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    International Affairs

    Don’t Believe Rumors of Cracks in Putin’s Regime

    adminBy adminMay 12, 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
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    Don’t Believe Rumors of Cracks in Putin’s Regime
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    Don’t Believe Rumors of Cracks in Putin’s Regime

    Every few months, a new rumor emerges from Moscow suggesting that Russian President Vladimir Putin may finally be vulnerable. A loyalist is arrested. A senior official disappears. Reports circulate of growing dissatisfaction and unrest among the Moscow elite or fractures inside the Kremlin. A fresh crackdown on Russia’s internet suggests nervousness at the highest level. Whispers of defections spread through intelligence circles, with one deputy government department head allegedly fleeing to the West. And just a few days ago, Putin looked uncharacteristically dejected at Moscow’s lackluster Victory Day parade. To outside observers, these moments can look like the first cracks in a weakening regime.

    But after 25 years in power, Putin has built a system designed precisely to survive rumors, dissent, and internal intrigue. In fact, many of the developments now interpreted as signs of weakness may actually be used by the security services to reinforce more harshly the very same methods that have kept Putin in power for decades.

    The reality is that Putin has spent his career mastering the mechanics of authoritarian survival. Whereas dictators and strongmen such as Libya’s Muammar al-Qaddafi, Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, and Iran’s Ali Khamenei have faced uprisings, isolation, or instability, Putin entered office already steeped in the culture and operations of the Soviet and post-Soviet security services. He was not simply a politician who learned authoritarianism after taking power; he was a career KGB officer who came to power understanding mass surveillance, coercion, and elite control from the inside. In his years in power, Putin has learned from other dictators’ failures. In a hypothetical “World Dictators and Autocrats” course, he would have gotten straight As for the past quarter century.

    As head of the Federal Security Services (FSB)—the successor to the Soviet KGB—under President Boris Yeltsin in the late 1990s, Putin was already an expert in monitoring and suppressing domestic dissent. Yeltsin elevated him to prime minister in part because the Kremlin establishment believed that Putin could protect the Yeltsin family and its allies from corruption investigations and political retaliation after Yeltsin stepped down. The arrangement carried an unspoken bargain: Russia might drift back toward centralized, Soviet-style governance, but the outgoing elite would remain protected.

    Once in office, Putin moved quickly against anyone capable of challenging him. Oligarchs such as Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Boris Berezovsky ended up in prison, exile, or political irrelevance. Independent power centers disappeared one by one. The FSB and other security services became instruments not merely of national security but also of regime preservation.

    Over time, assassinations, poisonings, mysterious falls from windows, and other suspicious deaths became an accepted feature of Russian political life. Responsibility was rarely explicit. The Kremlin maintained plausible deniability through layers of intrigue: Perhaps it was organized crime, rogue nationalists, Chechen actors, or overzealous patriots trying to make “the boss” happy. But the cumulative effect was unmistakable. Opposition carried real danger in Russia. And the events were always cloaked in the usual intrigues and cover stories; the more stories, the better, just to keep the Russian people and foreign observers guessing.

    That history matters when evaluating current speculation about Putin’s vulnerability. After 25 years consolidating power, it is difficult to believe that he suddenly lacks control over the very security structures that he spent decades building.

    The Russian security apparatus protecting Putin is immense, layered, and intentionally overlapping. At its center sits the FSB. Even before the war in Ukraine, the FSB was estimated by various sources to have an estimated 3050,000 to 400,000 personnel, including roughly 200,000 border guards. In Soviet and Russian tradition, these border forces were never just ordinary troops. Even though they included conscripts, they were paramilitary units entrusted with protecting the state itself.

    Within the FSB are specialized operational groups tasked with carrying out whichever missions the Kremlin deems necessary. Units such as Alpha and Vympel have long been associated with counterterrorism, hostage rescue, covert action, and what Russian intelligence veterans historically referred to as “wet work”—a euphemism for killings and other blood-spilling violence. Over the years, they have been linked to arrests of dissidents, assassinations, intimidation campaigns, and other operations inside and outside Russia.

    Beyond the FSB stands Rosgvardia, the Russian National Guard, created by Putin in 2016 specifically to strengthen internal regime security. By transferring elite internal security units away from traditional ministries and placing them under a separate command loyal only to the presidency, Putin reduced the risk of competing power centers. Rosgvardia includes OMON riot police and other rapid-response forces designed primarily for domestic control, not foreign war. Rosgvardia chief Viktor Zolotov is one of Putin’s longtime loyalists and a former KGB officer. Estimates place the organization’s strength at roughly 300,000 personnel.

    Then there is the Federal Protective Service, or FSO, Putin’s innermost security circle. This organization is responsible not only for presidential protection but also for safeguarding key state infrastructure, secure communications, and continuity of government. The FSO reportedly numbers around 50,000 personnel and includes some of Putin’s most trusted bodyguards and operatives.

