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War in Ukraine: “paranoia”, “irrationality”… how Vladimir Putin became the Kremlin’s madman

Significant Rumors frequently arise about Vladimir Putin’s health condition. The most recent speak of “rage” resulting from steroid treatment for cancer or brain disorders caused by Parkinson’s disease, or even the onset of dementia. It’s hard to see, especially since the health of the Russian president is kept under the strictest secrecy.

Since the “official” start of the war in Ukraine on the night of February 24, Vladimir Putin’s attitude has become the object of special attention, even more so than in the past. Has the head of the Russian state slowly but surely gone insane in recent months? Or is his choice to invade Ukraine part of a plan that has been worked out over the years by a “reasonable” person? Opinions are divided, but the impressions left by Putin on some foreign leaders (Macron, Merkel, etc.), accompanied by persistent rumors about his state of health, leave no one indifferent.

The latest hypothesis for today: according to Western spies, Vladimir Putin could be forced to treat cancer based on steroids. A “swollen” face, “more and more erratic” behavior exacerbating social distancing confirm the rumors.

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War in Ukraine: Putin has brain disorder due to cancer treatment, spies say

The world still remembers these images of the Russian leader at the other end of the table a few meters away facing Emmanuel Macron when he came in February, or standing exaggeratedly apart from his closest associates during the February 28 meeting. Taken to the extreme with Covid precautions? Perhaps, according to Carol Grimaud Potter, a geopolitician who specializes in Russia: “The rumors about the state of Vladimir Putin’s health are not new, but his extreme fear of Covid can no longer be proven. And nothing fate, of course, arrived from Russia, on his true state of health, which could justify such caution. It’s paranoia.”

“Closed, paranoid, unpredictable”

Like many other details of his daily life: the employment of a taster, the refusal to purchase a smartphone (he announced this in 2018). The viral scene during which he humiliates his director of foreign intelligence, with all these elements, helps to perpetuate the image of an isolated president, alone in his palace, cut off from the world. The posture he uses is “perhaps for health reasons, but also for political reasons, because for many years the Russian government felt threatened.”

Memories of the Arab Spring and images of the remains of ousted President Gaddafi haunt a Kremlin resident convinced that the West and the US have wanted to overthrow the Russian regime for years. “According to Putin, the threat can also come from within,” supports Carol Grimaud Potter. Which isolates him even more.

“He is a closed person, paranoid, unpredictable, but more than crazy, I would say irrational,” details Segei Zhirnov, a former KGB spy who rejects the image of a great strategist that others would like him to have. he’s driving – suicide. I heard that Putin was a great chess player. It is not true”. Nevertheless, for Carole Grimaud Potter, her strategy stems from a certain expansionist logic: “His attack may have seemed quite sudden even to the Russian intelligentsia, but it is in line with his vision of geopolitics, which includes the restoration of influence, which somehow restore the influence of Russia. At least that’s how he sees it. It should be remembered that Russia has never radiated otherwise than in an imperialist vein.”

The hypothesis of medical insanity would then naturally be ruled out. What remains is the madness of war. The one who, generation after generation, from time to time comes to strike at strong people and whom we hoped to finally get rid of …