The FSB has been criticised for
corruption,
human rights violations and
secret police activities. Some Kremlin critics such as
Alexander Litvinenko have claimed that the FSB is engaged in suppression of internal dissent; Litvinenko died in 2006 as a result of
polonium poisoning. Litvinenko, along with a series of other authors such as
Yury Felshtinsky,
David Satter,
Boris Kagarlitsky,
Vladimir Pribylovsky,
Mikhail Trepashkin, have claimed that the 1999
apartment bombings in
Moscow and other Russian cities were a
false flag attack coordinated by the FSB in order to win public support for a new full-scale
war in Chechnya and boost former FSB director and then prime minister
Vladimir Putin's popularity in the lead-up to
parliamentary elections and presidential transfer of power. The FSB has been further criticized by some for failure to bring Islamist terrorism in Russia under control. In the mid-2000s, the pro-Kremlin Russian sociologist
Olga Kryshtanovskaya claimed that the FSB played a dominant role in the country's political, economic and even cultural life. After the annexation of Crimea, the FSB may also have been responsible for the forced disappearances and torture of
Crimean Tatar activists and public figures. According to the
United Nations, in occupied Crimea, the FSB used torture with elements of sexual violence against pro-Ukrainian activists, forcing them to confess to crimes related to terrorism. The detainees were, allegedly, beaten, tortured with electric shocks in the genitals and threatened with rape. Some, such as Oleh Sentsov, have been detained and accused in politically motivated
kangaroo courts. The FSB spied on and filmed a gathering of members of the
Jehovah's Witnesses while they were about to undergo baptism rites, with the videos used as evidence in a trial against the defendants in 2021; Jehovah's Witnesses have been banned as a group in Russia since 2017 for "extremism". In spite of various anti-corruption actions of the Russian government, FSB operatives and officials are routinely found in the center of various fraud,
racket and
corruption scandals. FSB officers have been frequently accused of torture, extortion, bribery and illegal takeovers of private companies, often working together with tax inspection officers. Active and former FSB officers are also present as "
curators" in "almost every single large enterprise", both in public and private sectors. Several unnamed current and former officials described the FSB as less effective than the KGB, describing it as "rife with corruption, beset by bureaucratic bloat and ultimately out of touch", in a report by
The Washington Post in 2022. An investigation by
Bellingcat and
The Insider implicated FSB agents in the
poisoning of opposition leader
Alexei Navalny in August 2020, where he became ill during a flight. It was reported that during the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, FSB officers carried out filtration activities in
Mariupol, which were accompanied by searches, interrogations, forced deportations to Russia, beatings and torture. According to an investigative report by , some of the
suspicious deaths of Russian businesspeople in 2022–2023 may possibly be connected to large scale
accounting fraud by
Gazprom executives, who may have funneled money to a network of businesses owned by friends and family members with ties to the FSB and Russian military.
Role in the Russian doping scandal Following the broadcast of a documentary film alleging systematic doping in Russia,
World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) president
Craig Reedie authorized an Independent Commission (IC) to investigate the issues brought up by the documentary in 2015. The IC authorized a review of practices on whether there were any breaches by the
Russian Anti-Doping Agency. The report found direct interference into the laboratory's operations by the Russian State undermined the laboratory's independence and that tests conducted by the laboratory were highly suspect. The report elaborates on the role of the FSB: In January 2016, the head of Russia's anti-doping laboratory
Grigory Rodchenkov fled Russia and exposed the doping program, which included members of the FSB replacing tainted urine samples with older, clean ones. As a result of the scandals the
International Association of Athletics Federations suspended Russia from all international athletic competitions including the
2016 Summer Olympics. In July 2016, the first
McLaren Report found that "beyond a reasonable doubt" the Russian
Ministry of Sport, the Centre of Sports Preparation of the National Teams of Russia, the FSB, and the WADA-accredited laboratory in Moscow "operated for the protection of doped Russian athletes" within a "state-directed failsafe system" using "the disappearing positive [test] methodology". In a second McLaren Report released December 2016, it was found that In the period before the Sochi Games, a "clean urine bank" was established at the FSB Command Centre, which was situated immediately adjacent to the Sochi Laboratory. Inside that building a dedicated room containing several large freezers was set up for the purpose of storing the clean urine samples.
