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Each killing put Putin under severe suspicion, and each time Putin hotly denied any culpability. He habitually ascribed what he decried as a “tragedy” to a sinister “provocation” by unnamed foes whose aim was to tarnish his reputation.From that point on, the well-oiled Russian rumor mill spun wildly, and stories about assorted nefarious plots emerged one after the other in rapid succession. In each incident the police was said to have launched exhaustive investigations to apprehend the slayers. This is exactly what we witness now. Nemtsov is described as no more than an irritating fly for Putin, arguably why it made no sense for the Kremlin’s strongman to bother with him. Indeed, even if Putin had been remotely tempted, say some analysts, he’d have realized that a hit on as famous a target as Nemtsov would lead to detrimental repercussions in the West.But does Putin truly care about opinions of him far from home? Had he cared, he might not have become embroiled in the Ukrainian conflict.While the 55-year-old Nemtsov was well known and well regarded outside Russia, he was hardly a popular figure inside it. If anything, he was very close to pariah status – denigrated continuously by the media and portrayed as a traitor. Complicating things further was Nemtsov’s Jewish connection. His mother, who raised him alone, is Jewish, although he described himself as a member of the Russian Orthodox Church. Nevertheless, unlike some, Nemtsov never concealed his origins and openly spoke of his Jewish mother.Nemtsov’s lineage became another theme for his detractors, among them extreme Russian nationalists and avowed anti-Semites, who never cease emphasizing the fact that much of the liberal opposition in Russia – which is much smaller than liberals in the West acknowledge – is made up of intellectuals with “cosmopolitan” and Jewish links.That suffices to make Jews in Russia leery of what lies ahead. Both the adjectives “cosmopolitan” and “Jewish” are to this day used as pejoratives in some Russian circles. That, too, underscores the irrelevance of who actually took out a contract on Nemtsov’s life. While no one has produced any evidence that the Kremlin had anything to do with it, even if Putin didn’t personally order Nemtsov shot, he and his entourage helped create the atmosphere that invited the assassination.The nature of the Russian regime isn’t without significance to our region as a whole and to Israel in particular. Putin’s Russia appears to be quite fearless of the current American leadership. Hence, while it ostensibly belongs to the international coalition negotiating a deal with Iran, Russia also supplied Iran with nuclear reactors and know-how, violated the sanctions against it and supports Iranian collusion in Syria with embattled Damascus dictator Bashar Assad.To boot, Russia now offers reactors to other Mideastern states, benefiting from a nuclear arms race that it instigated.Despite his disapproving words pouring scorn on Putin, US President Barack Obama appears not to be doing much to stop Russia.Putin is confident enough not to give a damn, neither abroad and certainly not at home, where it is plainly dangerous to oppose him. One by one, his key critics meet an untimely end in obscure circumstances, regardless of who exactly gave the specific orders and who pulled the trigger.