The Rest Is Classified - The Rise Of Putin: Joining The KGB
Episode Date: November 14, 2025*Declassified Club exclusive: SUBSCRIBE to listen to the full series* How did Vladimir Putin rise from a nobody in St Petersburg to the most powerful man in Russia? Did he alwa...ys crave the power of public office? Or was this relentless determination beaten into him by the KGB? Listen as David and Gordon are joined by one of the world's foremost experts on Russian organised crime, author and podcaster, Mark Galeotti, to discuss the rise of Putin and his unorthodox time in the KGB. ------------------- THE REST IS CLASSIFIED LIVE 2026: Buy your tickets to see David and Gordon live on stage at London’s Southbank Centre on 31 January: https://www.livenation.co.uk/the-rest-is-classified-live-tickets-adp1627115 ------------------- Join The Declassified Club: Start your free trial at therestisclassified.com - go deeper into the world of espionage with exclusive Q&As, interviews with top intelligence insiders, quarterly livestreams, ad-free listening, early access to episodes and live show tickets, and weekly deep dives into original spy stories. Members also get curated reading lists, special book discounts, prize draws, and access to our private chat community. To sign up to the free newsletter, go to: https://mailchi.mp/goalhanger.com/tric-free-newsletter-sign-up ------------------- Email: therestisclassified@goalhanger.com Twitter: @triclassified Social Producer: Emma Jackson Producer: Becki Hills Head of History: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Well, welcome club members Secret Squirrels to a very very big.
special mini-series that we have for each and every one of you, because we are going to pair
the wonderful series that we have just started this week on Putin's chef, and so much more.
You have Genni Prokosian, which has its own sort of wild contours, and we are going to be
talking over the next three episodes for club members, this little mini-series, on Vladimir Putin.
And in particular, what we thought we do for all of you is to go a little bit deeper into the kind of parallel story of Vladimir Putin intertwined with that of Yevgeny Progoshin.
There's overlap with Leningrad and St. Petersburg, the emergence of a young and, as we'll see, maybe relatively forgotten KGB officer called Vladimir Putin.
and we are going to talk about how he sort of ascends through the ranks of the KGB and Russian politics in the 1990s to become Russia's leader.
But Gordon, you and I are not going to do this alone.
That sounds like too much for us to carry, too much of a burden.
So we are joined for the next three episodes by a very special guest.
That's right.
Our very special guest is Mark Galliotti.
Mark Galliotti is one of the leading experts.
on the worlds of Russian organized crime and the Russian security services and what goes on
at the heart of the Kremlin. Mark, welcome to the Declassified Club.
It's great to be here and joining you. Thank you. You've written a number of books,
haven't you, on the world of Russian organized crime and Putin? Which ones would you pick out
for us as being particularly relevant here? Well, I mean, the revised edition, I should say,
of my little primer, we need to talk about Putin. It's just coming out now, which we're
It basically brings us up to date from 2018 when the book was originally written to now
and really ask the question of whether or not we're dealing with a different Putin.
My answer is basically we're dealing with Putin squared.
He's still Putin, just even more so.
And, well, the other one I'd obviously sort of mention in this particular context is downfall,
which is precisely the book that I co-wrote with Anna Arutunian on precisely Prygosin's rise and fall
and does this job of attempting to intertwine the stories of these two different but not entirely
unconnected nasty chaps, Putin and Progogyn.
And we should say you also host a very good podcast of your own called In Moscow's Shadows,
which kind of dives deep into the world of the kind of power politics of the Kremlin and the Russian
security services. But Mark, on this series, we're going to look at Putin.
At once a kind of blank slate, but also is wonderfully rich and complex.
and fascinates everyone and has done so much to shape our world. And we want to kind of look at his
emergence, you know, how he ends up as Russia's leader and, you know, from his kind of modest
beginnings. So I guess maybe we should start with the young Putin himself and where he comes
from, because the story is very much rooted in Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, which of course is
also where a lot of our progosian series is set. And that's the world from which Putin
emerges as well, isn't it? It is. I mean, he was born in October, 1952. I remember once
actually being sort of dragged aside by a Russian occultist in Moscow who wanted to go into
great detail about why the fact that Putin was a Libra was so central to understanding him. I'm
speaking as a Libra myself. I'd rather resent that. But the point is, yeah, he was born at a time
when Leningrad was frankly still in ruins. You know, it had been besieged.