Crocus City Hall attack On 7 March the
United States Embassy in Moscow warned that "extremists have imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow, to include concerts". That day, the US also privately warned Russian officials of the danger of an impending attack from IS–KP from intelligence gathered earlier in March, under the US intelligence community's "
duty to warn" requirement, specifically mentioning the Crocus City Hall venue. Ten days after the attack it was reported that
Iran had also warned Russia that a major "terrorist operation" was being planned, based on information gathered from IS militants arrested after the
2024 Kerman bombings. Three days before the Crocus City Hall attack, President
Vladimir Putin told the board of the FSB that Western warnings of a potential attack inside Russia were "provocative" and "resemble outright blackmail and the intention to intimidate and destabilise our society". On 22 March 2024, four Tajik
ISIS–K gunmen launched an
attack on a concert hall in
Krasnogorsk, Russia, with rifles and incendiaries. The attack, claimed by ISIS–K, killed 144 and injured 551 and marked the deadliest attack on Russian soil since the
Beslan school siege in 2004. Putin and the FSB suggested that
Ukraine was involved in the attack, without offering evidence.
Alexander Bortnikov, the head of the FSB, said that "radical Islamists" prepared the attack with help from Ukrainian and Western "special services". Bortnikov claimed that the US warning was "of a general nature". IS-affiliated
Amaq News Agency published a video filmed by one of the attackers. Ukraine denied any involvement in the attack, and described the FSB's claims that the perpetrators of the Crocus City Hall attack tried to escape to Ukraine as "very doubtful and primitive"
disinformation, recalling that the border is heavily guarded by soldiers and drones, mined in many areas, and constantly shelled from both sides. A short video on Telegram allegedly showed one of the suspects being tortured by FSB agents, who cut off his ear and forced him to eat it. Navalny associate
Ivan Zhdanov criticized Russian security services for their "catastrophic incompetence" and the FSB for being "busy with everything except its direct responsibilities—killing their political opponents, spying on citizens and
prosecuting people who are against the war." Another associate,
Leonid Volkov, said that the FSB "can't do the only job it really should be doing: preventing a real, nightmarish terrorist attack."
Novaya Gazeta Europes chief editor,
Kirill Martynov, criticized Putin for dismissing Western intelligence warnings and focusing resources on "
LGBT extremists" and the war with Ukraine instead of guarding against "real threats".
Ukrainian invasion of the Kursk Oblast In August 2024, Ukrainian forces
crossed the border into
Kursk Oblast during the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine resulting in part of the oblast becoming under
Ukrainian occupation. All legal national borders of Russia are controlled by the
FSB Border Guard under the command of FSB director Alexander Bortnikov. Since most of the best Russian troops were deployed in Ukraine, most of the men guarding the border in the Kursk Oblast were young, inexperienced
conscripts from the FSB Border Service and lightly equipped army infantry units (all male citizens of Russia aged 18–30 are subject to conscription for one year of active duty military service), who suffered heavy losses in combat with experienced Ukrainian troops. Some of the conscripts stationed on the border with Ukraine were even purportedly unarmed.
FSB detention centers In July 2025, the State Duma passed a law officially restoring the FSB's authority to operate its own detention centers. Russian investigative journalists
Andrei Soldatov and
Irina Borogan described the legislation as "a foundation for a new
Gulag” and predicted a major expansion of
political repression in Russia: "Special railcars, ships, aircraft, powers to transport prisoners, and the authority to rule and punish within prison walls—all of this, under FSB control, points to preparations for repressions on a scale we haven't yet seen." FSB detention centers would hold prisoners accused of treason, espionage, terrorism, and extremism. According to human rights activist Ivan Astashin, "The transfer of some detention centres to the FSB's jurisdiction will lead to them effectively becoming unaccountable to supervisory bodies." ==See also==