Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 15 – Captain
Aleksandr Nikitin, who exposed Soviet
nuclear dumping in the Arctic three decades ago, said in 2000 when someone
described Vladimir Putin as a former KGB officer that “there are no former KGB
officers just as there are no former German shepherds” because they are a
separate species whose members cannot change their spots.
But now there appears to be an additional
reason why there are so few former officers of the FSB, as the KGB is now
called, and it is this: Some currently employed by that organization would like
to quit but are denied the possibility to do so, according to journalist Dima
Shvets in an article for Zona.Media (zona.media/article/2020/06/15/fsb).
Two
young FSB officers turned to Shvets to describe why they were unhappy with
their service in the organs and what happened to them when they tried to leave.
Speaking anonymously to avoid reprisals, they said that the work they were
required to do was boring and offensive and the conditions of work were
hellish, even “slave-like.”
According
to the two, many others who work for the FSB would like to leave but don’t try
because they have concluded that they will be punished if they try to and will,
like these two, be blocked in their attempts by bosses who don’t want to look
bad in the eyes of their superiors and who are content to continue things as
they are.
What
the two stress is that in all things, Russian law is irrelevant both to what they
are required to do as agents and also to their chances of protecting themselves
from abuse at work and from exercising their right to resign. Formally, they
have certain rights; but in practice, they don’t have any.
The
two also suggested that the FSB’s work was often badly organized, involving the
monitoring of people and the collecting of information no one really needs; and
they said that the contempt for law meant that during elections, FSB officers
often voted “two or three times” for the candidate supported by the powers even
if they wanted to vote otherwise.
Having
experienced this, both tried to leave but were met with threats if they
continued and promises of preferment if they remained. They were told that prosecutors would ignore
any complaints they made because the FSB would ensure that their applications for
review were ignored.
And they concluded
that the only way out was to violate the rules of the FSB or to suffer some
physical problem or to die. Otherwise, they would remain not just secret
servants but indentured ones.
It is impossible to say just how
widespread such feeling are, but the comments of these two suggest they are
more common than the public image of the FSB as a totally united organization
is – and that could mean that in a crisis, it might prove less totally reliable
than the Kremlin – and even its opponents – typically assume.
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