According to former Russian
Duma member
Konstantin Borovoi, "Vladimir Putin|[Vladimir] Putin's appointment is the culmination of the KGB's crusade for power. This is its finale. Now the KGB runs the country." Olga Kryshtanovskaya, director of the Moscow-based Center for the Study of Elites, has found that up to 78% of 1,016 leading political figures in Russia have served previously in organizations affiliated with the KGB or FSB. She said: "If in the Soviet period and the first post-Soviet period, the KGB and FSB people were mainly involved in security issues, now half are still involved in security but the other half are involved in business, political parties, NGOs, regional governments, even culture... They started to use all political institutions."). As Putin said, "There is no such thing as a former KGB man". Soon after becoming prime minister of Russia, Putin also perhaps somewhat jokingly claimed that "A group of FSB colleagues dispatched to work undercover in the government has successfully completed its first mission." hardcore ideology, and support of population (60% of Russians trust the FSB), which according to
Yevgenia Albats and
Catherine A. Fitzpatrick makes it a perfect
totalitarian political party. Some observers note that the current Russian state security organization the
FSB is even more powerful than the
KGB was, because it does not operate under the control of the
Communist Party as the KGB in the past. and the staff of Russian
Strategic Rocket Forces is not officially subordinate to the FSB, although the FSB is likely interested in monitoring these structures, as they inherently involve state secrets and various degrees of access to them. The Law on the Federal Security Service, which defines the FSB's functions and establishes its structure, does not mention these activities, but it is widely understood that the organization engages in these activities vigorously regardless. A
political scientist,
Stanislav Belkovsky, also defines Chekism to be an "imperial ideology" that includes aggressive
anti-Americanism.
Andrei Illarionov, a former advisor of Putin, describes contemporary Chekism as a new
corporatism system, "distinct from any seen in our country before". In this model, members of the Corporation of Intelligence Service Collaborators [Russian abbreviation KSSS] took over the entire body of state power, follow an
omerta-like behavior code, and "are given instruments conferring power over others – membership “perks”, such as the right to carry and use weapons". According to Illarionov, this "Corporation has seized key government agencies – the Tax Service,
Ministry of Defense,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Parliament, and the
government-controlled mass media – which are now used to advance the interests of KSSS members. Through these agencies, every significant resource of the country – security/intelligence, political, economic, informational and financial – is being monopolized in the hands of Corporation members." The ideology of "Chekists" is "
Nashism (“ours-ism”), the selective application of rights", he said. ==Attitudes toward Chekism in contemporary Russia==