logo
Putin shows off home chapel and favourite drink in bizarre Kremlin tour… and admits he ‘fights urge to punch people'

Putin shows off home chapel and favourite drink in bizarre Kremlin tour… and admits he ‘fights urge to punch people'

Scottish Sun04-05-2025

DICTATOR Vladimir Putin has showed off his private chapel and his favourite drink in a bizarre tour of his Kremlin apartment.
The Russian tyrant gave the public a glimpse into his home in an interview marking the 25th anniversary of his first inauguration as president.
5
Putin showed off his private chapel in the interview
Credit: East2West
5
The Russian tyrant offered his reporter pal some of his favourite drink - kefir
Credit: East2West
5
The pair discussed everything from the war in Ukraine to his grandchildren
Credit: East2West
The bizarre footage shows Putin giving his favourite interviewer, Pavel Zarubin, a tour of the apartment while answering his questions.
When asked about his grandchildren from daughters Maria, 39, and Katerina, 37, Putin says they occasionally visit him unexpectedly in his austere apartment.
He said: 'They can, they can.
'But still everyone understands that I have such an around-the-clock schedule, and they try to give advance notice, [and] ask when I'll have a little window to see them.'
Zarubin follows up and asks if he is a strict grandfather to which the 72-year-old responds: 'No, no!'
Putin did not name his grandchildren but it is known his eldest grandson Roman, 12 - born to his daughter Maria - is half-Dutch, by her first husband Jorrit Faassen, the son of a NATO colonel.
The pair then make a stop in the kitchen where Putin is seen getting a bottle of kefir from his German Liebherr fridge, before offering some to Zarubin.
The dictator claimed he copes in the kitchen alone before admitting: 'Well, the guys [adjutants] come, they help.
'But now, what for? We'll pour the kefir ourselves.'
Kefir is a traditional Russian sour milk associated with gut health, immunity, and longevity - suggesting he is trying to show he's patriotic and staying fit.
Putin's 'next three targets' revealed by Zelensky's ex-adviser
Putin is later asked about unleashing nuclear war against Ukraine or the West - a question often raised by Russian propagandists.
Zarubin asks: 'When [Ukraine and the West] provoke us, provoke us, provoke us – they even started hitting us with NATO missiles.
'And many people had this desire…to strike back.
'Why such cold-bloodedness these three years? Because everything would have ended in nuclear war in that case?'
Mad Vlad replies: 'You said it right – they wanted to provoke us.
'They wanted to make us make mistakes.
'Well, and there was no need to use the weapons you're talking about – and, I hope, there won't be.
'We have enough strength and means to bring what was started in 2022 [the war against Ukraine] to a logical conclusion with a result that suits Russia.'
The Russian leader also gave a glimpse into his gold-gilded chapel where he claims he fell to his knees to pray after the Nord-Ost siege in 2002.
He said: 'Here is [my] little home chapel."
He continued: 'Back then, during the Nord-Ost crisis, I, for the first time in my life, knelt.'
Hundreds of hostages died in the Nord-Ost siege, mainly from gas used by Putin's pawns, and up to 50 militants were also killed.
The interview then took a strange turn as Putin admitted he often has to restrain himself from a craving to punch people.
Zarubin asked: 'On the outside, you always seem very cold-blooded and reserved — don't you ever get the urge to, as they say, punch someone?'
Putin replied: 'Always….I live with it. But I fight it.'
Finally, Putin revealed that he is always thinking about who to crown as his successor and hinted at a potential leadership contest.
He said: 'I always think about that.
'In the end, people can have whatever attitude they want toward this, but ultimately, yes, in the final analysis, the choice belongs to the people - the Russian people, the citizens, the voters.'
He suggested that the outcome could be skewed with 'election technologies' and 'administrative resources'.
But he said: 'The chances of truly achieving something are slim for a person who doesn't have the trust of the people behind them.
'That's a fundamental issue.
'So when I think about this - and I think about it all the time - of course I think that a person should emerge, or better yet several people, so the people have a choice.
'Someone who could earn that trust from the citizens of the country.'
Zarubin probed: 'But you're constantly observing and assessing the potential of each person, right?'
To which Putin simply replied: 'Yes. That's right.'
The bizarre interview - "Russia, Kremlin, Putin, 25 years" - was intended to reveal new personal details about the notoriously secretive Putin.
The dictator claimed the apartment has been his main base during the war against Ukraine, but it looked far from homely.
Ironically, a large portrait of Russian Emperor Alexander III is sat on a desk when the two open the doors on the left side.
Dubbed "The Peacemaker" the Russian Tsar fought no major wars during his reign - a far cry from Putin's rule.
But the emperor was also known for tight censorship, empowering the Russian secret police, cracking down on political dissenters, revolutionaries, and nationalist movements, including Ukrainians - all of which may appeal to Putin.
Putin became president on the last day of 1999 and served from 1999 to 2008, before serving as prime minister until 2012.
The former KGB lieutenant colonel then became president for a second time in 2012
5
Putin's grandson Roman Faassen pictured during a karting race in Tatarstan, Russia, in 2022
Credit: East2West

