A “depressed” Vladimir Putin has moved his family to a “secret underground city” and “intends to conduct nuclear reactor evacuation drills” in accordance with the Kremlin’s doomsday plan, insiders say.
One source who previously reported that Putin was suffering from multiple and serious health problems also claimed that the death toll of Russians in the war in Ukraine was higher than even Kyiv’s estimates: more than 17,000 casualties in 23 days of fighting.
Putin “often vents his anger at people close to him,” according to the latest report from a source, a Telegram channel allegedly linked to a former Kremlin intelligence insider who claims to have close ties to people close to Putin.
“He doesn’t have deep conversations with almost anyone, and limited contact even with his children – not only his [adult] daughter, but also [undisclosed] children with [Olympic gold medal winning gymnast, 38] Alina Kabaeva”.
The source said Putin recently shocked his top generals by demanding a nuclear exercise, fueling fears he was preparing for a nuclear conflict.
Another Russian expert said that Putin moved his family to a secret location, which is not just a bunker, but a huge underground city, to protect them from possible radioactive fallout.
Earlier, Putin threatened NATO allies with “consequences you haven’t seen in history” if they intervene in the conflict in Ukraine, and earlier this month put Russia’s nuclear forces on high alert.
On Saturday, Russia launched its “unstoppable” nuclear-capable Kinzhal hypersonic missile, destroying a military depot in Ukraine.
Vladimir Putin recently shocked his top officers by demanding a nuclear evacuation exercise amid lingering concerns about the Russian despot’s state of mind, the source claims. Pictured: the “flying Kremlin” or “doomsday plane” to be used by Putin and his closest allies in the event of a nuclear war.
A recent post on the General SVR telegram channel states that high-ranking political figures have been “warned on behalf of the president that they may be participating in an evacuation exercise in the event of a nuclear war in the near future.”
“Everyone who was addressed with this warning was seriously surprised and concerned about this initiative of the president.
“But everyone, without exception, confirmed their readiness to participate.
An element of Russia’s plans for nuclear war is a fleet of “flying Kremlins” – Il-80 Maxdomes – on standby – to be used by Putin and his closest allies to stay out of a potential war.
These “ship” aircraft are considered aging and should be replaced with adapted Il-96-400Ms that allow the Russian leader to control troops and missiles during a nuclear disaster.
However, it is believed that the ultra-modern bunker in the sky is not yet ready.
While the channel was initially considered unreliable, more recently briefings attributed to Western intelligence have echoed its claims about Putin’s alleged health problems.
The channel also reported: “Vladimir Putin’s general mental state has recently been alarming people from the president’s inner circle.”
Sources say Vladimir Putin (pictured Friday) is suffering from multiple and serious health problems, including rising levels of paranoia, raising fears of a nuclear conflict.
Pictured: Vladimir Putin with alleged mistress and Olympic gold-winning gymnast Alina Kabayeva, who is said to have undisclosed children by
Echoing earlier claims about his alleged condition — previously dismissed by the Kremlin — the post read: “When Vladimir Putin, who suffers from cancer, Parkinson’s disease and schizoaffective disorder, invites government members and heads of the State Duma and the Federation Council [the lower and upper houses of parliament] getting involved in the preparations for evacuation in the event of a nuclear war… is not fun at all.”
The only person who can provoke Armageddon is Putin, the account says.
He names ex-president Dmitry Medvedev, who is now in charge of security issues, as well as speakers of the two houses of parliament – Vyacheslav Volodin and Valentina Matvienko – among those who were allegedly told that there would be nuclear war exercises.
Schizoaffective disorder is a mental health condition that includes symptoms of schizophrenia, such as hallucinations or delusions, as well as mood problems, such as depression or mania.
The channel said today that Russia has registered a death toll of 17,000, including 12,949 military personnel.
The rest were from private military armies or mercenaries supporting the Kremlin and allegedly stationed in Ukraine.
Russia has not reported the estimated death toll in Ukraine for more than two weeks.
Earlier reports suggested that Putin moved unidentified family members to either a luxurious mountain villa in neutral Switzerland or a high-tech underground bunker in Siberia’s Altai Mountains.
Russian Il-80 Doomsday aircraft at the Victory Parade in Moscow
Valery Solovey, a 61-year-old political scientist, cited a Telegram channel earlier this month as saying: “It’s not really a bunker, but an entire underground city equipped with the latest science and technology.”
He warned, “I hope this means something to you?
“That the President is sending his family to this bunker.
