Leaks Expose Secret British Military Cell Plotting to âKeep Ukraine Fightingâ

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By Kit Klarenberg – Nov 16, 2024
Leaked files show top UK military figures conspired to carry out the Kerch bridge bombing, covertly train âGladioâ-style stay-behind forces in Ukraine, and groom the British public for a drop in living standards caused by the proxy war against Russia.
Emails and internal documents reviewed by The Grayzone reveal details of a cabal of British military and intelligence veterans which plotted to escalate and prolong the Ukraine proxy war âat all costs.â Convened under the direction of the British Ministry of Defense in the immediate aftermath of Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the cell referred to itself as Project Alchemy. As British leadership sabotaged peace talks between Kiev and Moscow, the cell put forward an array of plans âto keep Ukraine fightingâ by imposing âstrategic dilemmas, costs and frictions upon Russia.â
The leaks obtained by The Grayzone expose a hidden hand behind Britainâs policy in Ukraine, showing in unusually granular detail how it aimed to engineer a long, grinding war through covert operations that stretched the bounds of legality.
Project Alchemyâs proposed schemes spanned every conceivable field of warfare, from cyber attacks to âdiscreet operationsâ to outright terrorism. The secret cell even put forward a plan to âaggressively pursueâ and âdismantleâ independent media outlets â including The Grayzone â through an aggressive campaign of legal harassment and online censorship, so they âwould be forced to close.â The incendiary blueprints were fed to the highest levels of the British state and national security structure, where they were apparently well-received.
Founded by a senior British Ministry of Defence official, Project Alchemy is composed of veteran military and intelligence operatives united by a desire for all-out war between the West and Russia. Some have trained Ukrainian forces in clandestine sabotage tactics.
Members of the national security cabal tacitly acknowledged that their proposed operations stretched the bounds of British law. Thus they suggested that London should be âprepared to creatively use the lawâ to meet its goals, and even be willing to erase âlegal restrictions on UK deniable opsâ against Russia.
Some of Project Alchemyâs most extreme recommendations have already been implemented, often with calamitous results. These include the cellâs proposal to strike Crimeaâs Kerch Bridge, which prompted a Russian escalation that saw punishing attacks on Ukraineâs electricity infrastructure. Alchemy also envisioned the construction of a secret, Gladio-style army of Ukrainian partisan fighters to carry out assassination, sabotage, and terror missions behind enemy lines.
It appears the British premier, Keir Starmer, fell under the influence of the Project Alchemy cabal soon after his election in July, when he eagerly embraced the role of âwartime prime minister.â After pledging to support Ukraine âas long as it takes,â however, Starmer is quietly backing away from the maximalist policy. In Kiev, Ukrainians are left to ponder how their âfriendsâ in London got them into this mess, and why they can not, or will not get them out of it.
The British spooks who gathered around Project Alchemy reasoned that the longer the proxy war continued, the more Russian president Vladimir Putinâs âcredibility at home and abroad drops, and his ability to fight NATO is degraded.â Today, Project Alchemyâs gambit has clearly backfired, as Putin remains popular within Russia, while a crumbling Ukrainian army loses territory by the day despite constant re-arming by the West. But the war planners in London remain staunchly committed to escalation, refusing to shelve their diabolical proposals.
Britain takes âunilateral leadâ on âregime changeâ in Russia
Project Alchemy was founded on the personal orders of Lt. General Charlie Stickland, who is charged with âplanning, executing and integrating UK led joint and multinational overseas military operationsâ as the head of Britainâs Permanent Joint Headquarters. Stickland boasts in leaked communications that his family âcome from a long line of pirates and buccaneers.â In his email signature, the general identifies himself as an âLGBTQ+ Advocateâ in rainbow-colored text.
Stickland and his assistant, Maj. Ed Harris, did not answer The Grayzoneâs calls to their personal phones, nor did they respond to detailed questions submitted to them through WhatsApp.
đŹđ§ đłđ´ Lieutenant General Charlie Stickland CB OBE, (Chief of Joint Operations), Minister of the Lords, Baroness Annabel Goldie, and a delegation of senior multinational officers and officials visited Ukrainian Armed Forces personnel being trained in the UK.
