A long time ago in another lifetime, I was a History
major in college. My area of
concentration was Russia & the Soviet Union. This was during the Cold War and the Soviet
Union was by far the most interesting places to study. I kept my eye on this area because of what I
did for a living [I was an Air Force intelligence officer]. It was fun to be an amateur
Kremlinologist. I was going to write a
Master’s thesis on the effects of nationalism on the Soviet Union and whether
it would break-up that superpower. But a
funny thing happened on the way to writing the thesis – the break-up actually
happened, and for the very reason I suspected.
So after the collapse of the Soviet Union my focus on such things wasn’t
as sharp as they had been prior to the August 1991 coup. But Russia’s decision
to annex the Crimea in 2014 jump-started my desire to deep-dive back into all
things Russian.
While casting about for sources to get me back up to
speed on Russian events, I found Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Given that RFE/RL was a child of the Cold
War, imagine my surprise that such a thing still existed 25 years after the
Cold War ended. Not only does it still
exist, it is flourishing. RFE/RL is my
go-to source for all things Russian. In
particular is their Russian analyst, Brian Whitmore. He hosts a weekly podcast called The Power Vertical, which provides keen
insight to what’s happening inside Russia.
During one of his podcasts, Whitmore referred to “the Collective Putin”
and has continued to do so ever since.
What does he mean by “the Collective Putin”? He doesn’t name many names, but he has
mentioned a few on the air to give me a clue where to look for the rest of the
names. It is those people with whom
Vladimir Putin has surrounded himself to govern Russia. It isn’t just one group of people upon whom
Vladimir Putin use – there are several circles of people, the membership of
which sometimes overlap. Having scoured
many an online publication, this is the best list of names I can compile. These groups of people have Vladimir Putin in
common. They sometimes overlap, but they
don’t meet together. Putin is one who
stands above the fray and is the ultimate arbiter of issues between these
groups.
My first glimpse into the Collective Putin came in March
2014, when the US slapped sanctions against individuals within the Russian
ruling elite. That was a start, but what
are the backgrounds of these people? One
such group is known as the Soliviki. The folks at Global Security say the term siloviki is taken from silovye struktury, loosely translated
from Russian as “force structures”. So siloviki is a blanket term used to
describe “men of force”, and these particular men of force have backgrounds in
intelligence, state-security, and military with ties to the KGB, the Federal
Security Service (FSB), the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), the Main
Intelligence Directorate (GRU), or even the armed forces. As former-KGB, Vladimir Putin is a silovik.
The siloviki are the kind of
people with whom Putin is most comfortable.
They offer Putin a direct defense against political threats. Siloviki
are like Marines – Marines think of themselves as “once a Marine, always a
Marine.” So too it is with the siloviki – once a silovik, always a silovik. Vladimir Putin is quoted as saying “there is no such thing as a former
Chekist.” When the Soviet Union
was on the cusp of collapse, Putin transitioned from KBG to politics in the
civilian world, and wherever he’s gone in his career, the siloviki have gone with him.
Brian Whitmore refers to the siloviki
has Putin’s “sword and shield.”
Putin has managed to put his fellow siloviki in positions of government. He has also placed them in
positions of authority in industries [most especially the energy sector and
weapons manufacturing] and media that Putin uses as tools to cajole or coerce
other countries to help Russia’s interests.
