Putin's Army Was Looted From Within - Jason Jay Smart
The Kursk fortification scandal is no longer a local corruption case. Money meant for border defenses was siphoned off, Ukraine broke through the same sector, and a regional failure turned into a Moscow-level liability. What once looked provincial now cuts into rear security, political protection, and the chain of officials above it. That is why Kursk, Belgorod, Krasnodar, Novorossiysk, and Crimea no longer read like separate files.
Fresh pressure across Russia's rear keeps reopening the same wound. Novorossiysk should have looked safe. Crimea was supposed to anchor the Black Sea rear. Governors now look less protected, regional managers look more expendable, and Moscow is spending more political capital just to keep the system looking stable. Some regions can be punished to contain scandal. Others are handled more carefully because the Kremlin fears what disorder there could trigger.
Jason Smart breaks down how Kursk, rear strikes, exposed regional weakness, Dagestan's flood pressure, and Chechnya's succession anxiety point to one change inside Putin's system. Russia still has force, but force no longer guarantees confidence, cover, or coherence. Rear weakness is spilling into governance, prosecutions, extraction, and regional control. What used to stay local now travels upward, and every new shock makes the next one harder for Moscow to absorb, contain, and hide.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro: Putins Regime on the Brink of Collapse
01:37 - Ukraine Attacks: Russias Defenseless Airspace
03:00 - Kursk Invasion: Ukraines Symbolic Victory
03:48 - Kremlin Corruption: Stolen Defense Funds
06:06 - FSB vs Military: Putins Internal Power Struggle
08:24 - Putins Shakedown: Seizing Billionaire Assets
10:36 - Ukraines Victory: Why Putin is Hiding Today