The attacks were distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks in which hundreds of
thousands of “zombie” computers overwhelm the target network. According to an Estonian
spokesperson the attack on Estonia originated in 178 countries. The Kremlin denied
being implicated in the cyber attacks. Afterward, however, direct Russian implication
was conceded through two incidents. The first involved Duma deputy and Kremlin pundit
Sergei Markov, who, on March 3, 2009, in a panel discussion with American experts
on information warfare, said: “About the cyber-attacks on Estonia . . . don’t worry,
that attack was carried out by my assistant. I won’t tell you his name, because then
he might not be able to get visas.” The assistant was thought to have been in “one
of the unrecognized republics.” Later it was stated that he was in the Moldovan breakaway
province of Transnistria—outside the territory of Russia. (Cf. “Sergei Markov Says
He Knows Who Started the Estonia Cyber War,”
The name of this assistant was revealed later. It would have been Konstantin Goloskokov,
a Nashi commissar. He told the
26.
Cf. Evgeny Morozov, “What Do They Teach at the ‘Kremlin’s School of Bloggers’?”
27.
In 2005 the movement distributed a brochure titled “Program for Combating Fascism”
in secondary schools and universities. The “fascists” named in the brochure included
Ilya Yashin, the leader of the liberal Yabloko youth organization; Yukos shareholder
Leonid Nevzlin; and the democratic opposition leaders Garry Kasparov and Vladimir
Ryzhkov. It is telling that Dmitry Rogozin, who at that time was chairman of the nationalist
Rodina party and, maybe, the only representative of the extreme right on this list,
was later appointed ambassador to NATO by Putin. (Cf. Oleg Kashin and Yuliya Taratuta,
“Obyknovennyy antifashizm,”
28.
Shaun Walker, “Pro-Kremlin Youth Group Blamed for Attacking Paper,”
29.
Dmitry Sidorov, “A Mafia-Style Message on Russian Free Speech,”
30.
In his article Podrabinek attacked Soviet veterans. “Your fatherland,” he wrote, “is
not Russia. Your fatherland is the Soviet Union. You are Soviet veterans, and your
country, thank god, has not existed for eighteen years. The Soviet Union is not at
all the country that you described in the school books and your liar press. The Soviet
Union—it is not only political leaders, Stakhanov workers, communist superproductive
workers, and cosmonauts. The Soviet Union—it is also peasant rebellions, victims of
the collectivization and the Holodomor, hundreds of thousands of innocent people who
are shot in the basements of the Cheka and millions who are tortured to death in the
Gulag . . . . The Soviet Union—it is permanent confinement in psychiatric hospitals
for dissidents, treacherous murders, and in countless Gulag cemeteries the anonymous
graves of my friends, the political prisoners who did not live to see our freedom.”
(Alexander Podrabinek, “Kak antisovetchik antisovetchikam ,”
31.
Cf. Follett, “Russia’s Past Mobilized to Shape the Present.”
32.