Putin’s Russia is a Chekist corporate state. But this Chekist corporate state has no
interest in Communist ideology. Their
interest is money and power. Below is just
a sample of those who have been along for the ride with Putin:
Table 1: Putin’s Siloviki
Silovik
|
Connection to Putin
|
Positions Held
|
Igor Sechin
|
GRU
|
-
Putin’s Chief of Staff, 1994-96
-
Putin’s deputy, Presidential Property Management Dept
-
Deputy
Chief of Putin’s presidential Admin, 1999-2008
-
CEO of Rosneft
Oil Company, 2004-present
|
Sergei Ivanov
|
Leningrad KGB
|
-
Deputy
FSB director overseeing analysis, forecasting, and strategic planning,
1998-99
-
Secretary, Security Council, 1999-2001
-
Defense
Minister, 2001-07
-
Deputy
Prime Minister, 2005-07
-
First
Deputy Prime Minister, 2007-08
-
Chairman,
United Aircraft Corporation (OAK), 2006-present
|
Nikolai Patrushev
|
Leningrad KGB
|
-
FSB Director, 1999-2008
-
Secretary, Security Council, 2008-present
|
Alexander Bortnikov
|
Leningrad KGB
|
-
FSB Director, 2008-present
-
FSB Deputy Director, 2004-08
-
Chief, St. Petersburg FBS, 2003-04
|
Nikolay Tokarev
|
Dresden KGB
|
-
President
of the Russian oil company Zarubezhneft, 2000-07
-
President of the Russian pipeline company Transneft, 2007-present
|
Sergei Naryshkin
|
Leningrad KGB
|
-
Chairman
of the Board of Directors, Channel One, 2006-present
-
Deputy
Prime Minister for external economic activity, 2007-08
-
Chairman of the State Duma, 2011-present
|
Viktor Ivanov
|
Leningrad KGB
|
-
Director
General of Almaz-Antey [Anti-aircraft]
-
Head
of the Internal Security Department of FSB
-
Director, Federal Drug Control Service [FSKN],
2008-16
-
Deputy
Head of the Presidential Staff for personnel, 2000-present
|
Viktor Cherkesov
|
Leningrad KGB/FSB
|
-
Director
St. Petersburg FSB, 1992-98
-
First
Deputy Director of FSB, 1998-2000
-
Putin's
envoy to the Northwest Federal District, 2000-03
-
Director, Federal Drug Control Service [FSKN],
2004-08
-
Head of the
Federal Service for Exports of Arms, Military and Special Equipment,
2008-present
|
Aleksandr Grigoryev
|
Leningrad KGB
|
-
Deputy
Director of FSB, 1998-2001
-
Director
of the Russian State Reserves Agency, 2001-04
-
Director
of the Federal State Reserves Agency, 2004-08 [his death]
|
Sergei Chemezov
|
Dresden KGB
|
-
CEO
of Rostec defense and industrial group - “Putin’s
arms trader”
|
Andrei Belyaninov
|
Dresden KGB
|
-
Director
General of Rosoboronexport, 2000-04
-
Director,
Federal Defense Order Service, 2004-06
-
Director,
Federal Customs Service [FTS],
2006-16
|
Vladimir Putin was born in Leningrad [now St. Petersburg]
in 1952. After graduating from the
Leningrad State University, Putin joined the KGB. He worked in counterintelligence before
transferring to another directorate to monitor foreigners and the myriad
consular officials in Leningrad. After
serving the KGB in Leningrad for 10 years, Putin moved to Dresden in East
Germany. After East Germany dissolved
and became part of the Federal Republic of Germany, Putin went back to
Leningrad. Beginning in 1991, he
started to work for Anatoly Sobchak, the city’s mayor. It was during his time in the Leningrad/St.
Petersburg government that Putin chaired what was the Director of the Committee
for Foreign Liaison [KVS]. It was here
that he immediately began to gather around himself the core group of people who
would work with him throughout the 1990s and into his presidency. Some of those people were fellow siloviki. Others came from Komsomol, legal and business
circles.
Deputy Mayor of St. Petersburg
Between 1991-95, Vladimir Putin served first as a deputy
mayor, then first deputy mayor [first among equals] of St. Petersburg under
Mayor Anatoly Sobchak. In this position
Putin was responsible for oversight of all law enforcement, the Administrative
Directorate of the city, the Hotel Directorate, the Justice Department, the
Registration Chamber, and the Public Relations Directorate. At the beginning of his tenure as deputy
mayor, Putin was also still in the KGB’s active reserves until at least August
1991. As a former KGB operative in East
Germany, with dealings in East‑West German economic relations, Putin had more
experience than most Russians in foreign economic relations.
With this experience he was able to secure for himself
the post of Director of the Committee for Foreign Liaison [KVS]. Here he was responsible for encouraging,
regulating, and licensing foreign investment in St. Petersburg and Russian
investment through St. Petersburg abroad.
