Putin's confidant Patrushev prepares for looming Russian crisis
Nikolai Patrushev is one of Vladimir Putin's most trusted men. According to media reports, the Russian president has indicated him as a potential successor. The former Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation has a plan to combat the country's crisis, which is reportedly approaching rapidly and will affect the Russian economy later this year.
21 May 2024 08:36
Vladimir Putin, who started another presidential term last week, appointed former Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev and Tula Governor Alexei Dyumin as his assistants.
Patrushev, one of Putin's closest security officials, served as Secretary of the Security Council for the last 16 years and is now his advisor. He is an FSB officer who has known Putin for years and is among a few of his most trusted individuals.
According to the authorities' plan, Nikolai Patrushev will oversee issues related to the shipbuilding industry in Russia, but "there will also be other functions" that he will fulfill. Patrushev was one of the prominent participants in Monday's consultations of the so-called "Politburo 2.0," where reports from the leadership of the newly established economic bloc of the government and the leadership of the Central Bank were discussed.
As read on platform X, the reports primarily include warnings about the approaching economic and financial crisis and proposals for urgent action. Russia is expected to experience a severe downturn later this year, as reported by the mysterious blogger General SVR, the same one who wrote about Vladimir Putin's death last fall.
He also argued that the country is run by the elite in the Kremlin and the president's doubles.
Increasing pressure. Putin's man's idea for the crisis
What method does Nikolai Patrushev have to combat the crisis? It's not "sophisticated," considering Russia's history and the former intelligence officer's activities. One of Putin's key men plans to intensify repression shortly to block any potential increase in social tension in the event of a crisis.
The authorities intend to punish any manifestations of widely understood dissent severely, and the first to be targeted will be "ultra-patriots" with radical views. All of this is to control the unrest in the country and continue the war in Ukraine without hindrance. The Kremlin's gray eminence, as Patrushev is called, knows how to manage this.