@Admiral @Permanent pic.twitter.com/rOJ38aRXcL— ĐоноŃаНŃниК ŃŃай ĐĐĄĐŁ (@GeneralStaffUA) February 11, 2023
Stickland convened the first meeting of Project Alchemyâs on February 26, 2022, just days after Russian troops made their initial foray into Ukraine. According to minutes of the gathering, âan assortment of leading academics, authors, strategists, planners, pollsters, comms, data scientists and techâ was on hand to produce a âgrand strategy options paper.â
The paper consisted of a series of proposals for the British government to âdefeat Putin in Ukraine and set the conditions for the reshaping of an open international order of the future.â Throughout the document, the need to âkeep Ukraine fightingâ was described as Londonâs âmain effortâ in the conflict.
In an email to British military apparatchiks dated March 3 2022, Stickland described Alchemyâs paper as the result of âsome mischief Iâve been up toâ with âa group of âsideways thinkers.ââ He expressed satisfaction that âthis has been seen by all sorts of people,â including senior British government and military officials, âand landed well.â
An Excel document listing potential and confirmed recruits for the effort, authored by project chief Dom Morris, names a number of individuals from the private sector and academia alongside high-ranking army officials. Currently a fellow at Kingâs Collegeâs âCentre for Grand Strategy,â Morris was listed in the document as a âcivilian leader.â The role of âmilitary leaderâ was to be carried out by Simon Scott, a brigadier in the British army who was appointed O.B.E. in 2013 for his âgallant and distinguished servicesâ in Afghanistan.
Information operations were to be headed by a still-to-be determined member of Britainâs 77th Psychological Operations Brigade. Also listed as a participant in information operations was longtime British psychological warfare operative Amil Khan, founder of the âcounter-disinformationâ analysis firm Valent Projects.
In 2021, The Grayzone revealed how the then-Prince of Wales, King Charles, enlisted Khanâs Valent Projects to astroturf a pseudo-socialist YouTube influencer to attack skeptics of the governmentâs ham-fisted response to Covid. Previously, Khan participated in the UK Foreign Officeâs program to foment regime change in Syria.
Months after Alchemy put Khan forward as a member of its team, The Grayzone exposed him for plotting with celebrity-left journalist Paul Mason to destroy this publication. One leaked email showed Khan proposing a âfull nuclear legal [attack] to squeeze [The Grayzone] financially.â The newly-uncovered documents indicate the decision to assail The Grayzone was met with approval from the highest ranks of the British government.
Leaked Files Suggest Hidden British Hand in Latest Kerch Bridge Strike
âUkraineâs Next Chapter â Elders Grand Strategy Options Paperâ
Within Project Alchemyâs covert war room, the obsession with a long war quickly took hold. Members of the cell took their cues from a policy paper Stickland attributed to âThe Elders,â which he described as âa group of Fusion players,â referring to the strata of academics and defense industry figures with strong ties to the British military.
An Alchemy document composed under Sticklandâs watch and titled, âUkraineâs Next Chapter â Elders Grand Strategy Options Paper,â suggests that members of the cabal had convinced themselves a âpalace coupâ inside the Kremlin was inevitable. So long as Russia struggled inside Ukraine, they believed, British intelligence would be granted âthe opportunity to challengeâ Moscowâs ever-growing âstature as a competent international actorâ on the world stage.
âA long war against a small state makes [Putin] look a fool,â the Alchemy paper asserted. âHe is obsessed by the end of Ghaddafi â he will want to avoid that⌠Pressure will pile on from oligarchs as a long war drags on â he will not want to give them excuses to threaten his authority.â The group reasoned that âa long war will affect [Putinâs] international credibility,â as âa failure to quickly defeat Ukraine will seriously⌠reduce his credibility with new rich friends in Belarus, Hungary, China, India, Middle East, Brazil etc.
