Whilst under Putin's regime the size of Russia's regular forces has
shrunk recently and will continue to do so, its security and
paramilitary elements have become increasingly powerful. In fact,
recently they have proliferated - as have their special uniforms and
kit - and have become disproportionately important, spearheading all
recent operations. They seem set to remain Russia's most active armed
agencies for the immediate future. In parallel, within the murky world
where government and private interests intersect, a number of
paramilitary 'private armies' operate almost as vigilantes, with
government toleration or approval.
This book offers a succinct overview of the official, semi-official and
unofficial agencies that pursue Russian government and quasi-government
objectives by armed means, from the 200,000-strong Interior Troops,
through Police and other independent departmental forces, down to
private security firms (in Moscow alone, the largest four security
companies have c. 8,000 armed operatives). While some elements have been
created in response to real challenges from terrorism and organized
crime, other special groups owe more to 'bureaucratic warlordism' in
other Ministries.
Most visibly, several government agencies have been heavily involved in
the wars in Chechnya and elsewhere in the Caucasus. This conflict has
spread, requiring counter-terrorist operations both there and inside
Russia by the Interior Troops and the Federal Security Service (ex-KGB).
Counter-terrorist defence is also provided by a Presidential Security
Service. Simultaneously, the long fight against the 'Mafiya' has given
birth to special Police and other Justice Ministry units. At the fringes
of such activities are parachute-trained combat medics, disaster-relief
and fire-fighting officers of the Ministry of Emergency Situations. In
the face of lawlessness born in the chaotic years of Boris Yeltsin's
reign in the 1990s, there has also been a toleration of armed civilian
vigilante groups in the Caucasus and Russian Far East, with the
reappearance of Cossack patrols and other groups, which are provided at
a community level with arms and uniforms in return for taking over local
security.
Featuring rare photographs, and detailed color plates of uniforms,
insignia and equipment, Mark Galeotti, a renowned authority, explores
the Putin regime's shadowy special-forces apparatus, active in an array
of counter-terrorist and counter-mafia wars since 1991.