Purge season
Nearly 100 senior Russian officials have been charged with corruption so far in 2025 — the highest number in a decade
The apparent suicide of former Russian transport minister Roman Starovoyt, who was reportedly facing criminal charges for embezzling billions of rubles during the construction of fortifications on the Ukrainian border, became one of the most widely discussed events of July. But the investigation into Starovoyt and other border region functionaries is just the tip of the iceberg — a sweeping purge of high-ranking Russian officials appears to be underway.
“For an autocracy to survive, it must instil fear — but without unleashing full-scale terror.”
“The state is showing that the old schemes no longer work, that the rules of the game have changed — and so have the demands for loyalty.”


Remorseless
The killer of Novaya Gazeta’s Anastasia Baburova has been freed into a country that’s more aligned with her worldview than ever

Moscow’s minions
A new pro-Kremlin bloc is taking shape in the European Parliament
Double whammy
Could sanctions and drone strikes lead to the collapse of Russian oil production and end its funding of the Kremlin’s war machine?
Dream ticket
As Georgia’s slide into autocracy continues, Europe appears to be losing faith it can reverse the process
They came from the East
Europe is struggling to respond to Russia’s growing use of hybrid warfare
Profits of doom
Will the EU breach its own sanctions to compensate an Austrian bank fined €2 billion in Russia?
Economic overkill
Russia’s untenable level of military spending has trapped the country in a Catch-22
Tanking it
Ukrainian drone strikes have disabled one sixth of Russia’s oil refining capacity and led to a protracted fuel crisis
Stopping the clock
Why has Russia massively increased its funding of anti-ageing research?



