Rumor of the day: Putin places top FSB official under house arrest over Ukraine debacle; Update: FSB HQ raided?

Sergey Guneev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

There are three rumors competing for “rumor of the day” this morning, actually, but the one about the FSB official is the newsiest.

I’m skeptical that it’s true, yet there *are* signs recently that Putin understands that the campaign in Ukraine isn’t going well for him. The calendar alone would have punctured any bubble of denial he might be in, as the Kremlin reportedly thought it would knock over Kiev within three days of invading. But there are other clues. The surprising admission that conscripts had been sent to fight, the multiple reports of shocking Russian losses, and the sudden turn towards Syrian mercenaries to reinforce the Russian army all point towards Putin and his deputies scrambling to salvage a war which they realize has gone sideways.

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Go figure that the search for scapegoats might be under way.

I shouldn’t call Beseda a “scapegoat” since that term implies placing blame on someone who’s done nothing to deserve it. There clearly was a catastrophic intelligence breakdown that led the Kremlin to believe Ukrainians wouldn’t resist or, if they did, that they’d be pushovers. Russia being Russia, the likeliest explanation for that breakdown is that the money earmarked for intel operations went into buying mansions for Beseda and his deputies instead. A former British intel official told one UK paper that Putin would naturally fault the FSB “for seeding him the advice that led to the poor decision-making in Ukraine.”

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So maybe the purges have begun. Stay tuned.

The second rumor that’s percolating involves another major battlefield loss for Russia:

There’s always a chance that the Ukrainians are lying but I fail to see how it’d be a propaganda victory for them if they falsely identified Kolesnikov as KIA and then he turned up on Russian television the next day insisting that he’s fine. If they’re going to lie about killing Russian generals, they wouldn’t name names. Doing so and being proved wrong would damage their credibility.

Besides, we already know from the death of Vitaly Gerasimov that the Russian military isn’t always using secure communications to report their battlefield losses to Moscow. It’s possible, maybe likely, that the Ukrainians heard about Kolesnikov’s death because western intelligence is eavesdropping on the Russian army’s phone calls and overheard the news.

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The third rumor is a doozy if true. Reportedly a site in neighboring Belarus has been bombed, a development that would be convenient for Russia if true. The Russians need reinforcements on the battlefield and Belarus’s president, Alexander Lukashenko, is a Putin client. Striking Belarus and pinning it on Ukraine would be an easy way for Russia to justify Lukachenko’s entry into the war:

Warnings of a Russian false flag op against Belarus were reportedly posted on social media even before the bombing was carried out, echoing the U.S. strategy last month of trying to deter Putin by publicizing his invasion plans before he could follow through on them. Reports have swirled for the past week that Belarusian troops are reluctant to get involved in a war that Russia is having trouble winning, replete with thinly sourced claims of mass desertion and a top general resigning. Maybe those reports were Ukrainian propaganda, maybe not. Either way, a staged attack on Belarusian soil would be an obvious device for rallying the nation and its military in favor of joining the fight against Ukraine.

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So there you have it. Three rumors, all or none of which might be true. The fog of war is getting thicker.

Update: Uh oh.

Update: Those rumors about a rift between Putin and his FSB chiefs are getting extra spicy:

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