Investigation reveals Swiss Federal Intelligence Service maintained connections with multiple Russian tech companies, raising national security questions

"The relationship began (…) in 2016 or 2017 in Moscow."
"The most important source of information."
National security hangs in the balance as an explosive investigation reveals that the Swiss Federal Intelligence Service (FIS) has been operating dangerously close to Moscow. For five critical years, between 2015 and 2020, the FIS cyber team did not merely observe Russian tech entities—they actively collaborated with them. This is not just a minor oversight; it is a staggering breach of protocol that suggests highly sensitive data may have been leaked directly to Russian intelligence services.
While the involvement of software giant Kaspersky was previously suspected, new evidence confirms a far wider web of compromise. The FIS worked intimately with two additional providers—identified only as 'Blue' and 'Violet'—integrating them into the heart of Swiss intelligence operations. This revelation shatters the illusion of Swiss digital neutrality. We are confronting a scenario where the very guardians of our state secrets may have opened the back door to foreign actors. The implications are severe: if Swiss intelligence cannot secure its own supply chain against Russian influence, the integrity of the entire nation's defense architecture is in jeopardy.
Hidden in plain sight, the company identified as 'Blue' represents a Trojan horse within Swiss borders. Although headquartered in Zurich, this entity is fundamentally rooted in Russian operations. Founded by two Russian nationals alongside a single Swiss citizen, 'Blue' actively recruited staff within Russia, creating a direct personnel bridge between Zurich and Moscow. The relationship was not casual; it was forged in the Russian capital itself as early as 2016 or 2017.
The depth of this integration is alarming. The FIS did not just request data; they possessed direct access to 'Blue’s' servers. On at least a dozen separate occasions, data flowed from these compromised servers to Swiss intelligence—or potentially vice versa. While 'Blue' vehemently denies ties to Russian intelligence and claims adherence to Swiss law, the operational reality paints a different picture. We are witnessing a 'Zurich' company that functions with a Moscow heartbeat, and the FIS granted them unprecedented access to the Swiss intelligence apparatus.
The investigation uncovers a financial labyrinth that is as unorthodox as it is suspicious. Enter 'Violet', a company described as the FIS cyber team's "most important source of information." Operating servers within Switzerland that were frequented by Russian hackers, 'Violet' became the center of a bizarre triangular relationship involving the FIS and Kaspersky. In a move that defies standard financial oversight, the Swiss secret service allegedly utilized Kaspersky to funnel payments to 'Violet'.
This was not standard government procurement; this was 'fondue diplomacy' gone wrong. Meetings in Ticino and dinners in Bern masked a reality where the FIS was leveraging a company known for its "dubious customers." By using Kaspersky as a financial intermediary to pay a firm hosting Russian hackers, the FIS created a convoluted money trail that effectively obscured the source of funds. This triangular dependency raises critical questions: Was the FIS paying for legitimate data, or were they inadvertently funding the very infrastructure used by foreign cyber operatives?
The fallout is immediate, severe, and reaching the highest levels of the Federal Palace. Defense Minister Martin Pfister has been forced to initiate an urgent external administrative investigation to contain the damage. The government is no longer just asking questions; they are hunting for accountability. The FIS cyber team has already undergone a comprehensive reorganization, a tacit admission that the previous structure was fundamentally compromised.
However, administrative shuffles may not be enough. The situation has escalated to a legal crisis, with the supervisory authority AB-ND filing a formal criminal complaint. We are moving beyond internal reviews into the realm of criminal liability. As prosecutors begin to unravel this tangled web of contacts, payments, and data leaks, the Swiss public demands answers. This investigation must be ruthless and transparent. Switzerland's reputation as a secure, neutral state is on the line, and anything less than a full purge of these compromised connections will leave our national security in tatters.