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Putin just made a major change to Russian law enforcement

Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a ceremony to award the Hero of Labor at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, April 30, 2016. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a ceremony to award the Hero of Labor at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, April 30, 2016. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

(Thomson Reuters)
Russian President Putin delivers a speech during a ceremony to award the Hero of Labor at the Kremlin in Moscow

Russian President Vladimir Putin has just carried out a major reshuffling of the country's law enforcement in attempts to take an even stronger grasp of the country, the Financial Times reports.

In a sudden reshuffle, Putin has dismissed eight senior law enforcement officials while promoting 12 others who are viewed as Putin loyalists.

The reshuffle was first announced on the presidential website on Saturday as an official decree.

Among those promoted in the reshuffle, the FT notes, are Alexei Kudrin, who has been a longtime Putin confidant, as well as Igor Krasnov, an investigator into the death of opposition politician Boris Nemtsov.

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The sudden law enforcement reshuffle comes less than a month after Putin similarly made a surprise announcement of the creation of a National Guard. That decision effectively created a new military force within Russia that would report directly to the government. The National Guard will function, according to NYU Global Affairs professor Mark Galeotti, as a sort of maximally loyalist Praetorian guard.

The new National Guard will act as both a force to provide security for Putin and his loyalists, as well as serving as a new power lever that would allow Putin to intimidate and keep other Russian elites in line.

And the sudden moves to both create a new National Guard as well as reshuffling Russian law enforcement could demonstrate a move by Putin to secure his own power in Russia as much as possible as Moscow continues to grapple with such systemic issues facing the country as a crashing economy, low oil prices, and military entanglements as far afield as Ukraine and Syria.

Still, Putin's attempts to take ever greater control of the country may end up being too little too late. According to Nikolay Petrov, a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, Russia is likely to go through periods of extreme turmoil within the following year.

And, there is a good chance that Putin's regime may not truly be able to make its way through such upheavals without actual concrete reforms — not just reforms that benefit Putin and his inner circle.

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