Putin fires chief of staff, sign of fatigue with old guard
MOSCOW — President Vladimir Putin on Friday abruptly replaced his longtime chief of staff with a low-profile younger aide, the latest in a series of moves by the Russian leader to rid himself of members of his old guard.
Analysts see the dismissal of the 63-year old Sergei Ivanov as a reflection of Putin’s increasing weariness with his close lieutenants who had known him even before his ascent to the presidency. The Russian leader now seems inclined to promote new, younger members of the Kremlin administration who fully owe their careers to him.
The elevation of 44-year-old Anton Vayno, one of Ivanov’s former deputies, doesn’t necessarily portend any shift of Kremlin policy, which has invariably been shaped by Putin himself throughout his 16-year rule.
Ivanov met Putin in the 1970s, when they were both young KGB officers. Unlike Putin, whose KGB career reached its peak with a stint in East Germany in the late 1980s, Ivanov served several stints in Western countries — coveted postings which were considered much more prestigious.