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ukraine's race to rebuild power plants under Russian bombardment
Ukraine's race to rebuild power plants under Russian bombardment

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Ukraine's race to rebuild power plants under Russian bombardment

Valeria was about to take a bite of pizza when the Iskander landed nearby. The blast from the Russian missile shattered all the windows in the Mykolaiv CHP (combined heat and power) plant in southern Ukraine, igniting a gas fire and propelling shrapnel through the canteen. 'I had imagined what I might do when a missile or a Shahed [drone] comes, like if it really happens to me, and I had told myself I should be really calm at that moment,' says the 27-year-old. She and her twin sister Alyona led a hyperventilating colleague out of the plant's office to her car. The trio were still driving away when the second Iskander hit, devastating the plant's boiler-room. After that Oct 10 strike, the plant was targeted again, in January, February and May, each time with Shahed drones. On Thursday night, Russia renewed its campaign against Ukraine's national energy infrastructure, breaking a loosely followed ceasefire Vladimir Putin agreed with Donald Trump in a phone call on March 18. Power facilities were struck in the western city of Ternopil and targeted in other areas, days after Putin warned he would avenge Ukraine's elaborate 'Spiderweb' attack on Russia's bomber fleet. 'The scumbags haven't hit the energy sector en masse for five months,' wrote Myroshnykov, a Ukrainian military blogger. 'Ballistics on transformers – only the scumbags could do that.' On Friday night, Moscow struck the northeastern city of Kharkiv with what the mayor described as the 'most powerful attack' since the start of the war, involving more than 50 Iranian-made drones, one rocket and four guided bombs. At least three people were killed and 22 wounded in the devastating strikes. Harrowing scenes saw bloodied residents being carried out on stretchers from their homes by rescue workers wearing gas masks. Respite is direly needed. Ukraine faces shortfalls in both electricity and natural gas production after the wave of Russian attacks – and every hour without further explosions allows for the progress of repairs. Few appreciate the challenges like Dmytro Myroshnychenko, the chairman of Mykolaiv CHP plant. On a tour of the facility, he grimly points out the legacy of Russia's bombardment: the boiler-room is a tangle of charred iron and splintered rebar; shrapnel perforates an oil tank; flaps of corrugated roof panelling limp over the walls of the destroyed turbine control centre. In full health, the Mykolaiv CHP heats 160,000 homes and provides 26MW of electricity to the national grid. The latter was ended by a February drone strike. That the plant managed to deliver heat over winter is testament to the grit of its staff. After the first Iskander strike in October, Mr Myroschnychenko ran through the facility to check if anyone was injured. 'My first thought was, everyone is lying on the floor,' he says. Luckily, everyone survived. The next day, repairs began. Russia's attack hit two weeks before the start of Mykolaiv's heating season, when residents can turn on their radiators as temperatures sink below freezing. Staff were nervous coming to work but 'everyone understood the importance, as if we didn't rebuild the city would be left without heat'. Only interrupted by air raid alerts, workers frantically shifted pipelines from the two ruined boilers to a 1930s predecessor. When he pushed the button to turn on the heat again, Mr Myroschnychenko felt little relief. 'I knew more attacks would be coming,' he says, 'so we started preparing for them.' The £29.5million needed to build two new boilers is prohibitive; instead, the plant is focused on keeping its elderly system running. Four small metal air raid shelters have been placed on the plant floor, in addition to three underground bunkers. Gennady, a 47-year-old machinist, escaped the boiler room by touch in one strike, unable to see through the clouds of dust. Now, when sirens warn of an impending strike, he often has to climb up and down several ladders: unlike the destroyed computerised systems, the surviving parts have to be operated by hand. He jokes there is one advantage: 'It is difficult to break them so easily, as there are no electronics.' But they are harder to shut down in an emergency. One new metal air raid shelter stands a few feet from the boiler. As Gennady opens the door, a worker caught in a lunchtime nap guiltily slips out. The most serious challenge facing Ukraine ahead of the next heating season is a shortage of gas, with underground storage badly hit by the Russian strikes: Mykolaiv CHP lost large quantities when the Iskander destroyed a pipeline. 'We need to find $2.5 billion and purchase gas, putting aside the risk of further strikes. The task is quite clear, but extremely difficult,' Oleksandr Kharchenko, the director of Ukraine's energy research centre, told RBC-Ukraine, a local news outlet, this month. Last winter, Ukraine avoided a crisis. Record high temperatures and low industrial use spared residents from major power cuts. Experts are calling for small boilers, firewood and coal to be delivered to the worst-hit cities – Mykolaiv, Odesa, Dnipro and Kryvih Rih – before winter. Should there be long-lasting blackouts, further waves of refugees will head west. Others will freeze to death. In Mykolaiv CHP, the workers plough on with gallows humour. The plant knows war: it was destroyed by the Nazis when they were forced out of Mykolaiv by the Red Army in 1943. A portrait of Lenin has been left above the doorway in one workshop, with the name 'Morozov' scrawled underneath; a decades-old reference to a lookalike employee. The shipyard next door built Russia's only aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetzov, before this invasion began. All the plant's staff are protected from conscription. But it needs another 40 people to get up to speed, admits Mr Myroshnychenko. At work, Valeria and her friends no longer eat pizza. The next time they sat down to one after the October strike, an air raid sounded immediately. 'It's become a joke,' she says – and another reason to loathe the Russians.

