It shouldn't surprise anyone that the autocrat is also a kleptocrat. Indeed, plundering Russia was always part of the plan—the KGB’s plan. It even had a name: Operation Luch. $50 billion was siphoned out of the country and used to reassert the KGB elites’ power after the fall of Communism. That is exactly what happened, with Putin reaping the greatest benefits, both in terms of money and power. French historian Yvonnick Denoël chronicles the Russian dictator’s enrichment and the ruthless consolidation of his position in Putin’s Fortune, illustrated by Gildas Java, which is now on-sale at book and comic retailers.
His boss at the KGB knew Gorbachev was doomed to fail, so he entrusted Operation Luch to his trusted subordinates, including Putin. They immediately started implementing his plans with help from some key allies in the East German Stasi and the Russian mob. Indeed, one of Denoël’s biggest “scoops” is his revelation of Putin’s longstanding cooperation with various criminal clans, which simply carried over from their alliance with the Communist Party.
Basically, Putin started creating a spider’s web of dummy corporations and holding companies, whose boards were all packed with KGB veterans. Money flowed out of the Soviet Union and later Russia, through lucrative western investments and back into slush funds that purchased state enterprises at fire-sale prices and financed Russian political campaigns.
At this point, just about all of Putin’s Fortune is already in the public record. Unfortunately, few people care. Perhaps Java’s starkly noir art can help, to an extent, because it vividly the soulless evil of the titular tyrant and his regime. His ultra-cool art is also clearly intended for adults, because it graphically illustrates the debauchery of Putin and his cronies, whom useful idiots like Marjorie Taylor Greene bizarrely celebrate for their alleged “traditional values.”


























