Authored by Andrew Korybko via Substack,
Belarusian media reported earlier this month that their security services busted a Japanese spy. He allegedly entered into a fictitious marriage that helped him legalize his stay in the country, after which he set up a businessĀ in GomelĀ to explain his travels, including to the border. He also taught Japanese. The spy allegedly hadĀ over 9,000 photosĀ of roads, bridges, and military facilities and wasĀ actively in contactĀ with his embassy. These reports raised a lot of eyebrows since few expected Japan to spy on Belarus. Ā
As it turns out, his home base of Gomel is in Ukraineās crosshairs as explained last monthĀ here, and itās possible that the security servicesā additional scrutiny on all activities there as part of their precautionary measures resulted in them finally catching him. His interrogationĀ also revealedĀ that he was involved in the failed summer 2020 Color Revolution and had been monitoring the socio-economic situation as well, including the availability and prices of goods as well as localsā reaction to this.
Considering the importance of his activities, especially in the context of theĀ specialĀ operation, thereās no way that heād be allowed to continue operating if anyone had picked up on what he was doing earlier. Itās therefore almost certainly the case that he only came on their radar recently as was speculated above. This means that he was transmitting highly sensitive information during the past two years of the New Cold Warās top proxy war, thus raising the question of why Japan would want to do this in the first place.
What might have been going on is that Japan was passing everything along to its Western partners in the implied hopes of them then supporting it more in its own part of the world. His most recent activities might also have played a role in Ukraineās recent drone provocations in Belarus. In fact, he might have been pressured by his handlers into taking more risks than usual because the West demanded more information for Ukraine, which could have contributed to him finally getting caught.
This explanation is the most logical since Japan couldnāt act on its own with what that spy hadnāt uncovered this entire time. It was alsoĀ reportedĀ that he was spying on Chinaās Belt & Road Initiative investments too, of which its primary one in Belarus is theĀ āGreat Stoneā industrial park, which could have disguised his more nefarious activities had he been caught earlier under different circumstances. Itās much better, after all, to be busted for conducting ābusiness intelligenceā than military intelligence.
In retrospect, thereās not much that the security services could have done better to have stopped him ahead of time.
He was legally in Belarus, had his own business, and was also teaching Japanese at a local university, thus making him a model immigrant. Nobody could have plausibly suspected that he was up to no good.
If thereās any silver lining to this case, itās that the spy was finally caught and will no longer be sharing information with his handlers to pass along to the West and their Ukrainian proxies.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/25/2024 – 02:00