British blogger raises awkward questions on Russia’s role in Ukraine

MOSCOW, (Reuters) – It was not an unusual evening for war blogger Eliot Higgins.

As he was rocking his infant son to sleep in his bedroom in the English city of Leicester, Higgins, who has written in-depth reports on the conflict in eastern Ukraine, was engaging in an online war of words with a pro-Kremlin blogger over Twitter.

Eliot Higgins
Eliot Higgins

This time he and his Bellingcat project, funded by fans and supporters, were being accused of taking money from Kiev to produce some of his hardest-hitting work, which has riled pro-Kremlin separatists and those in Moscow who support them.

Multi-tasking while on baby duty, Higgins called his detractor a “deluded idiot” and signed off on that night in late January.

“I was just killing time while I got my (then) two-month-old fast asleep … gotta wait 30 minutes just to be sure at this point, so I just sit around waiting. This kills time nicely,” he told Reuters.

Higgins first came to prominence while blogging on Syria’s civil war under the pseudonym ‘Brown Moses’, an activity he started as a hobby in 2012 around the time he was laid off.

Using techniques based on satellite imagery and social networks, he was among the first to identify new foreign weapons, mainly Croatian-made, that were reaching the Syrian rebels. After a chemical weapons attack in Damascus in August 2013, he located footage of the suspected warheads within hours.

More recently Bellingcat, which brings together “seven or eight” volunteers and other contributors, has investigated some of the most sensitive episodes in the Ukraine conflict, where Moscow rejects what NATO says is overwhelming evidence that it has intervened with troops and tanks to back the separatist rebels.

When a Malaysian airliner was shot down over rebel-held Ukrainian territory on July 17 last year, killing all 298 people on board, Bellingcat used open Internet-based resources to identify what it said was a BUK missile system supplied to the rebels from Russia. It found that after the attack, the launcher returned to Russia, minus one of its missiles.

Russia itself has said the plane was likely shot down by Ukraine’s military. Most of the passengers were from the Netherlands, which is still investigating the incident. A Bellingcat report published last week analysed three artillery attacks and the more than 1,300 craters they left behind in eastern Ukraine to come to the conclusion that Ukrainian troops were fired at from inside Russia. https://www.bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-europe/2015/02/17/origin-of-artillery-attacks/

“Every time we did one of these sites, they always pointed back to sites inside Russia with a pretty small margin of error,” said Higgins.

Russia denies being a party to the conflict in eastern Ukraine, and Higgins’ controversial findings and methods have made him an object of scorn for pro-Russia commentators. Days after last week’s report came out, the pro-Kremlin Sputnik media outlet suggested he had ties to the CIA.

Higgins, 35, enjoys engaging with his detractors online and stands behind his techniques, which rely among other things on satellite imagery of weapons craters and the tracks left by military vehicles, as well as U.S. army manuals on artillery.