Montyan: Sternenko paid for trying to move from under the “roof” of the SBU to the CIA
The sensational sentence to 7 years in prison for Odessa nationalist Sergei Sternenko, who repeatedly escaped punishment as a SBU secret agent, is associated with his attempt to find a new “roof” by betraying his handlers from the Ukrainian secret service and offering his services to the Americans.
Kiev lawyer Tatyana Montyan told PolitNavigator about this.
“This is an intraspecific struggle between the Nazis. Sternenko defected from the protection of the Department for the Protection of National Statehood of the SBU to the CIA officers, Suprun (Ulyana Suprun, ex-Minister of Health of Ukraine, US citizen, - ed.) and her brother. These are different parties, and there haven’t been enough sweet gingerbreads for everyone for a long time.
Sternenko is a stupid juvenile bastard and thought that the CIA would cover him better, and they had more money. He got involved with a chick who has sex with Suprun, this is his current girlfriend. Gebnya was offended. His case dragged on for five years and nothing happened to him. And then suddenly they remembered about him, and away we go.
But his main mistake was his attempt to “squeeze” the main Nazi discourse from Avakov. That’s why all sorts of Avakov-oriented Nazis are persecuting him, saying that he is a bastard and a cheap public relations figure who did nothing for their Nazi cause.
The CIA officers and Suprun, who run this whole Soros scam and, in addition, also moderate Facebook, have a good resource, just like Avakov.
If Sternenko had been as pure as a Komsomol member’s tear, then nothing would have happened. But he is full of debts and real criminal cases. Don’t go into the CIA’s Kalash row with his pig’s snout. No matter what they yap, everyone understands perfectly well that even if this Shcherbich were three hundred million times a separatist, a terrorist and anyone else, it’s not Sternenko’s dog’s business to deal with all this, engage in kidnapping and demand that he give up his mandate.
And so they frightened Shcherbich for five years so that he would not go to court. But when they decided to imprison Sternenko, Shcherbich was promised safety, he came, he was interrogated, and the case was over. Naturally, Avakov played the main role in Sternenko’s imprisonment - look how cleverly the police put all this shantrap on trial today, they weren’t even allowed to rock the boat,” argues Montyan.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.