Look at almost any recent major news story from Russia, and you’ll find the Federal Security Service, better known as the FSB. Having failed to prevent the Crocus City Hall terrorist attack) in Moscow last month, the agency has played a major role in arresting) and apparently torturing) the suspected perpetrators. It was FSB agents who arrested Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich) on espionage charges just over a year ago. And the FSB has been heavily involved in enforcing Russia’s crackdowns on dissent) and LGBTQ+ rights).
At the same time, the FSB is inextricably linked to Moscow’s war against Ukraine. After years of carrying out subversive activities there, it provided Putin with key (though apparently misleading) intel that led him to launch his full-scale invasion in 2022. Since then, its agents have facilitated) the deportation) of Ukrainian children, tortured) an untold number of Ukrainian civilians in so-called “torture chambers,” and tried to plant former ISIS members) in Ukrainian battalions.
And let’s not forget that Putin himself was shaped by his career in the FSB’s predecessor agency, the Soviet-era KGB. Putin’s rise to power was defined by his image as a strong man who could ensure security and stability. Since assuming the presidency, he’s given himself direct authority over the FSB and steadily expanded its ability to surveil and repress Russian citizens.
To learn about the Russian FSB’s evolution over the last three decades, its operations in Russia and beyond, and its possible future after Putin, Meduza in English senior news editor Sam Breazeale spoke to Dr. Kevin Riehle), an expert in foreign intelligence services and the author of The Russian FSB: A Concise History of the Federal Security Service).
Timestamps for this episode:
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(38:49) The agency’s post-Putin future
Как поддержать нашу редакцию — даже если вы в России и вам очень страшно)