Catastrophically in the Second World War, remember, more people died in the siege of Leningrad
than the total war dead of Britain and the United States combined.
And, you know, still one of the great spectacles of this city, these sort of huge, rolling mass
grave sites where people were buried.
So, you know, Leningrad was still in ruins.
It was okay if you were part of the party elite, the nomenclature, but Putin absolutely was
not. His family was a very sort of basic stock. I mean, he'd had two elder brothers,
had both died, one during the war, and one before. His mother was a factory worker. His father
had been a submariner who then worked, was in the army. But, you know, these were not in any
way can enrich people. He lived in massively overcrowded and, frankly, very, very grotty
accommodation. And he himself, it's not just that he didn't come from the nomenclatura class,
but didn't exactly distinguish himself in the sort of classic sense as a schoolboy.
He seemed more interested, frankly, in running with kid gangs and picking fights.
But people who had recognized who, I mean, although he was relatively small, still is,
but that he was pretty indomitable and that, you know, when he went into a fight, he would go all in.
There was no question about that.
But, you know, this was it.
He was a scrappy kid from the wrong side of the tracks.
And in some ways, this is one of the reasons why he ended up going to KGB because it was still
one of the social elevators.
You couldn't become a university professor if you didn't have the right connections, but
you had a chance of getting into the KGB.
There's an interesting story.
It's a 16-year-old.
He actually walks up to KGB headquarters in Leningrad and basically knocks on the door cold
and just says, I want to join.
I mean, it's a kind of
baldsy, ambitious thing to do
and slightly odd.
And it seems like he's been influenced
in those early days by fiction
and by the kind of portrayals of the KGB
and especially some of the series
set in the Second World War like the Sword and the Shield
to see this idea of being a KGB officer
as being a kind of heroic defender of the motherland
and that's what he wants to do.
Well, yes and no.
I mean, first of all, absolutely.
it's not just balzy, it is deeply weird to go to the KGB headquarters in Leningrad.
I mean, the so-called Bolshoidon, the big house, as it was known.
I mean, this is the same building that had been the headquarters of the secret police in Stalin's times.
So this is a building that is as steeped in blood as one could imagine.
There was the old joke about how it must be the tallest building in Leningrad,
because you can see Siberia from its basement.
And people didn't just go to the KGB and say, hi, how do I join?
So, I mean, I can only imagine just how non-plus the duty officer must have been when this kid wanders in.
But, look, I don't think it was ever about being, as the KGB's motto was, the sword and shield of the Communist Party.
Because one of the other things about Putin was he did not until he absolutely had to join the Komsomel, the Uncommunist League, which again was basically a necessity if you were going to get anywhere in the party state.
And so although later on in his biography, he said he used to enjoy reading the works of Marx and Engels and Lenin, I somehow doubt that.
So instead, I think it was from his point of view that the KGB was his chance to break in to a different kind of life.
But also, this is a guy who, and here I'm playing amateur psychologist, has always been desperately looking for security.
That's something that he craved, and he still craves today.
And from his point of view, I think the KGB was the biggest gang in town.
You know, it was the place where if you got in, that's it, you were secure, not just,
I don't mean secure from being arrested or whatever, but secure from poverty, from isolation
and from God help us all, irrelevance.
As you say, he was sort of impressed by this idea that this was a career where you ended
up really mattering.
I've been struck listening to Julia Yoffie's podcast called About a Boy on Putin and his
kind of early life. And the rules of sort of the street, the courtyard in 1950s, 1960s,
Leningrad sound to me a lot like a prison yard. Like it sounded very similar. It's sort of this,
you know, the way you get social status and influences through power, it's very often physical
power. Those who are strong can do what they like. There's a high degree of sort of social
consciousness around who's up and who's down, and if you're down, you're way down, and it's
really hard to get back up, if not impossible. It's fascinating to sort of think about that period
as, you know, which I think in a lot of the Putin sort of story is overlooked, but it just
is so striking when you compare that kind of power system to the one that he seems to be
operating in today. It just seems so, I don't know, like you could almost draw not quite
quite a straight line, but something close to it. I'm just curious how formative you think that
experience as kind of a street brawler was and is to Putin today.
If you want to know more about how a young Vladimir Putin found himself in the KGB, even knocking
on its front door as a 16-year-old, you can access the full episode by signing up to the declassified
club at the rest is classified.com.
