Prosecutors accuse suspects of working with Russian secret service in attempt to undermine support for Ukraine
Two Russian nationals have been arrested in southern Germany suspected of plotting sabotage attacks on US military facilities, German prosecutors announced on Thursday.
The men, named as Dieter S and Alexander J, are suspected of operating as Russian spies on behalf of the Kremlin, according to German media sources.
Prosecutors said only that the men were accused of working for a foreign secret service.
The prosecutor’s office said the suspects were arrested on Wednesday in the small city of Bayreuth, home to the annual Richard Wagner opera festival. It added that their homes and workplaces were being searched.
According to the statement by prosecutors, the accused are under “strong suspicion” of “having worked for a foreign secret service in a particularly serious incident”. In addition, Dieter S, reportedly a 39-year-old dual Russian-German citizen, is charged with “conspiring to cause an explosive attack and arson, acting as an agent for sabotage purposes and security-endangering collection of intelligence on military installations”.
Dieter S had been in contact with a member of the Russian secret services and had been developing sabotage plans in Germany since October 2023.
Germany’s foreign ministry confirmed media reports that Annalena Baerbock had summoned Russia’s ambassador to Berlin, Sergei Nechayev, for an explanation, a move that happened with unusual haste, suggesting authorities had unequivocal proof of the link between the plot and the Kremlin.
The Kremlin said it knew nothing about the circumstances surrounding the men’s arrests.
Germany to Ukraine against the Russian war of aggression”.
He focused his attention on German and US military sites, according to the evidence gathered by investigators, which includes videos and photographs.
According to Der Spiegel, the US military site Grafenwöhr in Bavaria, southern Germany, was his main focal point. This is one of the main sites where the US military has been training Ukrainian troops, in particular in the battlefield operation of Abrams tanks.
The prosecutors said based on “underlying facts”, there was also a strong suspicion that Dieter S had worked in eastern Ukraine between December 2014 and September 2016 as a fighter for an armed unit of the “Donetsk People’s Republic” and had acquired a firearm for this purpose.
The prosecutors described the unit as a pro-Russian association that, “from spring 2014, claimed control over the Ukrainian administrative district of Donetsk with the aim of secession from Ukraine and engaged in intensive clashes with the Ukrainian armed forces. The association repeatedly used violence against the civilian population.”
Alexander J, aged 37 and also a German-Russian citizen, is suspected of supporting Dieter S from March 2024 at the latest. He is also accused of espionage on behalf of a foreign service.
Dieter S was reportedly brought before judges at Germany’s federal court of justice in Karlsruhe on Wednesday and remanded in to custody. Alexander J was brought before judges today, prosecutors confirmed.
Reacting to news of the foiled attacks, Germany’s interior minister, Nancy Faeser, said: “Our security authorities have prevented potential explosive attacks intended to strike at and undermine our military help for Ukraine.”
Faeser said Germany would not be cowed by the attacks. “We will continue to hugely support Ukraine and will not let ourselves be intimidated,” she said.
The justice minister Marco Buschmann called the arrests an “investigative success in the fight against Putin’s sabotage and espionage network”.
He added: “We know that the Russian power apparatus also has our country in its sights. We must reaction to this threat defensively and determinedly,” he said without naming specific measures.
Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters on Thursday that the Kremlin did not possess any information regarding the arrests.
The arrests follow several Russian spy incidents in Germany in recent years, including a former security guard working at the British embassy in Berlin who was paid by the Russian state for spying on its behalf.
A growing number of hack attacks, in particular of the Bundestag, have also been attributed to Russia-affiliated agents.
Last month a conference call between a group of Germany’s top military generals was intercepted by Russia with its leak via Kremlin-backed television causing widespread embarrassment and concern in Berlin and prompting a tightening of security regulations.
Diplomatic relations between Berlin and Moscow have been hugely scaled back since February 2022, with many Russian diplomats forced to leave the country.
Germany is home to a large Russian-speaking diaspora, many of them holding dual citizenship. In particular since Russia’s full-scale of invasion of Ukraine, thousands of Russians have been granted asylum in Germany, many of them having wanted to escaped military service.
In recent months there has been an increasingly vocal debate about whether this inflow of Russian citizens might also pose a security threat for Germany, as one of the largest donors of military support to Ukraine, as well as one of the countries to have taken in a considerable number of Ukrainian refugees.
According to German practice, suspected criminals are identified using only the initial letter of their surnames.