Incredible new footage of Ukraine's Op Spiderweb shows smuggled drone taking off from lorry & blitzing Putin's bombers
Incredible new footage of Ukraine's Op Spiderweb shows smuggled drone taking off from lorry & blitzing Putin's bombers

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Incredible new footage of Ukraine's Op Spiderweb shows smuggled drone taking off from lorry & blitzing Putin's bombers

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS is the moment a smuggled Ukrainian drone launched from the roof of a lorry — and blitzed a Russian Tu-22M3 bomber in a direct hit. The incredible footage, part of Ukraine's covert 'Operation Spiderweb,' tracks the FPV drone from launch to impact in stunning detail. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 Ukraine has released new footage of its dramatic Operation Spiderweb Credit: Twitter It shows the drone lifting off from the top of what appears to be a transport vehicle — camouflaged as part of everyday infrastructure. The FPV is then seen skimming across enemy territory and diving into a high-value target at Russia's Belaya airfield. As the drone closes in, smoke is already seen rising from previous strikes - the aftermath of a calculated blitz that's left Russia's long-range air force in shambles. The strike is part of a larger, high-stakes campaign that's left a trail of wreckage across four of Russia's strategic air bases. It also delivered a staggering $7 billion blow to Vladimir Putin's long-range bomber fleet. More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos. Like us on Facebook at TheSunUS and follow us on X at @TheUSSun

Incredible new footage of Ukraine's Op Spiderweb shows smuggled drone taking off from lorry & blitzing Putin's bombers
Incredible new footage of Ukraine's Op Spiderweb shows smuggled drone taking off from lorry & blitzing Putin's bombers

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

Incredible new footage of Ukraine's Op Spiderweb shows smuggled drone taking off from lorry & blitzing Putin's bombers

THIS is the moment a smuggled Ukrainian drone launched from the roof of a lorry — and blitzed a Russian Tu-22M3 bomber in a direct hit. The incredible footage, part of Ukraine's covert 'Operation Spiderweb,' tracks the FPV drone from launch to impact in stunning detail. It shows the drone lifting off from the top of what appears to be a transport vehicle — camouflaged as part of everyday infrastructure. The FPV is then seen skimming across enemy territory and diving into a high-value target at Russia's Belaya airfield. As the drone closes in, smoke is already seen rising from previous strikes - the aftermath of a calculated blitz that's left Russia's long-range air force in shambles. The strike is part of a larger, high-stakes campaign that's left a trail of wreckage across four of Russia's strategic air bases. It also delivered a staggering $7 billion blow to Vladimir Putin's long-range bomber fleet.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store