He was uniquely positioned to regulate the movement of money, goods, and
services into and out of Russia’s largest trading city. Businesses that wanted to be established
legally in St. Petersburg had to be licensed and registered by Putin’s KVS. Putin dealt with literally thousands of
foreign and native investors, from Coca‑Cola to organized crime bosses.
When Putin went to work for Sobchak, he immediately began
to gather around himself the core group of people who would work with him
throughout the 1990s and into his presidency. Here are just some of those people:
Table 2:
Putin’s St. Petersburg Cadre
Function in St. Petersburg
|
Position(s) after St. Petersburg
|
|
Igor Sechin
|
-
Putin’s Chief of Staff, 1991-96
|
See Table 1, Putin’s Siloviki
|
Viktor Zubkov
|
-
Deputy
Chairman of the External Relations Committee, 1992-93
-
Department
of the State Tax Inspection, 1993-98
|
-
Prime Minister, 2007-08
-
First Deputy Prime Minister, 2008-12
-
Chairman, Gazprom, 2008-present
|
Dmitri Medvedev
|
-
Adviser to Mayor Anatoly Sobchak
-
Legal Counsel to KVS
-
Friend of Vladimir
|
-
Chairman, Gazprom, 2002-08
-
Presidential
chief of staff, 2003-05
-
First
Deputy Prime Minister, 2005-08
-
President of Russia, 2008-12
-
Prime Minister, 2012-present
|
Viktor Ivanov
|
-
Chief
of the Administrative Staff of the Mayor’s office
|
See Table 1, Putin’s Siloviki
|
Aleksei Kudrin
|
-
Vice
Chairman of the Committee for Economic Reform
-
Deputy
Mayor, 1993-96
|
-
Minister of Finance, 2000-11
|
Sergei Naryshkin
|
-
Committee
for Economy and Finance, 1992-95
|
See Table 1, Putin’s Siloviki
|
Dmitriy Kozak
|
-
Deputy head, St. Petersburg City Hall’s Legal
Department, 1990-91
|
- Deputy Presidential chief of staff, 2000-04
- Putin’s envoy to the Caucasus & Southern European Russia, 2004-07 - Deputy Prime Minister for 2014 Sochi Olympics |
Alexei Miller
|
-
Putin’s deputy at KVS, 1991-96
|
-
Deputy Chairman, Gazprom, 2002-present
|
Nikolai Shamalov
|
-
KVS
|
-
Co-owner of Bank Rossiya
|
Vladimir Churov
|
-
KVS
|
-
Chairman,
Central Election Commission, 2007-16
|
Vladimir Kozhin
|
-
Director
General of the St. Petersburg Association of Joint Ventures
|
-
Head
of the Presidential Property Management Department, 2000-present
-
Assistant
to the President for military and technical cooperation
|
During Putin’s tenure
as First Deputy Mayor in St. Petersburg, he made a lot of “friends,” some of
them “legitimate businessmen,” some of them not so “legitimate.” Putin owned a dacha outside St. Petersburg. Seven of his friends built dachas near his
and together they formed a gated community called the Ozero Dacha Consumer
Cooperative.
All the cooperative members have assumed top positions in
government and industry and have made lots of money. A gated community of dachas on the banks of
Lake Komsomolskoye, on the Karelian Isthmus near St. Petersburg. On November 10, 1996 the eight members of
this gated community [including Vladimir Putin], formed a housing
cooperative. Included in this
cooperative is a bank account. All
members of this cooperative are entitled by Russian law to deposit or withdraw
funds for their own personal use. It’s a
“share the wealth” bank account. Karen
Dawisha, author of Putin’s
Kleptocracy: Who Owns Russia?
concluded this bank account is just one of many ways Vladimir Putin can receive
money from others directly.
Leader: Vladimir Smirnov - Appointed by Putin
to head of Tekhsnabeksport, one of the world’s largest suppliers of nuclear
goods and services to foreign governments, including Iran.