He did not name members of Putin’s family, but had previously claimed that Kabaeva was his secret wife and Russia’s hidden first lady. “This is his real family, and Alina is able to influence his decisions,” Nightingale said last year.
The home of a former professor at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) — a training ground for future high-ranking diplomats and spies — Nightingale was recently searched and interrogated for eight hours.
The channel also claimed that Putin and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, who is responsible for the uncertain military invasion of Ukraine, attended a shamanistic ritual in Siberia during which a black wolf was sacrificed to improve the president’s health.
“A piece of white cloth soaked in wolf blood and burned,” the report says.
“They allegedly saw a black crow in the smoke, which circled for a long time.
“For some reason, this sign was explained to Putin as a great success.”
Asked about his claims that Putin is seriously ill, which the Kremlin vehemently denies, Nightingale said: “I don’t use the expression ‘terminally ill’ and never have used it.
“I use a euphemism: force majeure personal circumstances.”
Putin has two adult daughters: Dr. Maria Vorontsova, 36, a geneticist, and Katerina, 35, a fiery rock ‘n’ roll dancer turned mathematician.
He also reportedly has a daughter, Louise Rozova, an 18-year-old heiress, also known as Elizaveta Krivonogikh, from a previous relationship with cleaner-turned-multimillionaire Svetlana Krivonogikh, 45, now co-owner of a major Russian bank.
According to unconfirmed rumors, denied by the Kremlin, he has children with Kabaeva.
Last year there was an unfortunate security flaw: one of four existing doomsday planes was hacked and robbed during repairs in the Russian city of Taganrog on the Sea of Azov.
When opening the cargo hatch, 39 pieces of radio equipment were stolen.
As Ukraine continues to put up strong resistance to Putin’s forces, resulting in more death and destruction in Moscow’s ranks than ever expected, the Russian leader is said to be becoming increasingly paranoid even of his closest allies.
The message says that the humiliated dictator is looking for a scapegoat for the failure of the war, which is now in its fourth week.
Boris Karpichkov, a former KGB spy now based in the UK, told the Sun Online that Putin had gone astray before it even started.
“He turned out to be a psychopath, really heavily obsessed with paranoid ideas and conspiracy theories against himself and about non-existent threats that Russia allegedly faces from the rest of the world,” Karpichkov said.
Ukrainian police guard the area of a five-story residential building that partially collapsed after the shelling of Kyiv on March 18, 2022, when Russian troops attempted to surround the Ukrainian capital.
Damaged civilian settlement after Russian shelling of Kyiv, Ukraine, March 18, 2022
Putin was reportedly only in contact with his inner circle during the Covid-19 pandemic, but even they were asked several times a week to provide fecal samples to be tested for infection, and in some cases were asked to self-isolate for two weeks before meetings.
Rumors about the Russian leader’s health have been circulating for years, with repeated reports suggesting that he is suffering from cancer and Parkinson’s disease or has suffered long-term brain fog-inducing Covid-19.
That, and Putin’s putting Russia’s nuclear forces on high alert earlier this month, has raised fears that the world is moving closer to nuclear conflict.
“The top officials of the leading NATO countries also allow aggressive statements against our country, therefore I order the Minister of Defense and the Chief of the General Staff to transfer the deterrence forces of the Russian army to a special mode of combat duty,” Putin said. in a televised address last month.
“Western countries are not only taking unfriendly actions against our country in the economic sphere, but the top officials of the leading NATO members have made aggressive statements against our country.”
Meanwhile, the President of Belarus, who allowed Russia to use his country’s territory to invade Ukraine, says he does not intend to host Russian nuclear weapons.
Alexander Lukashenko has strengthened military ties with Moscow following Western sanctions over a crackdown on protests following his re-election to a sixth term in an August 2020 vote that the opposition and the West dismissed as rigged. He has
Lukashenko had previously offered to host Russian nuclear weapons, but in an interview with Japanese broadcaster TBS published by his office on Friday, he said he had no such plans.
“I’m not going to deploy nuclear weapons here, manufacture nuclear weapons here, create and use nuclear weapons against anyone,” he said, dismissing accusations of such plans as “an invention of the West.”
Lukashenka said that he had previously made a statement about the possible deployment of Russian nuclear weapons in Belarus in response to talk in the West about the possible redeployment of US tactical nuclear weapons from Germany to Poland.
The Belarusian leader noted that the constitutional amendments approved at a vote last month, depriving Belarus of a neutral status, have nothing to do with nuclear weapons.