    The FSO includes men who have killed on Putin’s orders. Vadim Krasikov was an FSB officer who transitioned to being an FSO bodyguard for Putin. He allegedly volunteered in 2019 to be sent abroad to kill a Chechen dissident in Germany. After the murder, Krasikov was caught, sentenced with assassinating the dissident, and imprisoned in Germany for years until he was finally freed in a 2024 swap of innocent civilians—including Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich—for convicted murderers from ouRussian security services. When Krasikov’s plane landed in Moscow, Putin was there to give him a bear hug right on the tarmac.

    The example is telling, because Putin had allegedly insisted during negotiations for the hostages-for-criminals exchange that it would have to include Krasikov or not proceed at all. Why? Because Putin wanted his security operators to know that if they kill for him, then they will not be forgotten. No doubt that story is repeated  constantly among the ranks.

    That is Putin’s way to engender loyalty among his elite security services. They are completely beholden to him, as are their fortunes. The children of higher-level officers mostly study abroad but have all the benefits of royalty in Russia. Their and their families’ fortunes and lifestyles are entirely at Putin’s bidding. None of that is going to change because of any level of minor dissent or discontent, regardless of the occasional official defecting or falling out of fashion and then out of a window.

    Finally, many have claimed that Yevgeny Prigozhin’s attempted rebellion in 2023 was an example of how hollow Putin’s rule really is. The rebellion by Prigozhin and his Wagner Group mercenaries were only start their march on Moscow in the first place because Russian military units in Rostov oblast, despite their loyalty to Putin, were reluctant to fire on fellow Russians without direct orders from above.

    Prigozhin’s anger was focused on Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Gen. Valery Gerasimov, whom he blamed for denying Wagner ammunition and support. He aimed to expose weaknesses in the regular army, not directly challenge Putin. And he stopped short of confronting the elite security forces protecting the regime. Within months, Wagner was dismantled, its commanders absorbed into state structures, and Prigozhin was killed in a plane explosion—an outcome that many viewed as inevitable. In retrospect, the outcome looked less like uncertainty and more like a familiar Kremlin pattern: patience followed by punishment.

    The same is likely at play now. This is why recurring reports of internal dissent and the temporary arrest of critics and former supporters should all be viewed cautiously. Putin’s political survival has long depended on controlling not only actual opposition but also the perception of opposition. Rumors, investigations, arrests, and selective purges can all serve political purposes. They create uncertainty within elite circles while justifying tighter crackdowns across society.

    So where does this leave things in Russia? One possible answer is that Putin and his security officials are themselves behind the latest rumors of growing dissent—as a way to justify an even more ruthless crackdown on the country’s society.

    The FSB’s focus on the popular Telegram messaging app is telling. In tracking down Khamenei for assassination, the Israelis allegedly accessed the regime’s own traffic cameras and other technology, which will not have gone unnoticed by Putin and the FSB. The crackdown on Telegram is likely fed by Putin’s and the FSB’s paranoia over digital apps and other technology being accessed and infiltrated by the West. In a similar vein, Putin has prohibited his inner circle from using any digital devices at all.

    The convolution of rumors, mysterious deaths, and security crackdowns—minus the digital technology aspect—should feel familiar to students of Russian and Soviet history. Joseph Stalin—the only modern-day dictator to have ruled from Moscow longer than Putin—secured his power with repeated claims that he was being undermined by dissent, sabotage, and attempted coups. Stalin used these claims to justify brutal purges and crackdowns, including against his own inner circle, just like Putin does. As Putin surely knows, these methods kept Stalin’s remaining followers fiercely loyal and the population frozen in fear.

    The most likely outcome amid today’s rumors of dissent and upheaval in Russia is therefore not imminent regime collapse, but further repression. Putin has spent decades studying how dictators lose power, and he has systematically built safeguards against such failures. Unlike many authoritarian leaders, he is a product of the security services and never stopped thinking like an intelligence officer.

    While the United States and much of the West spent the post-9/11 era focused on counterterrorism, long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and internal political divisions, Putin was steadily consolidating state power, modernizing his security services, suppressing opposition, and preparing Russia for long-term confrontation with the West.

    The invasion of Ukraine was his greatest gambit. Whether his broader ambitions ultimately succeed is another question entirely. Russia faces serious demographic, economic, and military pressures. But the idea that today’s wave of scattered rumors, isolated defections, and limited elite discontent will suddenly bring down Putin indicates a misunderstanding of the nature of the system that he created.

    Putin’s Russia was built to survive exactly these moments. And after more than a quarter century in power, he remains far more prepared for internal intrigue than many of his opponents or outside observers would like to believe. Putin is setting the stage for his own claim to becoming Russia’s greatest and longest ruler. He is closing in on the latter part of that title, all while busily preparing for his continuing wars and implementing his vision for a Russia restored to imperial greatness. This vision has no room for dissent, let alone a revolution.

    All statements expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not reflect the views of the U.S. government or any agency thereof.

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