How to Slay a Dragon

Khodorkovsky Communications Center

Mar 3, 2026

For 4 years, the Kremlin ignored my book about building a democratic Russia.
Then PACE created a formal dialogue with the Russian opposition — within days, the book was declared extremist.


The book is called “How to Slay a Dragon.” It proposes a federal, parliamentary Russia where power is decentralised and shared — instead of concentrated in one man. The Kremlin has now classified this as extremist material.


Separately, I was fined 50,000 roubles for “violating foreign agent regulations.” And the Russian Supreme Court has accepted a lawsuit to designate our Anti-War Committee — which I co-founded in 2022 — a terrorist organisation.


The Anti-War Committee was founded alongside other prominent pro-democratic Russians to oppose Putin’s regime and the invasion of Ukraine. In October, the Kremlin designated its members terrorists, accusing us of planning a “violent seizure of power.”


Here is what actually happened: in October, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe created a Platform for Dialogue with the Russian opposition in exile. For the first time, a recognised international body gave legitimacy to the alternative to Putin’s regime.


The Kremlin reacted furiously. They referenced our 2023 Berlin Declaration, where we called for the end of the Putin regime, and accused us of “financing Ukrainian paramilitary nationalist units.”


On January 28, I attended the Platform’s first meeting. PACE reiterated support for those opposing the war and endorsed our vision of a transformed Russia. Within days, my book was proscribed and I was fined. Within weeks, the Supreme Court lawsuit was filed.


This is a shift. For decades, Putin attacked opponents with invented “non-political” charges. I was imprisoned 10 years on fabricated economic crimes. Navalny was murdered on similar charges. Now the Kremlin openly calls opponents terrorists and their ideas extremist.


They have dropped the pretence because the opposition in exile has grown too loud to ignore. None of these absurd charges will stop us. We will continue to increase our presence at PACE and with parliaments and international organisations globally.


Meanwhile, problems mount at home: a faltering economy, crumbling infrastructure, hundreds of thousands of men returning from Ukraine, and record treason charges against war critics in 2025. Isolation is pushing Putin into an increasingly unequal relationship with China.


Putin has built a gangster state around one man. He is 73, and he will not be around forever. What matters now is what vision of the future we have that makes sure no other person can become him.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/02/24/banning-my-book-shows-the-fragility-of-putin/

The book is here:

https://www.google.com/books/edition/How_to_Slay_a_Dragon/mcjSEAAAQBAJ

Follow for more on the Russian opposition

The full DT article:

Putin’s time is nearly up

Russian dictators don’t last long past the incumbent’s age of 73. Whether by age, incapacitation or insurrection, he will soon be gone

Published 24 February 2026 

I recently received notice that my political manifesto for a liberal, democratic Russia – entitled How to Slay a Dragon  has been declared “extremist material” by the Kremlin.

This sanction, on a book that dares to proffer an alternative to Vladimir Putin’s authoritarian regime, is laughable. It also tells a highly informative story of the weakness and paranoia currently running through the Kremlin.

Proscribing my book, which the Russian authorities have known about for four years, is just one of a series of desperate political charges levelled at the rapidly unifying and strengthening Russian opposition in exile.

In October, members of the Russian Anti-War Committee that I founded along with other prominent pro-democratic Russians in 2022 to oppose the Putin regime and its invasion of Ukraine, were designated terrorists and accused of planning to seize power.

This month, the Supreme Court of Russia accepted a lawsuit to recognise the Anti-War Committee itself as a terrorist organisation, with a view to banning its activities within Russia.

How to Slay A Dragon – with its roadmap to a federalised, democratic, dictator-free Russia – is now “extremist” material. And I was separately fined 50,000 roubles for “violating the regulations regulating the activities of foreign agents”.

This is a significant change of approach from Putin, who for decades always preferred to attack political opponents with invented “non-political” charges.

I should know: after I first called out corruption in his administration in 2003, I was imprisoned for 10 years in Russia’s harshest jails. It was clear that the reasons for this were political – Amnesty International declared me a prisoner of conscience and a global campaign was launched for my release. But the supposed “crimes” I had committed were all economic.


Former oil executive Mikhail Khodorkovsky (left) stands behind bars during a trial in Moscow in 2005 Credit: AP

The same was true with Alexei Navalny, another of Putin’s political opponents. He spent two long spells in prison on clearly fabricated charges of fraud and embezzlement. The second of these ended in his murder and confirmation of this fact by the UK’s Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, two years after his death, was immensely vindicating for all of us who’ve been pushing for the truth, and are continuing to call for justice for his killing.

Other opponents, such as Alexander LitvinenkoBoris Nemtsov and Anna Politkovskaya were also assassinated on Putin’s orders or with his approval, rather than him ever confronting their ideas publicly.

Putin has previously avoided admitting political motivations wherever possible in his persecution of political opposition, because he did not want to acknowledge that it existed. Now, however, the pro-democratic Russian opposition in exile is growing too loud for him to ignore.

