Viktor Bout

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Виктор Бут
Viktor Bout
Born January 13, 1967(1967-01-13)
Dushanbe, Tajik SSR, Soviet Union
Nationality Russian
Other names "Merchant of Death"
Occupation former KGB major
Known for Illegal arms trafficking

Viktor Anatolyevich Bout (Russian: Виктор Анатольевич Бут) (born January 13, 1967 near Dushanbe, Tajik SSR, Soviet Union) is a Russian former GRU major and arms dealer.[1] Bout is suspected of supplying arms to the Taliban and Al Qaeda and of supplying huge arms shipments into various civil wars in Africa with his own private air fleet.[2] Nicknamed "the Merchant of Death", [3] he is the subject of a book by that name written by Douglas Farah and Stephen Braun.[4] According to Lee S. Wolosky, he is "the most powerful player in the trafficking of illegal arms." [1]

Recent reports suggest he is also operating in Iraq using front companies and Cargo Airlifts (Airline Transport, Air West, Aerocom and TransAvia Export). Bout came to officials' attention in the 1990s, when he was accused of supplying arms to rebels in West Africa after a cease-fire agreement had been brokered. At that time he owned or was using many airlines, including Air Cess and Centrafrican, which were later forced to shut down by authorities. He also supplied arms to the deposed regime of Charles Taylor in Liberia.

In May 2006, when 200,000 AK-47 assault rifles allegedly went missing in transit from Bosnia to Iraq, one of Bout's airlines was the carrier.[5] Bout's business partner is Hasan Čengić, the former Deputy Prime Minister of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, according to Slobodna Bosna and Douglas Farah.[6][7] Bout was arrested in Bangkok, Thailand on March 6, 2008, five days after the Colombian government found the computer of FARC's (Armed Revolutionary Forces of Colombia) leader alias "Raul Reyes" in a long term camp site in Ecuador .[8]

Yuri Orlov, Nicolas Cage's character in the 2005 film Lord of War is said [9][10][11] to be partially based on Viktor Bout.

Contents

[edit] History

Viktor Bout is a former Soviet military major who retired from the service in 1993 and became an international arms dealer [1]. Often referred to as the Embargo Buster, Bout made a significant amount of money selling illegal arms to countries that the UN has placed arms embargoes on. He first appeared on the radar when he sold weapons to African nations in civil wars under such embargoes.

Little is known about Bout before his military career, other than he was born to two Russian parents in 1967. According to his official passport, he was born in Dushanbe, USSR, which is now Tajikistan. However, Bout stated in a 2002 radio interview that he was born near what is now Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, and a 2001 South African intelligence file listed him as Ukrainian in origin[12][13]. After military training, he worked at a Russian military base in Vitebsk as a navigator. His duties expanded, eventually including the training of commando troops of the Russian Air Force.[14] In 1991 Bout graduated from the prestigious Soviet Military Institute of Foreign Languages in Moscow. He is said to be fluent in 6 languages, including Russian, Uzbek, English, French and Portuguese. After this he became a translator for the Soviet Army in Angola. In the same year the military base he was serving at was dissolved due to the collapse of the Soviet Union and Bout and his colleagues found themselves highly trained, but without jobs. He then started the Transavia Export Cargo company, which aided Belgian soldiers in Somalia in 1993. Russian sources have claimed that, in return for a cut of the profits, Bout was staked three Antonovs by the GRU of which he may well have been a member, given his association with the GRU school of foreign languages. Another of his early clients was the Islamic State of Afghanistan (later it was known by the name the Northern Alliance). Between 1992 and 1995, Bout made an alleged $50 million from supplying several Afghan groups.[15] This helped him grow his empire.

