In a landmark move that could redefine the global digital order, the Russian government has granted sweeping powers to its communications regulator, Roskomnadzor (RKN), enabling it to disconnect the nation’s internet — known as Runet — from the global web. The new rules, officially titled “Regulations for Centralized Management of the Public Communication Network,” will come into effect on March 1, 2026, and mark a major step toward what Moscow calls “digital sovereignty.”
According to the government decree, Roskomnadzor will have the authority to assume direct control of internet traffic in the event of perceived threats to the “stability, security, or integrity” of Russia’s digital infrastructure. The agency will be empowered to issue binding orders to telecom operators and internet service providers to restrict access to websites, redirect data through state-controlled channels, alter traffic routes, and, if necessary, completely isolate Runet from the global internet.
From Regulation to Command Authority
The decree effectively gives Roskomnadzor a “digital kill switch.” In the event of cyberattacks, infrastructure breakdowns, or what the government terms the “spread of prohibited content,” the agency can intervene directly to control or suspend online operations. Coordination will take place with the Federal Security Service (FSB) and the Ministry of Digital Development, while all communication operators will be required to appoint liaison officers and provide real-time data on network operations.
Critics note that the rules give the regulator near-unchecked command over the country’s internet backbone. What was once a regulatory body now possesses the power to manage — and, in emergencies, manually control — the entire national digital ecosystem.
The Road to a Sovereign Internet
This development is not without precedent. Russia’s journey toward internet independence began with the 2019 “Sovereign Internet Law,” which required telecom operators to install state-approved monitoring equipment and test the feasibility of operating Runet independently. The government conducted multiple disconnection drills in subsequent years, assessing the network’s ability to function without international connectivity.
By 2021–2022, amid the Ukraine conflict and intensifying geopolitical tensions, Roskomnadzor had already begun asserting control. The agency throttled Twitter (now X), blocked Facebook and Instagram, and targeted tools such as Tor and VPN services that enabled Russians to access foreign content. These moves, justified under the banner of “protecting national security,” laid the groundwork for the new centralized control system.
The 2025 decree takes this strategy further — transitioning from reactive censorship to proactive command. Analysts have described it as a shift from “content regulation” to “infrastructure control,” allowing the government to manage not just what Russians see online, but how the internet itself operates within the country.
The Official Narrative: Defense Against Western Interference
Russian authorities have defended the measure as a protective shield against what they describe as Western attempts to destabilize the country through disinformation, cyberwarfare, and digital sabotage. For years, the Kremlin has accused foreign media and intelligence agencies of exploiting online platforms to influence Russian politics and society.
President Vladimir Putin has frequently pointed to global examples — from the Arab Spring to protests in Moscow — as evidence of how online mobilization, allegedly fueled by Western influence, can challenge national stability. Officials argue that a “sovereign” internet infrastructure is essential to prevent such scenarios and to ensure the uninterrupted operation of vital services like banking, healthcare, and emergency communication.
As one Russian analyst put it, “In an era of hybrid warfare, a secure Runet is as important as a secure border.”
Echoes of the Great Firewall
Observers have drawn strong comparisons between Russia’s emerging system and China’s “Great Firewall.” Beijing’s model — which filters nearly all internet traffic in and out of the country — has long been seen as the global standard for state-controlled cyberspace.
Like China, Russia’s new system will channel traffic through centralized gateways, allowing authorities to block foreign websites, monitor data flows, and prioritize domestic platforms such as VKontakte, RuTube, and Yandex. However, unlike China, Russia is attempting to retrofit control onto a network that was originally open — a technically and politically complex endeavor that could lead to instability and outages.
China’s firewall was built from scratch over two decades, seamlessly integrated into its economic and digital ecosystem. Russia, by contrast, must balance national control with the operational realities of a globalized economy and ongoing Western sanctions limiting access to advanced technology.
Criticism and Concerns
Digital rights organizations and human rights advocates have expressed alarm at the decree. They warn that it could accelerate Russia’s drift toward digital isolation while suppressing freedom of speech and access to information.
According to a 2025 Human Rights Watch report, Russia has already blocked more than 20,000 websites since 2022. The new law, critics argue, will institutionalize this censorship under the guise of “national security.”
Political scientist Ilya Graschenkov cautioned that citizens should prepare for possible “restrictions or instability in access to international resources,” describing the system as a “managed ecosystem where national control outweighs openness.”
Ordinary users are likely to experience slower connections, blocked foreign websites, and growing difficulty accessing VPN services, which the state has been actively targeting. For businesses, the move could disrupt global e-commerce, data transfers, and cloud-based services — deepening Russia’s economic isolation.
The Global Impact: Toward a Fractured Internet
The broader implications extend far beyond Russia’s borders. Analysts fear that this step could contribute to the rise of a “splinternet” — a world where nations build their own closed digital environments, governed by local laws and censorship regimes instead of shared international norms.
While supporters of the Kremlin’s approach hail it as an assertion of technological independence, critics see it as part of a global trend toward fragmentation and state surveillance. The decision underscores an ideological divide between the Western vision of a free, borderless internet and the authoritarian model of digital control embodied by Russia and China.
Between Security and Isolation
For the Russian government, the move symbolizes resilience — a declaration that its digital infrastructure will not depend on what it calls “unfriendly” nations. For many citizens, however, it represents a step toward isolation from the global community.
As Russia approaches the March 2026 implementation date, the question remains: will the new system protect the country from external threats, or will it confine its citizens within a tightly controlled digital sphere?
One online commentator captured the mood succinctly:
“What Russians see, do, and think — Putin will see it all.”
Whether Russia’s digital sovereignty becomes a shield or a cage will be revealed when the world’s largest nation finally tests its independent internet fortress — a firewall built not only from code, but from control.
