(CNN) You've heard the allegations . And, if the US spy community is right, it wouldn't be a stretch to say that the world's most powerful person is Vladimir Putin.

Did he alter the 2016 US presidential election through devious hacking? This month, the House Intelligence Committee will begin investigating if those allegations -- which the Kremlin steadfastly denies -- are true.

No one is suggesting that hackers manipulated votes or ballots: It's a lot more complicated than that. The question is whether the Russian government hacked into the Democratic National Committee's computer system during the 2016 election and accessed sensitive documents, releasing them through WikiLeaks to smear the Democratic Party and its candidate, Hillary Clinton.

In October, the US intelligence community concluded that Putin personally ordered the hacks as part of a campaign to influence the election, most likely "because (Putin) holds a grudge" against Clinton.

Putin has repeatedly denied it.

So what would motivate the leader or Russia to want to help elect Donald Trump to the US presidency? Experts say it was less about his support of Trump, but more about deep-rooted animosity toward Clinton.

Putin's rise to power

Putin got a taste of power and manipulation on a rainy night in Dresden, East Germany, as the Iron Curtain began to collapse.

Stationed at the local Russian intelligence headquarters in Dresden, the 37-year-old junior KGB agent found himself in charge as an angry crowd closed in on December 5, 1989.

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"The Berlin Wall had come down, power was pretty much up for grabs," explained Edward Lucas, senior editor at The Economist, where he was the Moscow bureau chief from 1998 to 2002.

Putin phoned Moscow for help. The answer: you're on your own.

"It felt like a deep betrayal," explained Russian-American journalist and author Masha Gessen.

As the crowd grew and surrounded the building, Putin fired up the furnace and torched thousands of secret KGB files as a precaution.

Then, he went outside and bluffed: he warned the mob of people that armed guards inside the building were prepared to open fire into the crowd.

And it worked. The mob dispersed.

Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Russian President Vladimir Putin is a popular but polarizing figure who has dominated Russian politics for more than a decade. Click through to see images of his life and career. Hide Caption 1 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin, bottom, wrestles with a classmate in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1971. Hide Caption 2 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin poses with his parents, Vladimir and Maria, in 1985. Hide Caption 3 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin From 1991 to 1994, Putin served as the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee of the City Council in St. Petersburg. Before becoming involved in politics, he served in the KGB, a Soviet-era spy agency, as an intelligence officer. Hide Caption 4 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Russian President Boris Yeltsin, right, shakes hands with Putin during a farewell ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow in December 1999. Putin rose quickly through the political ranks, becoming the second democratically elected president of the Russian Federation in 2000. Hide Caption 5 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin President-elect Putin watches the tactical exercises of Russia's Northern Fleet in the Barentsevo Sea in April 2000. Hide Caption 6 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin takes the presidential oath next to Yeltsin in May 2000. Hide Caption 7 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin dances with a young girl in Kazan, Russia, while taking part in mid-summer festivities in June 2000. Hide Caption 8 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin and U.S. President Bill Clinton talk in Moscow in June 2000. Hide Caption 9 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin meets Pope John Paul II in Rome in June 2000. Hide Caption 10 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin speaks to his wife, Lyudmila, as they pose in front of the Taj Mahal in India in October 2000. Hide Caption 11 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin shakes hands with famous Russian gymnasts Alina Kabayeva, center, and Svetlana Khorkina in March 2004. Hide Caption 12 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin attends an inauguration ceremony for President-elect Dmitry Medvedev in May 2008. Putin was constitutionally obliged to stand down as President, but he stayed close to power, becoming Prime Minister. Hide Caption 13 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin This image, supplied by Time magazine, shows Putin on the cover after being named the magazine's 2007 "Person of the Year." Hide Caption 14 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin skis in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia, in February 2008. Hide Caption 15 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin shakes hands with Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi in November 2008. Hide Caption 16 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin vacations outside the town of Kyzyl in Southern Siberia in 2009. Over the years he has earned a reputation as a "strongman," declaring a crackdown on Chechen militants a priority in his first presidential term. Hide Caption 17 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin U.S. President Barack Obama meets Putin at his home in Novo Ogaryovo, near Moscow, in July 2009. Putin said Russia was pinning its hopes on Obama to revive ties with the United States. Hide Caption 18 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Medvedev and Putin ski together in Krasnaya Polyana in January 2010. Hide Caption 19 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin takes part in a judo training session at a sports complex in St. Petersburg in December 2010. Putin holds a black belt in judo. Hide Caption 20 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin In April 2011, Putin attends the first Global Ministerial Conference on Healthy Lifestyles and Noncommunicable Disease Control. The event was held in Moscow. Hide Caption 21 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin receives a medical consultation in August 2011 during a visit to the Smolensk Regional Hospital in Russia. Putin said he hurt his shoulder during morning judo practice. Hide Caption 22 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin speaks to supporters at a Moscow rally in February 2012. He won the presidential election one month later with just under 65% of the vote. Former President Medvedev became his Prime Minister. Hide Caption 23 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin During a massive rally of his supporters in Moscow, tears run down Putin's face in March 2012 after he was elected President for a third term. Hide Caption 24 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin A topless protester shouts at Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a visit to the Hanover Industrial Fair in central Germany in April 2013. Human rights groups say civil liberties and democratic freedoms have suffered during Putin's rule. Hide Caption 25 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin addresses the media during his visit to Hanover. Hide Caption 26 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin and his wife, Lyudmila -- seen here in 2012 -- announced the end of their marriage in June 2013. Hide Caption 27 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin poses for a photo with Russian Olympic athletes in Sochi, Russia, in February 2014. Russia hosted the Winter Olympic Games and won the most medals. Hide Caption 28 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin From left, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach, Putin and Medvedev look at their watches before the closing ceremony of the Winter Olympics in February 2014. Hide Caption 29 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin, center, and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, left, arrive to watch a March 2014 military exercise at the Kirillovsky firing ground in Russia's Leningrad region. Hide Caption 30 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin, left, controls the puck during an ice hockey game between Russian amateur players and ice hockey stars at a festival in Sochi in May 2014. Hide Caption 31 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin takes part in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier outside Moscow's Kremlin Wall in June. Hide Caption 32 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin speaks with Obama in November, during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Beijing. Hide Caption 33 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Putin puts a shawl on Peng Liyuan, wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping, as they arrive to watch a fireworks show in Beijing in November. Hide Caption 34 of 35 Photos: Russian President Vladimir Putin Several world leaders gather in Minsk, Belarus, in February to negotiate a ceasefire to the fighting in Ukraine. Putin is second from left, next to Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko on the far left. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko is on the far right. At center, German Chancellor Angela Merkel gestures in front of French President Francois Hollande. Fighting between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian rebels in the country has left more than 6,000 people dead since mid-April, according to the United Nations. Hide Caption 35 of 35

