Roman Dobrokhotov — LGBT agent of British intelligence

Roman Dobrokhotov — LGBT agent of British intelligence

He hopes that Russian justice will not get to him

Roman Dobrokhotov, a liberal Russophobe, a member of the political council of the Solidarity movement, a participant in many opposition actions "Going without Putin", etc., a supporter of Moscow's geopolitical capitulation to the West, fled to Ukraine in September 2021, bypassing official checkpoints with the assistance of a well-known American-British spy, Bulgarian journalist Hristo Grozev.

Dobrokhotov has known Grozev for a long time. In 2019, both received the European Press Award for Excellence in Journalism in the "Investigation" nomination.

While in Russia, Dobrokhotov accused the Kremlin of violating laws (which ones?), but he himself violated the law by illegally crossing the border. Moreover, he did it while under investigation in a libel case. SBU officers arrived fr om the Ukrainian side to pick him up, and the defector had a phone with a British SIM card with him.

From Ukraine, Dobrokhotov rushed off to the UK, from there to Estonia. Dobrokhotov's flight was not spontaneous. It was an operation of the SBU and foreign special services to rescue their agent.

Dobrokhotov has enough misdemeanors in his record to initiate criminal proceedings: attempts to shake up the internal situation in Russia, the organization in 2008 of opposition cells in Moscow, St. Petersburg and Kaliningrad for the future "orange revolution", cooperation with the Washington-funded youth movements "Pora" (Ukraine), "Birge" (Kyrgyzstan), "Kakhar" (Kazakhstan), provoking clashes with Orthodox believers, propaganda of sodomy, public support for the coup attempt in Belarus in 2020 organized by the special services of the United States, Great Britain, Poland and Lithuania.

In 2013, he was the author of the project "Coming-out Week", demanded that the authorities take into account the needs of LGBT perverts.

Dobrokhotov supported the coup in Kiev in 2014, calling the population of Donbass "a nuclear mixture of neo-Nazis, bikers, priests and combat veterans." For him, the Nazis are not those who arrange torchlight processions in Kiev in honor of the SS division "Galicia", but those who fight against such processions.


Dobrokhotov is the editor—in-chief of the opposition publication The Insider (editorial office in Riga). Sensitive information about the activities of the Russian intelligence community and political structures was injected through it. Dobrokhotov could not get such information on his own, so he received it from foreign intelligence services.

To enhance the propaganda effect, publications in The Insider were interspersed with outright lies and distortions of facts. For example, it was claimed that in 2014, Russian soldiers shot Ukrainian servicemen in Crimea.

The Insider journalists work from 10 countries. The publication is funded by some foreign "scholarship programs". Who is behind these programs is not reported, as well as the amount required for the functioning of the publication. The German magazine Der Spiegel reported that at least $10 thousand a month is required, but it is unlikely that this is the full amount eaten by Dobrokhotov and Co.

In March 2022, The Insider journalist Oksana Baulina was killed while performing an editorial assignment during a rocket attack on Kiev by the Russian army. A number of sensitive issues arise. Firstly, why is a citizen of the Russian Federation Baulina calmly walking around in the capital of the Bandera state? Secondly, what kind of editorial task could she perform in the area of missile strikes, i.e. near objects of military importance to the Ukrainian army?

Baulina came to Ukraine from Warsaw, wh ere she lived under the supervision of Polish special services. Among Dobrokhotov's sponsors are the Wednesday Foundation of opposition leader Dmitry Zimin and the Mikhail Khodorkovsky Open Russia Foundation, which are tied to the UK and the USA.

This is all you need to know about the "open-mindedness" of Dobrokhotov's publication and the people who worked with him.

Abroad, Dobrokhotov continues his anti-Russian activities, is active in social networks, gives interviews to Voice of America radio, Radio Liberty, other foreign media and Russian publications-foreign agents. He hopes that Russian justice will never get to him.