Snakes and adders
Powerful groups within the elite are increasingly breaking the unspoken rule against public infighting

In Russia, if a public figure is being prosecuted or punished, two things used to be true: they oppose Vladimir Putin’s rule or his “special military operation” in Ukraine, and they are not a high-ranking official.
What Putin has not offered is a clear strategy for achieving these goals. Nor has he provided Russians any vision of how they should live, or how Russia should operate, within this new world order. With no shared roadmap to follow, many Russian actors are being forced to improvise, often in ways that conflict.
These reshuffles suggest that the Kremlin seeks to strengthen the state’s organisation around the war agenda. But intra-elite discord does not bode well for Putin.

Breaking the waves
The Kremlin’s latest attempt to quash Telegram echoes the Soviet Union’s war on foreign radio broadcasts

Moscow’s Gulag Museum renamed Museum of Memory and dedicated to ‘genocide of the Soviet people’

Deserting the paper army
How one woman refused to be a cog in Russia’s military machine

Russian journalist jailed over €3 donation to Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation

Russian political prisoner dies after suffering heart attack in custody

Two Russian minors given 7-year sentences and massive fines for setting fire to military helicopter

Russia’s State Duma passes law allowing FSB to block individual communications

Russian man who declared himself a ‘foreign agent’ as a joke now faces criminal charges

Analysts say 2025 was deadliest year of war for both Ukrainian and Russian civilians