âMost importantly,â protracted Russian involvement in Ukraine âwill embolden NATO,â Alchemy argued. Convinced that Putin would fail in the eastern Donbas region, triggering a collapse of his government, Project Alchemy members openly fantasized about absorbing Russia into the Western-dominated financial order afterwards under the guise of a âPost Putin Marshall Plan.â Of particular interest was Londonâs âre-engagementâ with Moscow âin global energy and commodity markets,â a seeming reference to the Westâs desire for cheap Russian gas and wheat.
âDiscreet operationsâ: reviving âOperation Gladioâ terror ops in Ukraine
To accomplish the balkanization of Russia, Project Alchemyâs plotters took inspiration from Operation Gladio, a CIA and NATO-orchestrated covert operation that saw fascist paramilitaries carry out false flag terrorist attacks across Western Europe after World War II in a bid to prevent communism from taking root.
A section detailing potential âdiscreet operationsâ in Alchemyâs strategy paper, which stressed the âneed to intervene in every way except âofficial,ââ explicitly recommended âStay-behind Gladio handbooks/ Partisan Pamphletsâ which would be âupdated for Information Age.â
Another move Alchemy proposed was to deploy Britainâs âstrongâ private military [PMC] industry âto out Wagner, Wagner.â In other words, the group aimed to establish a British rival to the Russian mercenary force founded by the now-deceased commander Yevgeny Prigozhin. This objective required the formulation of âa new doctrine, operating concept, and legal framework, for effectively integrating the activities of PMCs and other [non-military] actors.â Under these guidelines, British mercenary firms capable of using âsophisticated weaponry like SAMS, cyber, combat air, dronesâ would be employed to âoperate and train and accompany Ukraine formations.â
These operations were all intended to ultimately be âsponsored and commandedâ by the UK government, âusing discreet coverâ to avoid triggering NATOâs Article 5.
Following the production of their grand strategy paper, Stickland invited his team of âsideways thinkersâ at Project Alchemy to submit further proposals for Gladio-style operations. Among the pitches that arrived was a âmissionâ to âdisable the Kerch Bridge in a way that is audacious, and disrupts road and rail access to Crimea and maritime access to the Sea of Azov.â The blueprints of this highly provocative plot were exposed by The Grayzone in October 2022, in the immediate aftermath of the truck bomb attack that crippled the Kerch Bridge.
Alchemyâs team also produced a PowerPoint presentation entitled, âTraining a Ukrainian Commando Force to restore Maritime Sovereignty â Elders,â outlining plans to construct a 1,000-strong Ukrainian commando force âtrained in Britain by military veterans equipped with British equipmentâ to âdegrade the Russian Navy and open another flank in the fight for Kherson and the south of Ukraine.â
Alchemyâs team had been working on the plan for at least three months by the time of the presentationâs submission. âUkrainians abroad and volunteers inside Ukraineâ had already been recruited, in advance of 12 weeks basic training âin the use of all troop weapons including mortars, anti-tank missiles, sniper craft, cliff assault, small craft training, demolitions,â the proposal stated.
The plan called for formally integrating the commandos into the Ukrainian Navy. Alchemy boasted that the prospective force âwill be a force multiplier and highly mobile,â while Russiaâs âoutdated doctrine will struggle with a highly motivated and well-equipped naval force conducting hit and run operations and targeting Crimea.â
Moreover, âindividuals who are fluent Russian speakers and deemed suitable for covert undercover operations,â including âfemale operators,â would be âinserted into southern occupied Ukraine and Crimea for intelligence gathering and sabotage of key infrastructure targets.â They would be trained by MI6 officers. For this, Alchemy asked the British government for a total of ÂŁ73.5 million. âThe program is at a high state of readiness. We are ready to go,â the presentation forcefully declared.
The enormous sum was to be paid to Elders Services Ltd that was founded by Alchemy members and registered to an address just 15 miles from Fort Monckton, which was described by former MI6 officer Richard Tomlinson as âthe SISâs field operations training centre.â It is unknown how much money, if any, the firm received from the British government for resuscitating Operation Gladio in Ukraine. Elders Services Ltd shuttered in March 2023 after less than a year of operation, without filing financial accounts.