In 1995 Bout established the Trans Aviation Network Group in the Belgian city of Oostende. The company delivered weapons to the Islamic State of Afghanistan, but this relationship came to an end when the Taliban drove that government out of Kabul and reduced its control to just a few northern provinces. In May 1995 one of his shipments for the Afghan government was intercepted by the Taliban. In August 1995 the crew of this shipment escaped (or was released) from Afghanistan and soon after that Bout had a new customer: the Taliban.[16]

During this period Bout lived in Belgium, even purchasing a mansion and several luxury cars, as well as an apartment in Moscow. But in 1997 newspaper reports revealed his shady business, prompting Belgian authorities to investigate.[17] Bout moved to Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates; here he founded his United Arab Emirates company, which would become his main base of operations. Bout is alleged to have used Sharjah International Airport as well as airfields in the neighboring emirates of Ajman and Ras Al Khaimah as transshipment points for arms traveling to Africa and Afghanistan as late as 2002[18]. In 1995 he founded another company that would become synonymous with his dealings. Air Cess was based in Equatorial Guinea and registered in Liberia and was Bout's main way of supplying arms to African conflicts. Bout seems to have sold to any group that could pay him for his weapons. US and UN officials say that Bout smuggled thousands upon thousands of semi-automatic rifles, grenade launchers, other weapons and ammunition to Armenia for Nagorno-Garabagh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan and African conflicts in Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Libya, Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland and Uganda.[19]

Most weapons smuggled into Africa came via Bulgaria, which Bout visited frequently between 1995 and 2000. From July 1997 to September 1998 Bout reportedly smuggled an estimated $14 million of weapons into Africa. In 2000 Bout also delivered helicopters, anti-aircraft guns and armored vehicles to Liberia. Bout also established Air Cess in Miami, Florida, in 1997. The company operated until September 2001, when it was dissolved. [20]

Viktor has essentially done business with anyone irrespective of ideology, often contracted on both sides of a war. As well as some of the more controversial customers such as the Taliban or Charles G. Taylor, the UN and the US have also paid for his services.[13][21]

His nicknames, namely the 'Embargo Buster' and 'Merchant of Death', were coined by former British Foreign Office minister, Peter Hain. Upon reading the 2003 UN report on Bout's activities, Hain said: "Bout is the leading merchant of death who is the principal conduit for planes and supply routes that take arms, including heavy military equipment, from east Europe, principally Bulgaria, Moldova, and Ukraine, to Liberia and Angola. The UN has exposed Bout as the center of a spider's web of shady arms dealers, diamond brokers, and other operatives, sustaining the wars."

[edit] Fugitive status

Viktor Bout only became a high priority for international authorities when his African arms dealings became very prominent. His criminal profile in the public eye reached a high-water mark with the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Bout supplied weapons to the Taliban, which has close ties to al-Qaeda. This placed Bout on a top-priority list for U.S. officials.

Years of dealing in arms, however, has allowed Bout to build a large network of business and political contacts. The United Arab Emirates eventually caved in to co-operate on capturing Bout. Bout's business dealings were careful and complicated, making it hard for authorities to assess, for instance, which airplanes are his and which are operating illegally. Constantly moving the locations of himself and his companies, not to mention frequent re-registering—often illegally—his aircraft has made it hard for US and Interpol authorities to build a case against him. He was finally charged prior to 9/11. Before then he had lived openly in Moscow, as his warrant for arrest by Interpol had not been taken seriously by Russia. In 2002 both Belgium and Interpol issued warrants for his arrest. When the heat was turned up, Bout fled to Russia, where he remained protected by the Russian Constitution which does not allow extradition of citizens to foreign nations. The UN has banned Bout from international travel and frozen his foreign bank accounts.

Bout is said to have at least five passports and several aliases. He resided in Russia with his wife, Alla, and her father, "Zuiguin." According to a UN report, "information from the United States suggests that his wife’s father, 'Zuiguin,' at one point held a high position in the KGB, perhaps even as high as a Deputy Chairman."

