Insider with Putin's secretive security service defects from Russia, blasts former boss as 'war criminal'
Defector confirms Russian President Vladimir Putin has become increasingly paranoid following war in Ukraine
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A former communications officer in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s elite secretive security service has defected after deciding he could not work for a "war criminal" following the invasion of Ukraine.
Gleb Karakulov boarded a flight to Turkey and fled Russia with his wife and daughter in October, becoming one of the most highly ranked Russians to defect over Putin’s war in Ukraine.
"Our president has become a war criminal," he said in an interview reported by The Associated Press. "It’s time to end this war and stop being silent."
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As a security official involved in ensuring Putin’s personal safety, Karakulov has unique knowledge of the Kremlin chief’s life, lines of communication, security details and potentially other classified information.
Between 2009 and 2022, Karakulov worked as an engineer in a field unit of the presidential communications department of the secretive Federal Protective Service — similar to the CIA — and was responsible for establishing secure communications for the Russian president and prime minister wherever they traveled.
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Putin, who was once thought of as a charismatic individual, has become increasingly paranoid in recent years, and following his invasion of Ukraine, he has turned to even greater measures to ensure his security.
According to Karakulov, the increasingly isolated leader refuses to use the internet, does not have a cellphone and apparently refused to fly, preferring to travel via armored train.
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The Russian defector also said that Putin in October had ordered that the Russian embassy in Kazakhstan be outfitted with a secure communication line, which was the first time Karakulov had been ordered to fulfill such a request.
One anonymous official with a security background from a NATO nation said that a defector with the level of insight that Karakulov has holds "a very great level of interest."
"That would be seen as a very serious blow to the president himself because he is extremely keen on his security, and his security is compromised," the official told the AP.
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The Kremlin has not commented on Karakulov’s defection.
It is unclear where Karakulov or his family are now located as he and his family have gone underground due to security concerns.
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Karakulov was originally interviewed by the London-based investigative group The Dossier Center, who provided the AP with more than six hours of footage and verified his position in Putin’s elite security service.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.