Putin Offers Rare Glimpse Inside His Kremlin Apartment, a Lavish Gold and White Space with a Private Gym
Twenty-five years after rising to power, Putin gave a series of interviews to journalist Pavel Zarubin for Russian television outlet Rossiya 1. The result is a film titled Moscow. Kremlin. Putin. 25 Years, which offers viewers another side to the stern-faced politician.
In the film, Putin, 72, welcomed Zarubin into his personal apartment inside the Kremlin, an impressive space decorated in shades of white and gold. He told the interviewer that he's been living primarily out of the apartment for the last three years, which coincides with the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Related: Trump Says He Was a 'Bit Sarcastic' When He Promised to End Ukraine War Within 24 Hours of Taking Office
Putin explained that it's a personal space, noting that he's shared tea in the apartment with President Bill Clinton — an indicator of their close relationship. When Zarubin asked after the Russian president's grandchildren, Putin conceded that, while his family are welcome to visit him there, 'they understand that I have a non-stop schedule.'
While he admitted that he 'rarely' plays the impressive white piano, Putin said that he does spend significant time each day in the apartment's 'most important' area: the private gym.
Amid the tour, Putin and Zarubin sat down at his dining room table to drink kefir and discuss more about the Russian leader's time in power.
Putin admitted that he thinks about who will succeed him 'all the time.' In 2024, the Russian leader won his fifth presidential election with 88% of the vote, extending his rule until 2030.
In terms of a successor, Putin said he hopes that multiple candidates will emerge so that 'the people have a choice.' However, he warned that the Russian population's trust would have to be won in order for the new leader to accomplish 'anything serious.'
Related: Trump Secretly Shared COVID-19 Tests with Putin and Stayed in Touch After Presidency, Bob Woodward Claims
While his election results seem to indicate that the Russian leader is almost universally beloved, Zarubin noted that he often comes off as 'cold-blooded and reserved." The interviewer then asked if he ever feels the urge to haul off and hit someone.
'Always,' Putin replied. 'I'm living with it, but I'm struggling with it.'
Somewhat ironically, Putin's apartment tour had one notable portrait on display: Tsar Alexander III, whose nickname was 'The Peacemaker.'
While Russia was in peacetime throughout his rule, Alexander III also increased censorship in the country and implemented Russification policies, like only teaching the Russian language in schools and dismantling religious institutions other than Eastern Orthodoxy.
As for his own efforts at peace, Putin referenced the war in Ukraine, which he spun as a 'special military operation.' Russia invaded the neighboring country in February 2022 and the violent conflict has so far caused the deaths of tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians, in addition to significant troop losses.
Contributor/Getty Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks on the annexation of four Ukrainian regions on September 30, 2022
Putin ominously said that 'so far' there has been no need for Russia to use its arsenal of nuclear weapons during the conflict.
'I hope they will not be required,' he added. 'We have enough strength and means to bring what was started in 2022 to a logical conclusion with the outcome Russia requires.'
Related: Jude Law Confirms He's Playing Vladimir Putin in a New Movie: 'How Am I Going to Do This?'
Despite his threats of military domination, in other parts of the documentary, Putin is depicted as universally beloved by his people, with millions of Russians cheering him on at massive rallies.
The president also attempts a humble image, with clips of him warmly embracing supporters, joking with children in the hospital and playfully straightening a soldier's tie.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
It's a study in contrast for a former KGB officer who became one of the most powerful men in the world — even as he claims not to embrace it.
'I have a feeling that I don't feel like a politician, a person who sits and dictates the fate of his country,' Putin told Zarubin. 'I continue to breathe the same air with millions of citizens of Russia.'
Read the original article on People

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
a few seconds ago
- CNN
Zelensky refuses to cede Donbas, says doing so would give Putin ‘springboard' for future offensives
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed on Tuesday not to give eastern Ukrainian land to Russia, saying that abandoning the Donbas region would open the door for Russian President Vladimir Putin to 'start a third war' in Ukraine. Zelensky's warning comes ahead of Putin's meeting with US President Donald Trump in Alaska on Friday, where the Russian president is expected to demand Ukrainian land as part of a peace deal. While there is confusion over Putin's reported conditions for a ceasefire, most versions stress that the Russian president will demand that Ukrainian forces withdraw from all parts of Ukraine's Donbas, which includes parts of the Donetsk region it still holds. 'For the Russians, Donbas is a springboard for a future new offensive. If we leave Donbas of our own accord or under pressure, we will start a third war,' Zelensky said in a meeting with journalists. Russia illegally annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014, and went on to launch its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. 'I am not going to surrender my country because I have no right to do so,' he added. 'If we leave Donbas today, our fortifications, our terrain, the heights we control, we will clearly open a bridgehead for the preparation of a Russian offensive.' Zelensky and Ukrainian military officials have warned that Russia is building up troops for a new offensive, ready to launch by September. 'I haven't heard anything — not a single proposal that would guarantee that a new war won't start tomorrow and that Putin won't try to occupy at least Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia and Kharkiv,' the Ukrainian president told reporters. 'The exchange of territories is a very complex issue that cannot be separated from security guarantees for Ukraine, for our sovereign state and our people,' Zelensky added, noting that the European Union's involvement in peace talks is also crucial because 'no one except Europe is giving us security guarantees.' A conversation between the US, Ukraine and 'all of Europe' will take place on Wednesday, according to the Ukrainian president. Trump has signaled Zelensky would not participate in Friday's summit, though the US president previewed his plans to phone Kyiv immediately after the meeting, along with other European leaders, to brief them. Trump said his goal is ultimately to get Putin and Zelensky in the same room to hash out their differences, and surmised only they would be able to find a way to end the war with some 'land swapping' between them. 'I'm not going to make a deal,' Trump said. 'It's not up to me to make a deal. I think a deal should be made for both.' Zelensky also gave further details on Tuesday about the diplomatic talks that have been taking place behind the scenes, as well as his take on the outcome of US special envoy Steve Witkoff's meeting with Putin. 'Witkoff said that there should be territorial concessions on both sides. That's how it sounded. And that Putin probably wants us to leave Donbas. So it didn't sound like America wants us to leave,' Zelensky said. 'I do not believe that Putin's proposal is Trump's proposal. I believe that Trump represents the United States of America. He acts as a mediator, he is in the middle – not on Russia's side.' CNN's Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.