[edit] Arrest

Viktor Bout was arrested in Bangkok, Thailand on March 6, 2008, during a sting operation set up by US DEA agents in Thailand[22]. Thai police acted on an arrest warrant issued by the US government, which accuses Mr. Bout of supplying weapons to Colombia's FARC rebels. He is currently awaiting deportation proceedings. Sources in Colombia and Spain claim that his arrest was made possible thanks to the information available from computers seized during the military operation that ended with the death of Raul Reyes (see 2008 Andean diplomatic crisis). [23]'

Further information about the DEA operation to trap Viktor Bout and his co-defendant Andrew Smulian can be found here.

[edit] In the media

Viktor Bout has always professed his innocence, saying he is just a businessman. He was interviewed by Peter Landesman for the Süddeutsche Zeitung (October 24, 2003).[24] He also appeared on Moscow radio station Ekho Moskvy, saying "I have never supplied anything to or had contacts with the Taliban or al-Qaida."[20]

In 2005 the movie Lord of War, starring Nicolas Cage as the character Yuri Orlov, was released. This movie is partially based on Bout.

In 2007 Stephen Braun and Douglas Farah published a book about Bout entitled Merchant of Death: Money, Guns, Planes, and the Man Who Makes War Possible.[4]

[edit] Arms dealings

Some of Bout's alleged arms customers include:

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c The HUMINT Offensive from Putin's Chekist State Anderson, Julie (2007), International Journal of Intelligence and Counter-Intelligence, 20:2, 258 - 316, page 309.
  2. ^ 'Lord of war' arms trafficker arrested, The Guardian, March 7, 2008.
  3. ^ BBC NEWS | World | Africa | 'Merchant of Death' still on the run
  4. ^ a b Merchant of Death book official website ISBN 978-0470048665
  5. ^ 200,000 AK47S FALLEN INTO THE HANDS OF IRAQ TERRORISTS? Daily Mirror, 10 May 2006
  6. ^ NATO-SFOR (quoting Slobodna Bosna), Main News Summary, 11 June 2004, accessed 28 November 2007
  7. ^ Douglas Farah, While Lebanon Boils, Watch Bosnia, July 19, 2006, accessed 28 November 2007
  8. ^ The Associated Press. "Thais May Charge Reputed Arms Dealer", New York Times, 2008-03-07. Retrieved on 2008-03-08. 
  9. ^ Viktor Bout: in the Movies...
  10. ^ Bertil Lintner: "A necessary evil"
  11. ^ William Norman Grigg: "Permanent War, Perpetual Profiteering"
  12. ^ Foreign Policy: The Merchant of Death
  13. ^ a b Douglas Farah and Stephen Braun: "The Merchant of death"
  14. ^ The criminal stories of the good soldier Bout - Knack no. 20, 16 may 2001, by Dirk Draulans
  15. ^ PBS Frontline story on Sierra Leone by Matthew Brunwasser
  16. ^ - A merchant of death or a decent businessman? from an article in Moscow Komsomolskaya Pravda 27 Feb 2002 pg.4
  17. ^ Ostend Airport arms' connection - from www.cleanostend.com, 24/03/2001
  18. ^ "Emirates Looked Other Way While Al Qaeda Funds Flowed," Los Angeles Times, January 20, 2002
  19. ^ UN Report: Monitoring Mechanism on Angola Sanctions - paragraphs 111 - 144, December 21, 2000
  20. ^ a b Viktor Bout - From International Outlaw to Valued Partner
  21. ^ Douglas Farah on The Daily Show
  22. ^ Revealed: trap that lured the merchant of death | World news | The Observer
  23. ^ Noticias24 :: Actualidad » Cae el mayor traficante de armas del mundo, gracias a los datos del PC de Reyes
  24. ^ Viktor Bout's File
  25. ^ Tamil Tiger Links with Islamist Terrorist Groups, Institute for Counter-Terrorism, Interdisciplinary Center

[edit] See also

[edit] External links