ABOUT US
OUR LEGACY:
While consulting, Khan realized that Central Asia had a resource that had remained untapped: a robust population of ex-military specialists who had the skills necessary to provide the services her consulting clients desired. Khan decided to expand. After securing funds from several private equity investors, Khan closed her consulting group and founded Seryi Volk Executive Response, offering small-scale security services for countries and organizations needing ready made security details for both public and clandestine initiatives.
S.V.E.R. also offered its services to local governments needing a more aggressive response to local security concerns. Most famously, S.V.E.R. responded to a request by a local government to address tensions between the government and an arm of the Albanian mafia that had used a recent political unrest to expand its heroin operations into the principalities' borders. After a nighttime raid, S.V.E.R. razed the heroin operation and produced its leaders to the government for trial. S.V.E.R. remained in the region and effectively countered several retaliatory responses until the mafia abandoned the region as a manufacturing outpost due to excessive cost.
After this well-publicized success, Khan recruited former Spetznas operative named Sergei Maslov, who previously worked for rival corporation Raven Industries. With Maslov on board as the chief of operations and Field Commander, S.V.E.R. quickly expanded its operations into China, Russia, and India, recruiting heavily in the areas where it sought to expand its portfolio. S.V.E.R. provided security and logistical services to the Yunnan province of China during the great Kunming Earthquake that killed 12,000 people, moving thousands of tons of food into the disaster stricken area and assisting with anti-looting efforts. S.V.E.R. also established a world class information and communications network and launched its own satellite into orbit, expanding its portfolio into intelligence gathering and covert communication.
With its global network in place, S.V.E.R. began building communication and research outposts around the world, offering regional clients secure locations for the creation and development of intellectual property. It then established itself further up the supply chain by purchasing a oil refinery and fuel depot in the Caspian Sea basin. Today, S.V.E.R. continues to expand its operations with a goal of providing corporations and governments with a complete package of logistical and security solutions.
LEADERSHIP:

Priya Khan got her start in the Indian Air Force in 2006, then joined the Garud Commando Force in 2010. During her four years in the Indian Special Forces, she executed combat rescues, counter-terrorism operations, and peacekeeping missions throughout Asia and Africa. After a botched operation in Pakistan, she was left behind by her commanding officer. With one leg shattered by sniper fire and a pair of broken ribs, she crawled six miles to a border station, where she was able to shoot her way through the guards.
After her convalescence, Khan retired from active duty and founded a small consulting group that provided regional governments and corporations with security and logistical advice. Seeing an opportunity for expansion into military contracting, Khan closed her consultancy business and formed S.V.E.R.. Today, S.V.E.R. is a multi-billion dollar corporation with offices and outposts throughout the world.
Priya Khan maintains a strict schedule, regularly visiting outposts and meeting with clients around the world.

Sergei Maslov (Spetsgruppa Vimpel) has served as the Field Commander of Sever nearly since its beginning. Although little is known of his service in the Russian Special Forces, where he fought in Chechnya and other conflicts during his stint with the Russian Army,
After leaving the Russian Army, Maslov joined Raven Industries, LLC as a commander but quickly grew tired of Raven's obsession with expensive gadgets of questionable worth to the company's missions. Seeking an employer who fought his kind of war, Maslov found a willing partner in S.V.E.R. CEO Priya Khan, and Maslov has been chief operating officer and field commander ever since.
PHILOSOPHY:
S.V.E.R. hires experienced veterans from regions of the world where defeat means death. For a S.V.E.R soldier, to win is to survive, and he will bring that same level of intensity to each mission he is given, from humanitarian assistance to armed conflict.
EXPERIENCE: THE RELENTLESS PURSUIT OF VICTORY.
S.V.E.R. responded to a request by a local government to address tensions between the government and an arm of the Albanian mafia that had used a recent political unrest to expand its heroin operations into the principalities' borders. After a nighttime raid, S.V.E.R. razed the heroin operation and produced its leaders to the government for trial. S.V.E.R. remained in the region and effectively countered several retaliatory responses until the mafia abandoned the region as a manufacturing outpost due to excessive cost.
When Azerbaijani workers went on strike south of the Caspian Oil Fields near Baku, tensions quickly escalated between worker, corporate and international interests, leading to a botched attempt to destroy a section of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. Corporate and international partners hired S.V.E.R. to police the strike during negotiations and to guard the pipeline from additional attempts at sabotage.
S.V.E.R. assisted with humanitarian relief after the Kunming Earthquake in the Yunnan province of China. S.V.E.R. transported and distributed 530 tons of relief aid, including food, water, tents and medical supplies. S.V.E.R. also provided security forces for hospitals, banks, and other points of strategic interest.
According to the Serbian government, the neighboring country of Montenegro was not effectively patrolling its borders, allowing terrorists and weapons to flow unobstructed into the Serbian capital and neighboring provinces. Montenegro accused the nationalist Serbian government of attempting to justify an annexation of Montenegro into the Serbian government. After a bus station bombing of suspicious origin, the Serbian government ordered its forces into Montenegro. Montenegro, with only an armed force of only 2500 men, largely naval in nature, hired S.V.E.R. to assist. The allied force successfully forced Serbia to withdraw.