The Return of Iron Felix: Putin Revives a Controversial Legacy
President Vladimir Putin has ordered Russia's spy academy to honor 'Iron Felix' Dzerzhinsky, founder of the Soviet secret police. Despite being toppled after the Soviet Union's collapse, this decree revives Dzerzhinsky's legacy, reflecting Russia's reversion away from post-Soviet Western alignment amid ongoing nationalistic movements.
In a move highlighting Russia's ideological pivot, President Vladimir Putin has decreed the renaming of the Federal Security Service's spy academy to honor 'Iron Felix' Dzerzhinsky, a symbolic figure in Soviet history.
Dzerzhinsky, initially a Polish noble turned revolutionary, was pivotal in establishing the Soviet secret police, fostering a climate of fear and repression known as the Red Terror following the 1917 revolution. Revered by Soviet loyalists, Dzerzhinsky's legacy was rejected by many post-Soviet states, evidenced by the toppling of his monuments across Eastern Europe.
Putin's decree, emphasizing Dzerzhinsky's contribution to state security, signals a nostalgia-laden return to Soviet-era values and institutions, diverging from the post-Soviet reformist path. This symbolic revival is viewed by some as indicative of wartime repression and a consolidation of power reminiscent of the Soviet era.