Catherine Belton - Putin’s People

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THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLERA Times and Sunday Times Book of the Year 2020 A Daily Telegraph Book of the Year 2020‘The Putin book that we’ve been waiting for’ Oliver Bullough, author of Moneyland‘Books about modern Russia abound … Belton has surpassed them all. Her much-awaited book is the best and most important on modern Russia’ The TimesA chilling and revelatory expose of the KGB’s renaissance, Putin’s rise to power, and how Russian black cash is subverting the world.In Putin’s People, former Moscow correspondent and investigative journalist Catherine Belton reveals the untold story of how Vladimir Putin and his entourage of KGB men seized power in Russia and built a new league of oligarchs.Through exclusive interviews with key inside players, Belton tells how Putin’s people conducted their relentless seizure of private companies, took over the economy, siphoned billions, blurred the lines between organised crime and political powers, shut down opponents, and then used their riches and power to extend influence in the West.In a story that ranges from Moscow to London, Switzerland and Trump’s America, Putin’s People is a gripping and terrifying account of how hopes for the new Russia went astray, with stark consequences for its inhabitants and, increasingly, the world.‘A fearless, fascinating account … Reads at times like a John le Carré novel … A groundbreaking and meticulously researched anatomy of the Putin regime, Belton’s book shines a light on the pernicious threats Russian money and influence now pose to the west’ Guardian

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This book began as an effort to trace the takeover of the Russian economy by Putin’s former KGB associates. But it became an investigation into something more pernicious than that. First research – and then events – showed that the kleptocracy of the Putin era was aimed at something more than just filling the pockets of the president’s friends. What emerged as a result of the KGB takeover of the economy – and the country’s political and legal system – was a regime in which the billions of dollars at Putin’s cronies’ disposal were to be actively used to undermine and corrupt the institutions and democracies of the West. The KGB playbook of the Cold War era, when the Soviet Union deployed ‘active measures’ to sow division and discord in the West, to fund allied political parties and undermine its ‘imperial’ foe, has now been fully reactivated. What’s different now is that these tactics are funded by a much deeper well of cash, by a Kremlin that has become adept in the ways of the markets and has sunk its tentacles deep into the institutions of the West. Parts of the KGB, Putin among them, have embraced capitalism as a tool for getting even with the West. It was a process that began long before, in the years before the Soviet collapse.

Putin’s takeover of strategic cash flows was always about more than taking control of the country’s economy. For the Putin regime, wealth was less about the well-being of Russia’s citizens than about the projection of power, about reasserting the country’s position on the world stage. The system Putin’s men created was a hybrid KGB capitalism that sought to accumulate cash to buy off and corrupt officials in the West, whose politicians, complacent after the end of the Cold War, had long forgotten about the Soviet tactics of the not too distant past. Western markets embraced the new wealth coming from Russia, and paid little heed to the criminal and KGB forces behind it. The KGB had forged an alliance with Russian organised crime long ago, on the eve of the Soviet collapse, when billions of dollars’ worth of precious metals, oil and other commodities was transferred from the state to firms linked to the KGB. From the start, foreign-intelligence operatives of the KGB sought to accumulate black cash to maintain and preserve influence networks long thought demolished by the Soviet collapse. For a time under Yeltsin the forces of the KGB stayed hidden in the background. But when Putin rose to power, the alliance between the KGB and organised crime emerged and bared its teeth. To understand this process, we must go back to the beginning of it all, to the time of the Soviet collapse.

For the men who helped bring Putin to power, the revanche has also brought a reckoning. Pugachev and Yumashev had begun the transfer of power in desperate hurry, as Yeltsin’s health failed, in an attempt to secure the future of the country – and their own safety – against what they believed to be a Communist threat. But they too had forgotten the not too distant Soviet past.

The security men they brought to power were to stop at nothing to prolong their rule beyond the bounds of anything they’d thought possible.

‘We should have spoken to him more,’ sighed Yumashev.

‘Of course,’ said Pugachev. ‘But there wasn’t any time.’