British spies call for âactionâ against The Grayzone
Behind the Project Alchemy teamâs bravado was a sense that Western hegemony was crumbling on the icy borderlands separating Ukraine from Russia. Referring to the rising BRICS alliance, which gathered in Kazan, Russia this October to challenge the US-dominated financial order, Alchemy planners urged British leadership to âprepare for SWIFT II,â as SWIFT was âgoing to be destroyedâ by the Westâs anti-Russia sanctions, âslowly, but inevitably.â
According to Alchemyâs analysts, countries across the globe would naturally âsee the need for a non-US alternativeâ means of safely parking their cash and trading. In a rare show of political sobriety, the British spooks predicted that sanctions on Russia combined with the Ukraine proxy war would impose higher prices on consumer goods and âhit British voters in the pocket.â
This posed âa threat to public supportâ for the British governmentâs âhard lineâ on Ukraine, they warned. âDomestic UK public opinionâ would understandably get âfed upâ paying more for everyday goods, meaning âpressure grows for a compromise.â
To prepare the British public for the coming storm, Project Alchemyâs plotters proposed what they blandly described as âinformation operations,â but which could be more accurately described as a blend of domestic state propaganda and malign attacks on disruptive media outlets.
The task they outlined not only included â[dismantling] Russian disinformation infrastructureâ by pressuring social media to ban RT and Sputnik, but also targeting critical independent media like The Grayzone.
âA number of actions can be undertaken against these outlets. The most obvious is legal since the content of these media outriders is frequently in contravention of media law in the UK, US and EU,â Alchemy insisted.
âAggrieved parties currently tend to ignore libel/defamation by these outlets. Were they to aggressively pursue these outlets, it is likely they would be forced to close.â
The Grayzone, it was claimed, had thus far âmanaged to obscureâ its funding â a suggestion that this outlet is covertly funded by Russia or some other enemy state, which is completely false. The paranoid fantasies of British intelligence may explain why this journalist was quizzed on the subject by British counter-terror police when they detained and interrogated him at Luton International Airport in May 2023.
Alchemy plotters seek to place Britain at lead of war with Russia
In addition to playing a leading role in media manipulation, Alchemy sought to place Britain at the forefront of the International Criminal Courtâs agenda to investigate and prosecute the Russian government for alleged war crimes in Ukraine.
Alchemy suggested London âset international conditions, collection mechanisms and funding for collection of data and evidenceâ in the proxy conflict, and âprovide all possible support, including intelligenceâ to the ICC âin its efforts to investigate war crimes,â just as British spies did for the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY).
Though not named in the document, high-profile British lawyers, including celebrity Amal Clooney, have since emerged at the forefront of efforts to prosecute Russian officials for war crimes, and establish an ICTY analog. As The Grayzoneâs Max Blumenthal reported, Britain played a critical role in the appointment of Amal Clooneyâs mentor, Karim Khan, as ICC prosecutor.
Project Alchemyâs provocative proposals appear to have reached the desk of PM Keir Starmer in some form. At NATOâs 75th anniversary summit, Starmer issued his full-throated endorsement of deep strikes by the Ukrainian military into Russia. Echoing the aggressive language found in Alchemy documents, he pledged to âdeliver ÂŁ3 billion worth of support to Ukraine each year⌠for as long as it takes.â
But as the Ukrainian militaryâs offensive in Russiaâs Kursk region falters, the Biden administration has distanced itself from the calls for striking into the Russian heartland. Fortunately for British leaders hellbent on taking the fight to Moscow, Project Alchemy has ensured that a platter of off-the-books options remains handy.
As Alchemy noted in its grand strategy paper, âThe UK seeks always to act multilaterally, but is prepared to take a unilateral lead where achieving multilateral consensus might prove time-consuming or difficult.â Among the warâs covert sponsors, who were safely ensconced over 1,000 miles away from the front lines, it was firmly agreed: âwe should attempt at all costs to keep Ukraine fighting.â
Kit Klarenberg is an investigative journalist exploring the role of intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions.