The chief of Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency, Igor Korobov, has died after “a serious and long illness,” Russian media reported on November 21, quoting the Defense Ministry.
The ministry did not disclose further details about his death.
The ministry called the 62-year-old Korobov, who ran the spy agency since 2016, “a wonderful person, a faithful son of Russia, and a patriot of his homeland.”
Korobov was appointed following the death of his predecessor, 58-year-old Igor Sergun.
The West has blamed the GRU for a string of brazen attacks.
Britain has accused it of attempting to poison former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter with a nerve agent in the English city of Salisbury.
The Netherlands believes the agency has tried to hack a global chemical weapons watchdog, and U.S. intelligence agencies said the GRU was behind attempts to hack the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Russia denies all those allegations.
Korobov, along with other GRU officers, was sanctioned by the United States for activities that "undermine cybersecurity on behalf of the Russian government."
Earlier this month, Russian President Vladimir Putin praised the GRU on its 100th anniversary.
"I am confident of your professionalism, of your personal daring and decisiveness, and that each of you will do all that is required by Russia and our people," Putin said on November 2.
The GRU was founded in 1918 after the Bolshevik Revolution and is one of Russia's three main intelligence agencies, alongside the domestic Federal Security Service and the SVR Foreign Intelligence Service.
Putin criticized a recent change in the agency's name to the Main Directorate (GU) from the GRU, or Main Intelligence Directorate.
"It's not clear where the word Intelligence went.... This should be reinstated," he said.