Putin now travels in specially-made armoured trains over fears he will be shot out of sky
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A paranoid Vladimir Putin is now travelling in a specially-made armoured train instead of his usual Flying Kremlin plane.
The Russian leader has taken to the railways as he is reportedly scared of being tracked and shot out of the sky when flying in his presidential plane.
Despite elaborate precautions for his safety since the war began to avoid airspace close to Ukraine, Putin reportedly remains anxious.
His train is camouflaged in grey and red to look like a Russian normal passenger train, making it visually almost indistinguishable from them.
Putin’s transition to rail comes as a former KGB colleague who attended spy school with the Russian leader said the war in Ukraine has increased the president’s anxiety.
The Russian leader (centre) has taken to the railways as he is reportedly scared of being tracked and shot out of the sky when flying in his presidential plane
His train is camouflaged in grey and red to look like a Russian normal passenger train, making it visually almost indistinguishable from them
Putin’s transition to rail comes as a former KGB colleague who attended spy school with the Russian leader said the war in Ukraine has increased the president’s anxiety
The Russian president’s train boasts radio antennae for special communications fixed to the roof of certain carriages, covered by casings, and has been upgraded to be more secure.
It has reinforced axles like heavy freight trains because of the weight of the armour on the carriages. It requires three engines at the front, and has one at the rear.
On the side of the train is the logo of Grand Service Express, a company which Dossier alleges is linked to close Putin associate Yuri Kovalchuk.
Regular trains are halted to allow the Putin express to speed to its destinations.
Putin rarely admits to using this train in public, and has not been photographed on it since 2012.
‘For the president of the aggressor country, it is indeed worth worrying about his safety,’ said journalist Ilya Rozhdestvensky.
‘Several of Putin’s residences which he usually got to by air are located in an area where flights are significantly limited, due to combat activities.
‘That is to say, if the president feels like visiting his palace near Gelendzhik [on the Black Sea], there is no guarantee that there will not be an attempt to shoot down his plane’.
In April last year the Ukrainians sank his flagship Moskva cruiser in the Black Sea, where he has several favourite residences.
Putin has also used it to reach his luxury residence at Valdai, between Moscow and St Petersburg, it is claimed.
For this reason he is now using more frequently his specially constructed armoured train rather than his Flying Kremlin presidential IL-96-300PU plane.
The Russian president’s train boasts radio antennae for special communications fixed to the roof of certain carriages, covered by casings, and has been upgraded to be more secure
It has reinforced axles like heavy freight trains because of the weight of the armour on the carriages. It requires three engines at the front, and has one at the rear
Yury Shvets, 71, Putin’s contemporary who studied with him at the KGB Institute, said Putin is not only anxious over being tracked in his plane but is also concerned over a ‘meat grinder’ struggle for power inside his Kremlin circle.
This – rather than a fear of flu or new Covid strain – is behind his increasing self-isolation, limiting face to face meetings.
‘It looks like he fears for his life,’ Shvets said.
‘Around him there is a struggle, a meat grinder. And in this struggle, Putin can very easily end his existence. So he has isolated himself again.
‘Poisons have run rife under Putin, as a key weapon against his enemies,’ Shvets told Ukrainian outlet gordonua.com.
‘Poison is the weapon of complete villains. This is what has flourished under him [Putin].
Yury Shvets (pictured), Putin’s contemporary who studied with him at the KGB Institute, said Putin concerned over a ‘meat grinder’ struggle for power inside his Kremlin circle
Shvets (right) said: ‘Quite likely he will be poisoned. This is the easiest way.’
‘They couldn’t keep it under unified control. And who now has this weapon, even he does not know. This is a source of very great stress for him.’
Shvets said: ‘Quite likely he will be poisoned. This is the easiest way.’
While Shvets – once a KGB ‘rezident’ spy in Washington who now has US citizenship – doubts the ‘grey mice’ in his top circle are up to assassinating him, the fear stalks Putin, he said.
More evidence of Putin’s paranoia is his decision to use an armoured train for travelling around Russia, especially between his various palaces, said another report by Dossier Centre, linked to exiled billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky, once Russia’s richest man.