Another high-placed victim was the ambassador of Estonia, Marina Kaljurand. She was
attacked when the Estonian government removed a Soviet-era war monument, the Bronze
Soldier, from the center of Tallinn. Starting April 30, 2007, members of Nashi picketed
the Estonian embassy in Moscow. They blocked the street on both sides, making it impossible
for the embassy’s staff to leave. Rocks and paint were thrown at the embassy building
and slogans painted on the walls, such as “We reached Berlin, we will reach Tallinn
too.” Day and night Nashi members played loud music in front of the building. The
embassy personnel noted that “the young people were equipped with everything necessary
to maintain round the clock presence, including portable toilets, a field kitchen
and electricity supply.”[22] Tents had even been erected in front of the embassy in which the protesters were
taking turns to sleep. On May 1, 2007, the Estonian flag was torn down from the embassy
and shredded into pieces. On May 2, the ambassador had to break through a Nashi cordon
to give a press conference at the offices of the magazine
Cyber Attacks
On April 27, cyber attacks started, aimed at paralyzing the web servers of the Estonian
government. These attacks originated from Russian state IP addresses. Due to the attacks
access by foreign users of the government web pages had to be restricted.[24] Nashi also seemed to be involved in cyber attacks on the Georgian government’s
website before and during Russia’s war against Georgia in August 2008. In a report
of the Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence in the Estonian capital Tallinn,
the authors wrote: “In the case of possible Russian government involvement with the
cyber attacks on the Georgian government website in July and August 2008, the available
evidence supports a strong likelihood of GRU/FSB [respectively, the Russian military
and the internal secret service] planning and direction at high level while relying
on Nashi intermediaries and the phenomenon of crowdsourcing to obfuscate their involvement
and implement their strategy.”[25] The close, almost symbiotic cooperation between Russia’s secret services and the
youth movement is particularly interesting. In this context the project of the “Kremlin
School of Bloggers,” set up in 2009 by the Fund for Effective Politics of Kremlin
ideologue Gleb Pavlovsky, should also be mentioned. The “Kremlin School of Bloggers”
sells the Kremlin’s policies to the young Internet community by writing blogs, attacking
opposition websites, and posting ideological YouTube videos.[26] The name of its website (liberty.ru) is Free World (