A Struggle Over Russia's Interior Ministry
Could Emerge
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Russian President Vladimir Putin hands Interior
Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev a flag during a 2013 ceremony. Photo: Mikhail
Klimentyev/AFP/Getty Images
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Summary
In recent weeks, rumors that Russian Interior
Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev will be replaced have been circulating among
Russian media and pundits who watch Moscow. Stratfor has been monitoring the
Russian government's coherence and the strength of its leader, President
Vladimir Putin, as the country faces a series of crises involving its faltering
economy and tensions with the West over Ukraine. Although Kolokoltsev is of
little consequence as a personality, the office he holds oversees one of the
most powerful tools for anyone seeking political power in Russia: a significant
part of the country's internal surveillance apparatus.
Analysis
Rumors that Kolokoltsev has been forced to
resign first appeared Oct. 29 on Russia's Dozhd (Rain) television and were
picked up by Pravda, RIA Novosti and other Russian media outlets before
becoming a topic of chatter for Russian pundits. Dozhd cited sources within the
Defense Ministry, though the exact status of Kolokoltsev's position was not
made clear. Dozhd is one of the last independent television stations in Russia
and has reported such rumors before. But even when the details of Dozhd's
reporting have been off, the television station's coverage of leaks from inside
the Kremlin have pointed to actual problems.
Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov
acknowledged the rumors but did not confirm or deny them. However, this week
Kolokoltsev attended the Interpol General Assembly in Monaco as Russia's
interior minister. There, he acted as if his situation were normal, giving
interviews on Russia's willingness to help combat various global issues such as
cybercrime. After Kolokoltsev's appearance, the Russian media are now
speculating that he will resign in the near future, possibly after Russia's Day
of Police on Nov. 10 -- a holiday celebrating the country's police, which
Kolokoltsev oversees and from whose ranks he was promoted.
On a technical level, Kolokoltsev has been one
of Russia's better interior ministers since taking office in 2012,
understanding the operations of the police forces and interior troops. His
reforms of the various forces have been viewed positively in Russia. But
Kolokoltsev himself is not important, and whether he resigns will have little
impact on the country. What is more important is the actual position of
interior minister -- and which of the Kremlin's power circles wields influence
over that official.
Russia's Interior Ministry is one of the most
powerful ministries in the country. As with most European interior ministries,
it is responsible for internal security, overseeing local and federal police
forces, paramilitary units and investigations. The ministry's paramilitary
troops -- which number around 200,000 -- are some of the best-trained and
best-equipped armed forces in Russia. They have ample combat experience, with
an excellent record of service in various conflicts in the North Caucasus, most
notably in Chechnya.
Traditionally, Russia's intelligence services
have been aligned with or have overseen the Interior Ministry. During the
Czarist era, the ministry controlled the gendarmes and the secret police. In
the early Soviet period, Felix Dzerzhinsky -- founder of the feared Cheka
secret police, the precursor to the KGB -- became the first Soviet interior
minister and head of the secret police.
This arrangement has led the Federal Security
Service, or FSB, to view the Interior Ministry's forces as its own armed wing,
so it does not have to rely on the Russian military -- which is overseen by
competing factions -- for influence. However, the FSB's control over the
ministry has wavered in recent years.
Kolokoltsev's predecessor, Rashid Nurgaliyev,
was in charge of internal affairs at the FSB before becoming interior minister.
Thus, he ran the ministry and its forces with political motivations instead of
a domestic security strategy. Kolokoltsev, on the other hand, was a police
officer and later Moscow's police commissioner before stepping into the
ministry. He was seen as a technocrat who was not involved in the Kremlin
clans' power struggle. Because of the change in leadership, the FSB -- and
other security factions, such as the Investigative Committee -- have been
struggling with the Interior Ministry in recent years over several choice
prizes, such as control over the Main Directorate of Economic Security and
Anti-Corruption, which comes with more tools for investigating economic crimes.
Thus, Kolokoltsev's premature withdrawal could be part of the FSB's efforts to
re-exert control over the Interior Ministry.
However, the rumored choice for Kolokoltsev's
replacement points to an even more important and dangerous struggle involving
Putin. Leaks to the Russian media have indicated that First Deputy Interior
Minister Viktor Zolotov will be chosen as Kolokoltsev's replacement. Though
Zolotov is already in the Interior Ministry, he is also the former head of the
Federal Protective Service, Putin's personal security detail that is the
Russian version of the U.S. Secret Service. Zolotov was the personal bodyguard
of Putin's mentor, Anatoly Sobchak, in St. Petersburg, where he met Putin.
Zolotov is directly loyal to Putin and not part of the other security circles
in the Kremlin.
Such a replacement would put a Putin loyalist
directly in charge of one of the most important security forces and mechanisms
in the country, keeping it out of the hands of the other various security
circles, such as the FSB.
At a time when Russia is facing a series of
crises that could erode Putin's popularity and leadership, this possible
reshuffle has heightened importance. If more indications emerge of an impending
change at the top of the Interior Ministry, they will reveal Putin's wariness
over the ability of the security circles, particularly the FSB, to influence
the ministry. A reshuffle will also highlight Putin's desire to shore up his
direct control over some of the country's most powerful tools.
"A
Struggle Over Russia's Interior Ministry Could Emerge is republished with
permission of Stratfor.",
November 13, 2014
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