[DEHAI] New Job for Ex-Soviet Pilots: Arms Trafficking


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From: wolda002@umn.edu
Date: Thu Dec 17 2009 - 22:15:19 EST


Thursday, Dec. 17, 2009
New Job for Ex-Soviet Pilots: Arms Trafficking
By Simon Shuster / Kiev

It was no ordinary smuggling bust. On Dec. 11, an old Russian plane landed
in Thailand to refuel after taking off hours earlier from Pyongyang, North
Korea. In its hull, police found 35 tons of explosives, rocket-propelled
grenades and components for surface-to-air missiles, all being transported
from North Korea in breach of U.N. sanctions. The captain and his crew were
promptly arrested and charged with illegally transporting arms. But
according to experts, they were only tiny cogs in a global network for arms
trafficking that feeds off the castaway pilots and planes of the former
Soviet Union. Suspected smugglers like Russian Viktor Bout have used the
system to transport weapons, as have huge U.S. military contractors like
Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR), though not for illegal purposes. And while
the flight crews like the one stopped in Thailand face the prospect of long
prison terms, the people behind this global arms-shipping service remain
hidden in the shadows.

The chief engineer on the flight was Mikhail Petukhov, 54, an out-of-work
Belarusian with nearly two decades of experience in the Soviet air force.
His wife Vera told TIME by phone from Belarus that the flight was
Petukhov's first for a company whose name he never told her. Before that,
he had waited more than six months for a job. "That's how it always is,"
she says. "Only once in a while by chance they'll get a call about some
one-off job. And they take what they can get. Once he was gone for three
months and came back with only $50; other times it's more. Then he waits
around again." She said he had never the other crew members, all Kazakhs,
before he left in early December for Kiev, where the flight is believed to
have originated. (See pictures of Russians in Ossetia.)

Most of the time, the coordinators of these flights are fly-by-night
companies set up to ship goods in violation of U.N. weapons sanctions or
embargoes, says Hugh Griffiths, an expert on illegal arms trafficking at
the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Analysts have said
the weapons on board the flight from Pyongyang were probably meant for
terrorist groups or rebels in the Middle East or Africa, the usual clients
for these types of portable but high-impact arms. But authorities have thus
far been unable to establish who arranged the shipment — the paper trails
are too winding and the companies involved too murky.

However, there are clear connections between the seized plane and smuggling
networks in Russia and Eastern Europe. Griffiths says the plane was
previously registered to a company that has links to self-professed Serbian
gunrunner Tomislav Damnjanovic and to three companies controlled by Bout,
who has been dubbed the "Merchant of Death" by Russian media. Last year,
Bout was arrested in Bangkok after allegedly offering to sell weapons to
U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency officers posing as members of the Colombian
rebel group FARC. While the U.S. seeks his extradition, Bout is being held
at Klong Prem prison in Thailand, the same place where Petukhov and his
crew are now jailed. (See the top 10 underreported stories of 2009.)

Damnjanovic has been accused of setting up other hauls like this one.
According to a report published in 2007 by a U.N. Development Program
(UNDP) research institute in Serbia, a company owned by Damnjanovic
smuggled military equipment in 1996 to the regime of Colonel Muammar
Gaddafi in Libya, which was then under U.N. sanctions. During one of the
shipments, the pilot of an aircraft noticed problems with the plane's
electrical systems. Damnjanovic insisted that the flight go ahead anyway,
the U.N. report alleges, and offered the crew $2,000 extra apiece. Fifteen
minutes after takeoff, the plane crashed near Belgrade and killed everyone
on board, the report says. "[The pilot and crew], they are victims of
circumstance. They are often paid extra money to accept a flight, often
using planes that they know are not entirely safe. But they are so
desperate for the money that they agree to take the flight," Griffiths
says. (See pictures of the rise of Muammar Gaddafi.)

Repeated efforts to contact Damnjanovic, believed to be living in the
United Arab Emirates, were unsuccessful. In a 2007 interview with the New
York Times, he denied any involvement in illegal dealings and defended his
involvement in arms shipments to places like Rwanda, calling his business
"completely official." He said, "What somebody else does with the weapons
when they get there is up to them."

Complicating matters is the fact that Damnjanovic has ties to U.S. defense
contractors like KBR and General Dynamics, according to the same UNDP
report. Both companies have hired Damnjanovic's companies in the past to
ship equipment on behalf of the U.S. military. "The case study of the
career of Tomislav Damnjanovic illustrates how smart arms smugglers work
within and outside the law, trafficking to rogue states and African
dictatorships under U.N. sanctions while at the same time supplying arms on
behalf of some of America's biggest companies, such as General Dynamics and
Kellogg, Brown and Root," the UNDP report states. (See "The Arms Trade
Booms Amid Global Economic Woes.")

In a statement to TIME, Heather Browne, KBR's head of communications, said
the company had no knowledge that the allegations in the UNDP report were
true. "KBR is committed to providing high-quality service to our customer,
the U.S. military, and conducting our business with ethics and integrity.
The company in no way condones or tolerates anything to the contrary," the
statement read. Rob Doolittle, a spokesman for General Dynamics, declined
to comment on the report.

For out-of-work pilots in Eastern Europe, a job is a job no matter who is
paying the bill. Vladimir Migol, a retired aircraft engineer who served
with Petukhov in the Soviet air force in the 1980s, says that for many
pilots, flying for these shadowy companies is the only type of work they
can get. "Everybody knows that these planes sometimes get busted with
stuff, or they crash," says Migol. "But you still have to fly. We all have
families to feed, and the chips fall where they fall."


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