A whole bunch of sensitive Kremlin files were posted online and whoever did it is trying to frame “Anonymous” for the hack. Anyone could be lurking behind that Guy Fawkes mask, even Christopher Wray. Now that it’s common knowledge that “QAnon” is really the Federal Bureau of Instigation in disguise, someone resurrected the shade of a long dead collective. It was clearly done for only one purpose, specifically to claim full responsibility for the operation.
Anonymous could be anyone
Back in the ancient mists of time before the turn of the millennium, were the “phreakers.” They loved passing around ways to hack free phone calls. They got up to other mischief as well. Each had the Anarchist Cookbook memorized word-for-word. When computers came along, they gravitated into the world of 4chan and went wild. The concept of Anonymous was a natural extension. They soon morphed into a “collective” of pranksters out to cause trouble for the fun of it, or as they called it “lulz,” a variation of “LOL.”
The hacktivists were as busy as they were effective but their mask of anonymity was also their downfall. The FBI infiltrated them with ease. By the end of 2012, all the heavy hackers were behind bars. The feds made a decision to let the masses in the collective run loose and observe them. Later, they began to guide and direct them as well. QAnon was born.
After years have gone by without any serious activism from the core collective, “Anonymous” is suddenly in the headlines again. It appears they aren’t happy with Vladimir Putin. Daily Mail is reporting that they “leaked a massive trove of Kremlin files.” It seems that somebody is “targeting Russia until the country ends its ‘aggression‘ against Ukraine.” How convenient.
They hit Government institutions and Russian companies right between the wires. The massive “data dump” drops “more than 200,000 emails from the Russian Ministry of Culture, a body which has oversight over censorship, archives and art.”
Whoever did it “also hijacked emails and data from the oil and gas company Aerogas.” All the Deep State needed to do next was use the standard computer generated voice, Guy Fawkes mask, and appropriate staging, to pin the crime on “Anonymous.”
The masked spokesperson calls it “part of ongoing attempts to infiltrate and disrupt the Russian war effort.”
A series of cyber attacks
Whoever dumped the data is also trying to get Anonymous blamed for “a series of cyber attacks in retaliation for Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, including a data leak of Russian soldiers and takeovers of state-controlled TV.” The feds really love those masks. They were the best idea anyone at the bureau has come up with since J. Edgar Hoover started the blackmail collection.
The decentralized nobodys insist they “will continue hacking and releasing confidential information until Russia withdraws from its offensive.” That should be easy with all the state level ultra-secret hacking tools they have at their disposal.
The feds started building the cover story using Anonymous all the way back on February 24, the day Putin gave the order to invade Ukraine.
That’s when someone in a mask announced the collective was “officially in cyber war against the Russian government.” Any follower was encouraged to hack along at their own pace, just target the Kremlin.
Since then, Anonymous is taking the heat for “various attacks in an effort to spread information.” They claim to be out to defeat “press censorship legislation in Russia” that’s “severely hampering transparency about what is actually happening within the Kremlin.” Another high profile attack was supposedly carried out by “Network Battalion 65 or ‘NB65,’” an alleged anon affiliate.
That group “shut down Russia’s space agency so that Putin no longer had control over spy satellites.” Amateurs? Yeah, right. They “downloaded and deleted confidential files related to the space agency’s satellite imaging and Vehicle Monitoring System.” That’s not the work of “scammers and petty swindlers.“