State security
The SSU continues to work for Ukraine’s victory eliminating sabotage and reconnaissance groups, detaining artillery spotters and Russian propagandists. Some of the SSU operations on March 17, 2022, are described below.
Counterterrorism
| Cyber security
| State security
Today, several online resources of Ukrainian media have been attacked by hackers from Russia. In particular, attackers posted on them symbols banned in Ukraine and used by the occupiers.
State security
| Russian aggression
| Counterterrorism
Russian occupiers are shelling our residential buildings cynically and without any sentiment.
State security
| Russian aggression
| Counterintelligence
| Counterterrorism
The SSU keeps on exposing traitors and collaborators who assist Russian occupiers by collecting intelligence on the Armed Forces of Ukraine. On March 18, 2022, the SSU detained several such suspects in different regions of Ukraine.
State security
| Russian aggression
In the conversations intercepted by the SSU, we can hear that there is total chaos in Putin’s army. The occupiers shoot at each other in order to go to hospital. Otherwise, they have to hide in trenches without food, water and weapons, waiting for death.
Russian aggression
| State security
The SSU has intercepted information about another ‘secret method’ of Russian invaders: they want to flee ‘with minimal losses’.
State security
| Russian aggression
Russian occupiers start looting massively in Ukraine and become uncontrollable in their search for easy gain.
State security
| Russian aggression
Russian soldiers don’t see sense in the war, convinced that they are used as ‘cannon fodder’ and sent to certain death.
State security
| Russian aggression
Russian propaganda shapes their image as a formidable force capable of carrying out any task of Putin. But after 26 days of war, this myth is completely debunked.
Russian aggression
| State security
In the absence of real success on the front, Russia is trying to destabilize the internal situation in Ukraine with fakes, propaganda and panic. Propaganda media deceive Russian audience and residents of the temporarily occupied territories with fabrications about the aggressor’s ‘victory’.
Russian aggression
| Counterterrorism
| State security
Getting rich in Ukraine is not a problem: go to any apartment and take what you want.
State security
| Russian aggression
| Counterterrorism
The occupiers prefer to shift it to politicians: ‘the one to blame is not the one who carries out orders, but the one who gives them’.