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In the autumn of 1999, a wave of apartment bombings across Russia killed hundreds and terrified the nation. The attacks were swiftly blamed on Chechen terrorists — but as journalist and historian David Satter was among the first to argue, evidence points to a darker truth: that the Russian security services themselves may have orchestrated the blasts to justify a new war and elevate an obscure ex-KGB officer, Vladimir Putin, to power. This conversation with Satter revisits that pivotal moment when Russia’s modern authoritarian system was born in violence and deception. The legacy of those events still defines the country today — from the destruction of independent media to the use of terror, disinformation, and manufactured crises as instruments of control. Understanding 1999 is essential to understanding how Russia became what it is — and why it wages war the way it does. David Satter is an American journalist, historian, and leading Western expert on Russia’s political and moral evolution. A former Moscow correspondent for the Financial Times and longtime Wall Street Journal contributor, he has spent over four decades examining Russia’s transformation from late Soviet stagnation to Putin’s authoritarian rule. Satter is best known for his investigation of the 1999 apartment bombings, which killed nearly 300 people and paved the way for Putin’s rise. In Darkness at Dawn: The Rise of the Russian Criminal State, he argued that the attacks were likely orchestrated by Russia’s own security services to create fear and justify war. His reporting — which he calls “the original sin of Putin’s rule” — led to his expulsion from Russia in 2013. Through books such as Age of Delirium and The Less You Know, the Better You Sleep, Satter explores how deception, violence, and moral decay became pillars of modern Russian power — and why truth remains its most potent threat.