In October, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) established a “Platform for Dialogue” with the Russian opposition in exile, including the Anti-War Committee. It is a mostly symbolic move, but a hugely significant one nonetheless, as it gives legitimacy to the alternative to Putin’s regime for the first time in the eyes of a recognised international body.

The Kremlin reacted furiously, declaring members of the Anti-War Committee terrorists for allegedly peddling lies that we were preparing for a “violent seizure of power” and “financing Ukrainian paramilitary nationalist units”. They even referenced the Anti-War Committee’s Berlin Declaration from 2023, where we called for the end of the Putin regime.

On January 28, I was present at the Platform for Dialogue’s first meeting, where PACE reiterated support for those opposing the war and endorsed our vision of a future, transformed Russia under the principles of democracy and international cooperation.

Within days, my book was proscribed and I was fined. Within weeks, the Russian Supreme Court lawsuit was filed to declare the Anti-War Committee a terrorist organisation.

None of these absurd charges will stop us. We’ll continue to increase our presence at PACE and with parliaments and international organisations globally.

At the same time that we make progress, problems mount for Putin. There is growing dissatisfaction over a faltering economy, crumbling infrastructure and the social disruption of hundreds of thousands of men returning from the Ukraine War.

The repression of dissident voices is also growing. The year 2025 saw a record number of treason and espionage charges opened up against critics of the war in Ukraine. 

What remains of civil society is outlawed and any form of organised resistance is blamed on “foreign agents” or “undesirable organisations”. Likes on social media or pledge of support for Ukraine put hundreds of Russians behind bars. Direct criticism of the war has been criminalised with prison sentences of up to 15 years.

Outside of Russia, international isolation brought on by Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is forcing him into an increasingly unequal and uncomfortable relationship with China, whilst his weakness on the world stage has been exposed by his failure to dissuade US attacks on allies, such as Venezuela, Iran and Syria.

Putin and his inner circle have built up a gangster state, based almost entirely around the bullying, scheming and repressive tendencies of one man. But Putin is 73 years old now, and history shows us that Russian dictators do not tend to last long past that age. Whether by age, incapacitation or insurrection, Putin will not be around forever, and he will leave a vacuum behind him when he goes.

What he and his cronies are worried about now, is that the anti-war Russians in exile are getting united and are seen by the Western powers as legitimate alternative to Putin’s regime. All Western leaders who want to put pressure on Putin should engage with the Russian democratic anti-war opposition – to increase its international standing and to continue a formal dialogue.

How to Slay A Dragon is a vision of Russia freed from the ruin of autocracy. It’s a vision of a decentralised, federal, parliamentary republic that shares the power previously concentrated in the hands of one man. Putin has shown us just how nervous he is that this vision might come true.


Mikhail Khodorkovsky is the founder of the New Eurasian Strategies Centre and co-founder of the Russian Anti-War Committee

………………………….

Feb 28

My friend Boris Nemtsov was murdered 11 years ago today. He was one of the few who openly challenged Putin, and it cost him his life.

The case was solved just enough to bury it.
We met in the 1990s. Over two decades, different paths, different fates. While I was in prison, Boris stood at pickets holding my portrait, supported my family, and never stopped fighting for my freedom. You don’t forget thinks like that.


When I was released, we sat down and talked for hours about Russia, about how to stop autocracy before it swallows everything, about how to avoid the worst. Boris was completely in the picture: sharp, alive, angry in the best sense of the word.
A year later he was shot dead on a bridge steps from the Kremlin.


The killers were found fast. The investigation was shut down even faster — the moment it led to Kadyrov, Putin-appointed Chechen criminal vassal. The executors were relabelled as the masterminds. A convenient fiction to close the case.


On the tenth day after Boris was killed, Ramzan Kadyrov received the Order of Honor. Putin understood precisely how this would look. He did it anyway and became a permanent accomplice to this murder.

https://www.rferl.org/a/putin-awards-kadyrov-with-order-of-honor/26889696.html


For eleven years, volunteers have guarded the memorial on the bridge where Boris fell. Every time the flowers are removed they bring more, every time it is destroyed they rebuild it. They deserve our gratitude for that.

https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-battle-for-flowers-on-nemtsov-bridge

There is a Nemtsov Square in Prague. Nemtsov streets in Washington, London, Vilnius, Kyiv.
In Moscow — nothing. But there will be. https://www.csce.gov/speeches/nemtsov-plaza-dedication-ceremony/

Eternal memory, Boris.


I tell these stories because people like Boris, who stood up when it cost them everything, must not be erased. Follow to stay informed.

Mar 1

For 11 years, Putin’s been trying to erase Boris Nemtsov’s memory from this bridge: sweeping away flowers, removing tributes, pressuring mourners.
At the exact time and spot of his assassination, dozens gathered for a minute of silence: the memorial still stands.
Video: SOTA

Video here :

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/18GrhWrm8h/?mibextid=wwXIfr

4 comments

  1. Boris Nemtsov was one of the finest ever Russians and it’s up to people like Mr Khodorkovsky to honour his memory and hopefully take russia out of fascism forever.

