Putin will be ruthless after the Moscow attack, but Russians don’t trust him to keep them safe | Andrei Soldatov

Putin will be ruthless after the Moscow attack, but Russians don’t trust him to keep them safe | Andrei Soldatov

His brutal, repressive regime is good at belated investigation and torture, but lacks the capability to stop attacks happening

When Vladimir Putin came to power in 2000, he made one thing clear immediately: he would be different from his predecessors – Boris Yeltsin and Mikhail Gorbachev, the last leader of the Soviet Union – in his response to terrorism.

That difference would be manifested in his declared determination never to wilt under pressure. Like many officers trained in the KGB and traumatised by the collapse of the Soviet Union, Putin was convinced the Russian state was so fragile that it could collapse at any moment if its enemies were given an inch. To Putin and his KGB friends, the famous phone call made in 1995 by Yeltsin’s prime minister, Viktor Chernomyrdin, to a terrorist leader to save the lives of hostages in a hospital in Budyonnovsk, was the worst possible way of dealing with terrorists.

Andrei Soldatov is author of The Compatriots: The Russian Exiles Who Fought Against the Kremlin

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