LONDON – An ex-KGB chief suspected of helping the former MI6 spy Christopher Steele to compile his dossier on Donald Trump may have been murdered by the Kremlin and his death covered up.
Oleg Erovinkin, a former general in the KGB and its successor the FSB, was found dead in the back of his car in Moscow on Boxing Day in mysterious circumstances.
Erovinkin was a key aide to Igor Sechin, a former deputy prime minister and now head of Rosneft, the state-owned oil company, who is repeatedly named in the dossier. Erovinkin has been described as a key liaison between Sechin and Russian president Vladimir Putin.
Steele writes in an intelligence report dated July 19, 2016, he has a source close to Sechin, who had disclosed alleged links between Trump’s supporters and Moscow.
The death of Erovinkin has prompted speculation it is linked to Steele’s explosive dossier, which was made public earlier this month. Trump has dismissed the dossier as “fake news” and no evidence has emerged to support its lurid claims.
The Russian state-run RIA Novosti __news agency reported Erovinkin’s body was “found in a black Lexus … (and) a large-scale investigation has been commenced in the area. Erovinkin’s body was sent to the FSB morgue.”
No cause of death has been confirmed and the FSB continues to investigate. Media reports suggested his death was a result of foul play. It was later claimed he died of a heart attack.
Christo Grozev, an expert on Russia-related security threats, said he believes Erovinkin is the key source to whom Steele refers in his dossier. Grozev said on a blog: “Insiders have described Erovinkin to me alternately as ‘Sechin’s treasurer’ and ‘the go-between between Putin and Sechin’. One thing that everyone seems to agree – both in public and private sources – is that Erovinkin was Sechin’s closest associate.”
Grozev, of Risk Management Lab, a think tank in Bulgaria, said: “I have no doubt that at the time Erovinkin died, Putin had Steele’s Trump dossier on his desk. He would – arguably – have known whether the alleged … story is based on fact or fiction. Whichever is true, he would have had a motive to seek – and find the mole … He would have had to conclude that Erovinkin was at least a person of interest.”
Experts expressed scepticism about the theory. “As a rule, people like Gen Erovinkin don’t tend to die in airport thriller murders,” said Mark Galeotti, an expert on the Russian security services.
Steele, 52, remains in hiding following his unmasking as the author of the Trump dossier.
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