Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 19—Nearly two
million Russians or slightly more than two percent of those employed work for
the internal security services, a figure that has gone up by approximately ten
percent over the last five years of Vladimir Putin’s time in power, according to
a new study by the Project Research Center. In addition, just under 800,000 are
in the military.
The Russian government does not call
attention to these numbers and spending and in many cases classifies significant
portions of each, making it difficult if not impossible for Russians and others
to know how much the government is spending on the forces it uses to control
the population.
Internal troops, including the 300,000-plus
Russian Guards, now outnumber those in the standing army by 30 percent. In addition, 211,000 work for the penal
system, 200,000 for the FSB, 50,000 for the Federal Protection Service, 40,000
for the customs service, and 33,000 for the procuracy general, 19,000 for the
investigation committee.
And approximately 12,000 to 14,000
are estimated to work for the SVR (znak.com/2020-02-19/proekt_poschital_chislo_silovikov_v_rossii_ih_2_6_mln_chelovek). The average pay of people in these agencies, which
has increased by 50 percent to 100 percent over this period, is two to three
times that of the working population as a whole.
Most
Russian security spending goes to the military, but 900 billion rubles (14
billion US dollars) went for the forces of the national guard in 2018, 451billion
rubles (6 billion US dollars) for other internal troops and border guards in the
same year, and 227 billion rubles (3.8 billion US dollars) for the penal
servies
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