This incident, according to The New Yorker editor David Remnick, created a fear that would stay with Putin for the rest of his life: a fear of a popular uprising.

Since that moment, Putin has been on a path to quell that fear through absolute power, Gessen said.

"To lead is to control ... that's exactly the wording that Putin would use," she said. "He has control of his country."

'He hated Hillary Clinton'

Putin quickly rose through the political ranks after his KGB career, becoming the Russian Federation's second democratically elected President in 2000 after Boris Yeltsin.

That same year, George W. Bush won the US presidency and attempted to forge a close relationship with the newly elected Russian leader.

"I was able to get a sense of his soul, a man deeply committed to his country," Bush said about Putin, after their 2001 visit.

A few years into Putin's presidency, the Bush administration changed its tune , voicing concerns about his commitment to democratic values.

Yet it was Clinton's harsh words for Putin when she was running for president in 2008 and again in 2011 amid worldwide pro-democracy protests that analysts say set the stage for Putin's alleged interference in the most recent US election.

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On the campaign trail in 2008, then-Sen. Hillary Clinton joked that Bush couldn't have gotten a sense of Putin's soul, as he had claimed, because the Russian president is a former KGB agent and that means "by definition he doesn't have a soul."

Then, in 2011 -- as Putin sought his third term as president -- Secretary of State Clinton sided with Russian protesters who staged the largest demonstrations in Moscow since the fall of the Soviet Union.

She called the disputed parliamentary elections "neither free nor fair," adding that "the Russian people, like people everywhere, deserve the right ... to have their voices heard and their votes counted."

Putin saw that as an attack on him, and turned the tables -- accusing Clinton of inciting protests with her complaints about the election and meddling in Russia's affairs.

"She set the tone for some public figures in our country, gave them a signal," Putin said at the time. "They heard this signal and launched active work with the US State Department's support."

Putin's move to seek a third term came at a very pivotal time in Russia and the rest of the world. Remember, 2011 was the year when democratic uprisings threatened strongmen across the Middle East and North Africa in the wake of Arab Spring.

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And, even as Prime Minister, Putin was Russia's strongman. Yes, he had stepped down as President in 2008, but many analysts say he continued to call all the shots while his close ally Dmitry Medvedev served as President until he returned to office in 2012.

Putin could potentially rule Russia until 2024, longer than anyone since Josef Stalin.

And, when Clinton set her sights on the US presidency once again in 2016, Remnick said there's no doubt who the Russian leader would support.

"Of course Putin wanted Hillary Clinton to lose," she said. "He hated Hillary Clinton."

Accusations of meddling

So, did Putin resolve to interfere with the 2016 US election because he hated Clinton and believed she had interfered with Russian elections?

"I think that's the line of thinking that led him to the intervention," former US Defense Secretary Robert Gates told CNN's Fareed Zakaria. "I'm totally convinced that Russians were meddling and intervening covertly."

There's likely more to it than simply a hatred of one politician. After witnessing the collapse of the Soviet Union, Putin made it his mission to restore Russia to greatness through strong economic and nationalist policies. And that has earned him an approval rating as high as 86% in recent years.

"Putin reflects the middle statistical opinion of the average Russian," explained Russian sociologist Olga Kryshtanovskaya.

That has often put him at odds with the West over issues such as the expansion of NATO.

Any perception that Russia could outsmart the United States would only benefit the Russian leader because it plays on what Kryshtanovskaya called "one of the pillars of our country's ideology.

"It was formed a long time ago and was carefully instilled in people by the Soviet leaders. Why are there problems? 'It's those people, the evil Americans, who are at fault, who make things worse for us.' It's an ideological cliché," she said.

"When Putin thinks of how he can justify his policies, it's faster to recall this old enemy than to create a new one."

Putin has laughed off the accusations that he was responsible for meddling in the US election, telling the Bloomberg News he didn't know anything about it.

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"You know how many hackers there are today, and they act so delicately and precisely," he said in September, in the wake of the allegations that Russia was behind the hack on the DNC.

"It's an extremely difficult thing to check."

And that, experts say, is exactly why Putin ordered a cyber-attack. It was cheap, it took advantage of a known weakness in America's election infrastructure, and it would be nearly impossible to pin the blame on anyone.

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Republican presidential candidate Trump certainly didn't mind the leaked emails that embarrassed his adversary.

"Russia, if you are listening, I hope you are able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing," he said.

And getting to the bottom of those questions has far-reaching consequences.

"If Donald Trump is in some way compromised, if the Russian government has something ... on him in terms of leverage, that's a very serious thing," Remnick said. "I don't suggest for a second that I have the answer to this question, but we can't just let this matter drop."