Putin's Insiders Are Getting Out - Jason Jay Smart [View all]
Putin's closest insiders are no longer behaving like men who trust the future. As fear deepens inside the Kremlin, the people with the most access and the most to lose are acting first. They are protecting assets, widening distance, and moving money and personal risk away from the center of power. Regimes do not suddenly start to look weak only when crowds fill the streets. They look weak when the people nearest the ruler begin preparing for what comes after him.
Moscow now looks less like the confident capital of a stable system and more like a city managed through fear, secrecy, and emergency control. Digital disruptions and growing dependence on cash fit a larger pattern where ordinary Russians feel instability while the elite class acts as if time is running short. The image of strength remains on television, but the behavior underneath is defensive, suspicious, and increasingly shaped by the fear of betrayal.
The deeper story is that Putin's system is forcing people to choose between loyalty and survival, and more are choosing survival. When insiders begin protecting themselves before the public fully understands the danger, it signals that trust at the top is fading. When trust fades around a ruler who survives purely on projected image, even silence becomes a dangerous warning.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro: Putin Missing & Moscows Blackout
01:51 - Billionaire Exodus: How the FSB Loots the Elites
05:19 - Kremlin Raiders: How FSB Sons Get Rich
06:29 - Putins Criminal Past: From Mafia Ties to President
07:30 - Ukraines Drone War: Burning Russias Oil Profits
09:26 - Kremlin War Profits: The Cost of Putins War
10:09 - Russias Banking Crisis: Defaults & Stolen Assets
11:55 - Putins Bunker Life: A Lazy Dictator Losing Control
13:42 - Putins Sick Regime: Why 1,500 Millionaires are Fleeing