Vladimir Yakunin
- had been first secretary at the Soviet mission to the UN, a post normally
reserved for KGB officers. Became the
federal representative in the Northwest Region for Presidential Property
Management Department in Moscow under Putin.
He moved on to become deputy minister of transportation in charge of the
country’s seaports in 2000 and then in 2005 became head of Russian Railways. He was relieved of his duties at Russian
Railways in early 2016.
Yuri Kovalchuk - described
as “essentially the personal banker for many senior government officials of the
Russian Federation, including President Putin.
He’s the largest shareholder of Bank Rossiya, and has been its chairman
since 2004.
Viktor
Myachin – Former Director-General of Bank Rossiya (until
2004). Since 2004 CEO of the investment
company "Abros" that is a subsidiary of Rossiya Bank. This investment
company owns 51% of the Согаз, a big insurance company in Russia.
Sergei Fursenko
- Head of Lentransgaz, which then became Gazprom Transgaz Sankt‑Peterburg, one
of Gazprom’s largest subsidiaries.
Andrei Fursenko
- Appointed deputy minister, then first deputy minister, then acting minister
of industry, science, and technology; after 2004 he became minister of
education and science.
Friends of Vladimir
Arkady and Boris Rotenberg
– These two have known Putin since childhood.
They share a love of judo and hockey with Putin. They own the SGM Group, the largest construction company for gas pipelines and
electrical power supply lines in Russia.
The US Treasury says the Rotenberg brothers have provided "support
to Putin's pet projects" by receiving and executing approximately $7
billion of contracts for the Sochi Olympic Games and state-controlled energy
giant Gazprom.
Others in Putin’s Orbit
Vyacheslav Volodin
- First
deputy chief of the Kremlin staff since late 2011, Vyacheslav Volodin is one of
President Putin's closest advisers. He is thought to have played a key role
first in Russia's decision to move into Crimea, before overseeing the annexed
Ukrainian region's political integration as part of Russia.
Vladislav Surkov
- Currently a presidential aide, he is regarded as the mastermind of Mr.
Putin's successive election victories through his controversial strategy of
"managed democracy". He became known as the "grey cardinal"
for his behind-the-scenes influence particularly in Putin's first presidential
term of office from 2000-2008.
Dmitri Rogozin
- An outspoken deputy prime minister and former Russian ambassador to
NATO in Brussels. He shrugged off the sanctions with a tweet that said:
"All these sanctions aren't worth a grain of sand of the Crimean land that
returned to Russia." Deputy Prime
Minister, in charge of defense and space industry.
Viktor Zolotov
- commander-in-chief of the new National Guard.
He was Putin’s bodyguard for 13 years.
Russian security expert Mark Galeotti refers to Zolotov as “one of
President Putin’s most loyal and muscular henchmen”. The National Guard
consists of riot police and paramilitary security troops that used to belong to
the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Zolotov reports directly to Putin.
Galeotti makes an interesting and thought-provoking observation:
In my opinion, it
is crucially important that all his life this man was a bodyguard. This
profession produces a specific psychology. Military personnel, security
officers, and police officers are all indoctrinated with the belief that their
task is to protect the people and the state. A bodyguard, on the other hand, is
trained to see his job as not to save Russia or the public, but a specific
“protected person.”
The “protected person” is Vladimir Putin.
When the Soviet Union
was still around, Kremlinologists had it relatively easy compared to
today. Back then there was one group of
people to watch – the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Kremlinologists scrutinized positions on the
reviewing stand on Lenin’s Tomb, who was sitting next to whom, who got
published in Pravda, who gave the important speeches, or who headed the funeral
committee when a General Secretary died.
With Putin, he’s got several power bases, the most powerful of which is
the siloviki, but even they have
internal squabbles. He also has loyalty
from oligarchs, business circles, and people like Ramzan Kadyrov and Viktor
Zolotov. He brought these people [except
Kadyrov, Timchenko and the Rotenbergs] to Moscow, and they owe their positions
to him. I think it is these people that
Brian Whitmore had in mind when he coined the phrase “the Collective Putin”.
Did I miss anybody,
Oleg?
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