USA Today
a few seconds ago
- USA Today
Seeing 'oceanfront property' in Ukraine, Trump's real estate history shapes his presidency
Framing intractable issues in terms of real estate also appears to be how Donald Trump orients himself - a way to process and understand. If there's one thing President Donald Trump likes to think of himself as an expert in, it's real estate. He's said it runs in his blood. (He began his career as a developer working under his father, who built a real estate empire.) On Aug. 11, while delivering the news of a federal takeover of Washington, D.C. police, Trump shared pearls of real-estate wisdom imparted by his father on the importance of first impressions. He might have thought of it as curb appeal. 'I had a wonderful father, very smart, and he used to say, 'Son, when you walk into a restaurant and you see a dirty front door, don't go in,'' said Trump. ''Because if the front door is dirty, the kitchen's dirty also.' Same thing with the capital. If our capital's dirty, our whole country is dirty, and they don't respect it.' Casting Washington, D.C. as America's 'front door' in need of a major wipe down, he went on describe his plan of action. A clean-up crew of 800 National Guard troops would be dispatched to clear out 'crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor' from the capital. The spruce-up project also has a deadline: 30 days. "It's a natural instinct,' he said on Aug. 11. 'As a real estate person, I was very good at that and I was very good at fixing things up.' Trump has a track record of displaying an obsession with the physicality of things: whether it is people (Arnold Palmer, Rosie O'Donell), places (cities, countries and spaces) or objects (portrait frames and ceiling moldings). He's been on a redecorating and remodeling binge in and around the White House – from a golden overhaul of the Oval Office to ripping up the sod in the Rose Garden to pave it over with white stone. He's also planning on adding a 90,000-square-foot ballroom in the East Wing. Trump has also shared his enthusiasm for the White House Vault, from which he selects "great pictures and artwork" to be placed around the house. 'I picked it all myself. I'm very proud of it," he said. But framing intractable issues in terms of real estate also appears to be how he orients himself − a way to process and understand. For instance, he's made a habit of describing war-torn areas through the prism of development potential. During the Washington event, he said he would try to 'get back' some of Ukraine's 'oceanfront property' during talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Aug. 15. 'Russia has occupied a big portion of Ukraine. They've occupied some very prime territory. We're going to try and get some of that territory back for Ukraine,' he said. 'They have taken largely - in real estate, we call it oceanfront property. That's always the most valuable property,' Trump said, describing the land Russia usurped during its three-year war on Ukraine. Talking to reporters about possible 'land swaps' between Russia and Ukraine − an idea Ukraine has rejected − he said his mission was to negotiate an agreement. 'I make deals,' he said. In Trump's telling, the negotiations seemed to be about a land deal, and he made no mention of any security guarantees for Ukraine. Back in February, during a visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu − the first world leader to visit Trump during his second term − Trump spelled out his vision for Gaza amid talks of an Israel-Gaza ceasefire. He said the United States should take over the war-torn seaside Palestinian territory and turn it into the "Riviera of the Middle East.' 'The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip. We'll do a job with it. We will own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous bombs and other weapons,' he said. 'We will level it out, create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area.' But Trump has found that some of his land acquistion pitches, such as buying Greenland from Denmark, do not go over well in the world of international diplomacy. When Trump hosted Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney in the Oval Office in May, he brought up his desire to annex the United States' northern neighbor and make it the 51st state. Trump, once again, brought up his professional builder bonafides. 'I'm a real estate developer at heart. When you get rid of that artificially drawn line (the U.S.-Canada border), somebody drew that line many years ago… like with a ruler, just a straight line right across the top of the country,' Trump said during the meeting. "When you look at that beautiful formation, when it's together − I'm a very artistic person − but when I looked at that beaut, I said, 'That's the way it was meant to be,"" he said. Carney was quick to swat away the suggestion. 'You know, from real estate, there are some places that are never for sale,' said Carney. 'Having met with the owners of Canada over the course of the campaign last several months, it's not for sale.' Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is a White House correspondent for USA TODAY. You can follow her on X @SwapnaVenugopal


New York Post
a few seconds ago
- New York Post
White House confirms Trump-Putin summit in Anchorage, calling it ‘listening exercise'
WASHINGTON — President Trump will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday in Anchorage, Alaska, the White House confirmed Tuesday. 'There were many sites discussed, but of course, Alaska is a state within the United States of America, so the president is very honored,' press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters during her regular briefing. Switzerland, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates had been among the speculated locations for the closely-watched summit, the first sitdown between Putin and an American president since the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Advertisement Switzerland, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates were floated for the long-awaited meeting between President Trump and Vladimir Putin, but Anchorage, Alaska was ultimately chosen for the one-on-one conversation. Will Oliver – Pool via CNP / MEGA 'There were many sites discussed, but of course, Alaska is a state within the United States of America, so the president is very honored,' press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. via REUTERS A venue for the meeting has not been made public, but Anchorage — a city of around 300,000 — is already experiencing an influx of officials and reporters seeking hotel rooms and other amenities to cover the high-level talks.