    Here are some of the comments from the DT article:

    Bernard Kennedy
    It must be hard for those Russians who, like the vast majority of the civilised world, see Russia becoming the toilet of the First World. A dictatorship – the viliest way of government only slightly better than medieval, feudal kingdoms with heriditary “royal dictators”. Seeing your country descend into awful, raw dictatorship must be so disheartening….

    Barry Betteridge
    Stalin was in power for 25 years. Putin has been in power for 25 years. Hopefully autocracy only has this amount of lifetime in Russia. Trump has been in power for 4 plus the latest presidency for 5 years. He has bullied and changed the World order in far less time. Starmer has been in power for 2 years and 8 months and has turned out to be the most hated prime minister of all times simply by changing all the rules to suit the Labour agenda. All the bullies see him as ineffectual and Putin is attacking us daily by pushing the limits with threats. Murderous Putin seems invincible. Trump respects him highly. What chance do we have?

    William Kinghan
    Putin has bankrupted Russia, spending money on destruction instead of Russian welfare, destroyed a generation of men, set back Russian development for decades. He is a war criminal, and needs to be arrested if he ever visits Europe again. All meetings with Putin should be boycotted by Western leaders.
    Western Europe should not allow any trade with Russia. No Russian tourists. No travel via our States, Nothing. We need to tell the Russians why this is the case via Radio broadcasts and internet. Any rehabilitation following Putin’s demise needs to take a long time.

    GRAHAM REEVE
    One of the former Russian soldiers testifying regarding the practice of summary executions put it very well I think: “Your adversary is in front of you but your enemy is your commander behind you”
    He was talking about his immediate commander, but it’s just as true for his ultimate commander, the deluded tyrant Putin.

    Bronislaw Kowal
    Russia can only be ruled by a dictator. It is a country riddled with criminal gangs and oligarchs interested only in protecting and growing their power and riches. Getting rid of Putin would create a vacuum that would suck in another power-hungry maniac. Ordinary Russians see Putin as someone who is keeping a porous lid on a bubbling cauldron. They surely know this latter-day Stalin is a thief, a liar and a murderer, but without him it is complete chaos.

    FRANK EVANS
    Mr Khodorkovsky,
    Tell us something about the Russian oligarchs. No, let me tell you first.
    Russian oligarchs amassed vast wealth primarily during the 1990s post-Soviet privatization, acquiring state-owned assets—especially in oil, metals, and banking—at severely undervalued prices through insider deals. They leveraged “loans-for-shares” schemes, where elite businesspeople loaned money to the government for political support, receiving lucrative corporate stakes in return.
    Key methods of wealth accumulation included:
    Privatization and Vouchers (1990s): Following the Soviet collapse, the government issued vouchers for state property, which savvy insiders bought cheaply from struggling citizens.
    Loans-for-Shares Schemes: Wealthy individuals loaned money to Boris Yeltsin’s government in 1995 to fund his reelection, securing shares in premier companies like Yukos, Norilsk Nickel, and Sibneft as collateral, often through rigged auctions.
    “Shock Therapy” Economics: The rapid shift to a market economy in Russia created a corrupt, chaotic environment that favored those with connections to state officials and early access to capital.
    Consolidation under Putin: When Vladimir Putin took power, he restructured the oligarch class, enabling loyal associates from his KGB/St. Petersburg days to control major state corporations (e.g., Rosneft, Gazprom).
    Exploiting Sanctions: Following Western sanctions after 2022, Kremlin-friendly businesspeople were allowed to buy assets from exiting foreign firms at heavily discounted prices.
    Putin is generally considered as both an autocrat and a dictator, and I sincerely hope that one day the totalitarian regime will crumble; however, let’s not hide the truth about the Russian oligarchs.

    Hilary Deighton
    Thank you for the voice of sane Russians. I shall look for a copy of the book. The paranoid repression from Putin now has all the hallmarks of a despot looking at his wall and seeing a moving finger starting to spell out words. It will be a good day when we can say bye bye to this Belshazzar.

  2. “Murderous Putin seems invincible. Trump respects him highly. What chance do we have?”

    Without even small Churchills in power in the West, we stand no chance at all, fregardless of our economic and military power.
    If you are armed with an assault rifle, what use is it against an opponent armed with a knife if your cowardice makes pulling the trigger impossible?

    • Since Churchill, no one comes anywhere near to him, except Zel. Maggie and Ronnie deserve a mention but they were not quite in his league.
      Sir Winston fought alone for 2 years against the combined might of Stalin and Hitler before FDR joined in. As a russia sympathizer he wasn’t going to do anything; until Stalin changed sides.
      Until that time, Churchill had begged him for help. He got nothing for a long time, until eventually FDR relented and sent a few clapped-out warships. A marked contrast to what he did for Stalin.
      To see FDR’s despicable treatment of Sir Winston, see Gary Oldman’s masterly portrayal in “Darkest Hour” (2017).
      Poor Zel got the FDR treatment from Biden. But at least Biden kept him in the game.
      Now he has to contend with a vile fascist/putler sympathiser in the WH.
      Yet still Europe is feckless and unreliable.
      It’s all like a script from a dystopian disaster movie.

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