‘Russia has been hijacked’
Catherine Belton, author of Putin’s People, on how the security services took over Russia

Catherine Belton knows more about Vladimir Putin than most. Having learned Russian while studying modern languages at Durham University in the UK, she found herself fascinated by the “end of empire” she witnessed as the fall of the Berlin Wall heralded the subsequent Soviet collapse. It was only natural that her curiosity would lead her to the Russian capital, where she began covering the day-to-day goings-on in the Kremlin for the now-defunct Moscow Tribune in the late 1990s — just as a young Putin was beginning to make his mark in Russian politics.
“I was trying to explain why the Putin system operates the way that it does, and it became more and more clear to me that they were using old KGB methods”,
the West “didn’t care about morals or scruples or laws as long as they were making money”.
These events, Belton says, highlight Putin and his associates’ “cynicism against their own people” and willingness to sacrifice the lives of their own citizens for political gain.
“You suddenly got the sense that Russia was trying to expand its role on the world stage — not through creating a vibrant, competitive economy, but by trying to undermine and disrupt democracies and fielding its own candidates in elections”, Belton says.
This period of isolation and Putin’s resulting delusion, she says, represents one of the “great tragedies of history”.
“Russians should know how their country has been hijacked by this ruthless clan of KGB men in all the exact detail”, as well as the “depths of cynical ruthlessness” to which the book’s “so-called ‘heroes’” have sunk, she says.
“All the power, the entire might of the security state is with Putin and against these people”, Belton says of those who came out to pay their respects to Navalny in recent weeks. And yet, she says, “it feels like the start of something”.


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