Vladimir Putin has issued a decree to expand the central administration of the Federal Protective Service (FSO) for the fourth time since his forces invaded Ukraine in 2022.
The FSO is tasked with a wide range of security functions, including the personal safety of the head of state.
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Prior to the full-scale invasion, the service’s central apparatus had not been expanded since 2010.
The decree, which was set to enter into force on July 1, raises the maximum number of military and civilian personnel in the central apparatus to 812 from 785, the independent outlet Verstka reported in late June, citing the draft published on Russia’s legal acts portal.
Beyond this administrative core, which forms the FSO’s nerve center, the service is believed to include tens of thousands of officers and troops responsible for protecting state properties and high-ranking officials.
Their primary duty is to protect the president, his family and the prime minister, but their remit also extends to securing the Kremlin, parliament (the State Duma) and dozens of heavily fortified presidential residences.
One specialized branch of the FSO, the Special Communications Service (Spetssvyaz), controls the nuclear briefcase associated with Putin while his close-in physical protection is handled by another FSO unit, the Presidential Security Service.
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