wearing a "nettle-coat"
for comfort. The simplicity of the song brings out a rash of
goose-bumps. Physical pain can be borne, even welcomed, but it is the
emotional pain that cannot be endured in this new gangsters paradise.

And as the band plays on, an early Reagan administration National
Security Decision Directive (NSDD) remains classified. It is simply
enitled "Prolonged Economic Warfare against the USSR" As the economist,
John Maynard Keynes, once shrewdly observed "There is no subtler, no
surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch
the currency. The Process engages all the hidden forces of economic law
on the side of destruction, and it does it in a manner which not one man
in a million is able to diagnose."











The foregfoing was originally written as the 1995 feature article
"Gangster's Paradise" - Copyright 1999
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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