PART ONE Contents Cover Title Page PUTIN’S PEOPLE How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West Catherine Belton Copyright Dedication Epigraph List of Illustrations Dramatis Personae Prologue PART ONE 1. ‘Operation Luch’ 2. Inside Job 3. ‘The Tip of an Iceberg’ 4. Operation Successor: ‘It Was Already After Midnight’ 5. ‘Children’s Toys in Pools of Mud’ PART TWO 6. ‘The Inner Circle Made Him’ 7. ‘Operation Energy’ 8. Out of Terror, an Imperial Awakening 9. ‘Appetite Comes During Eating’ PART THREE 10. Obschak 11. Londongrad 12. The Battle Begins 13. Black Cash 14. Soft Power in an Iron Fist – ‘I Call Them the Orthodox Taliban’ 15. The Network and Donald Trump Epilogue Picture Section Notes Index Acknowledgements About the Author About the Publisher

1 1. ‘Operation Luch’ 2. Inside Job 3. ‘The Tip of an Iceberg’ 4. Operation Successor: ‘It Was Already After Midnight’ 5. ‘Children’s Toys in Pools of Mud’ PART TWO 6. ‘The Inner Circle Made Him’ 7. ‘Operation Energy’ 8. Out of Terror, an Imperial Awakening 9. ‘Appetite Comes During Eating’ PART THREE 10. Obschak 11. Londongrad 12. The Battle Begins 13. Black Cash 14. Soft Power in an Iron Fist – ‘I Call Them the Orthodox Taliban’ 15. The Network and Donald Trump Epilogue Picture Section Notes Index Acknowledgements About the Author About the Publisher

‘Operation Luch’ 1. ‘Operation Luch’ 2. Inside Job 3. ‘The Tip of an Iceberg’ 4. Operation Successor: ‘It Was Already After Midnight’ 5. ‘Children’s Toys in Pools of Mud’ PART TWO 6. ‘The Inner Circle Made Him’ 7. ‘Operation Energy’ 8. Out of Terror, an Imperial Awakening 9. ‘Appetite Comes During Eating’ PART THREE 10. Obschak 11. Londongrad 12. The Battle Begins 13. Black Cash 14. Soft Power in an Iron Fist – ‘I Call Them the Orthodox Taliban’ 15. The Network and Donald Trump Epilogue Picture Section Notes Index Acknowledgements About the Author About the Publisher

ST PETERSBURG – It’s early February 1992, and an official car from the city administration is slowly driving down the main street of the city. A grey slush has been partially swept from the pavements, and people are trudging through the cold in thick anonymous coats, laden with bags and hunched against the wind. Behind the fading façades of the once grand houses on Nevsky Prospekt, shops stand almost empty, their shelves practically bare in the aftershocks of the Soviet Union’s sudden implosion. It’s barely six weeks since the Soviet Union ceased to exist, since the fateful day when Russia’s president Boris Yeltsin and the leaders of the other Soviet republics signed their union out of existence with the stroke of a pen. The city’s food distributors are struggling to react to rapid change as the strict Soviet regulations that for decades controlled supply chains and fixed prices had suddenly ceased to exist.

In the bus queues and at the impromptu markets that have sprung up across the city as inhabitants seek to earn cash selling shoes and other items from their homes, the talk all winter has been of food shortages, ration cards and gloom. Making matters worse, hyperinflation is ravaging savings. Some have even warned of famine, sounding alarm bells across a city still gripped by memories of the Second World War blockade, when up to a thousand people starved to death every day.

But the city official behind the wheel of the black Volga sedan looks calm. The slight, resolute figure gazing intently ahead is Vladimir Putin. He is thirty-nine, deputy mayor of St Petersburg and the recently appointed head of the city’s foreign relations committee. The scene is being filmed for a series of documentaries on the city’s new administration, and this one centres on the youthful-looking deputy mayor whose responsibilities include ensuring adequate imports of food.[1] As the footage flickers back to his office in City Hall at Smolny, Putin reels off a string of figures on the tonnes of grain in humanitarian aid being shipped in from Germany, England and France. There is no need for worry, he says. Nearly ten minutes is spent on careful explanations of the measures his committee has taken to secure emergency supplies of food, including a groundbreaking deal for £20 million-worth of livestock grain secured during a meeting between the city’s mayor, Anatoly Sobchak, and British prime minister John Major. Without this act of generosity from the UK, the region’s young livestock would not have survived, he says.

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