“The fact that Putin is now utilizing barbarous cluster bombs and missiles against civilians is a sign that he is losing his patience and his mind.”
“The fact that his troops have so far failed to complete the mission Putin has given them enrages Putin,” he continued.
“What is going on with Putin and what is going on inside his psyche cannot be explained or ‘justified,’ regardless of whether there was some ostensibly ‘legitimate’ reason to invade Ukraine first.”
Russia’s push into Kyiv has been halted by a series of logistical setbacks and resupply issues, indicating that things are plainly not going as planned for the Kremlin.
The Russian tyrant appears to be growing increasingly nervous behind the scenes, fearful that someone close to him could poison him.
Putin is now “totally losing his mind” at the state of the Ukraine war, according to Boris Karpichkov, a former KGB spy now living in exile in the United Kingdom.
“Putin lost the war before he even started it – and it happened a long time before this insane concept sprang into his sick mind,” the 62-year-old ex-double agent told The Sun Online.
Vladimir Putin is becoming increasingly concerned about his own inner circle as the violent Ukraine invasion takes a terrible toll on Russia’s soldiers.
As the war limps into its third week, the humiliated autocrat, 69, appears to be hunting for someone to blame. Russia is dealing with declining army morale and stubborn Ukrainian resistance.
“He turned out to be a psychopath really heavily obsessed with paranoid ideas and conspiracy theories against himself and about non existent threats Russia allegedly faces from the rest of the world.”
Putin was cagey and mistrustful long before he stepped into the role of president, Mr Karpichkov said.
The ex-spy said people who knew him before noted his “pathologically abnormal craving for personal enrichment by any means”.
And the Russian leader showed an “absence of any moral principles and barriers, multiplied by careerism, hypocrisy, dishonesty and deceit”.
“I am outraged, appalled, and sickened that Putin, like myself, is a former KGB officer,” he stated.
“Looking at Putin now, anyone can condemn and label everyone who was a part of this organization as a monster.
“However, as a former member of the KGB who later worked for the Russian security service, the FSB, I can attempt to explain what thoughts are running through his mind, what prompted him to reveal his true monster face.”
Mr. Karpichkov expressed his thoughts as follows: “Putin is unconcerned, and has begun marching over dead bodies under his feet, regardless of whether the victims belong to Ukrainians or his own Russian countrymen.
‘LOYALTY PURGES’
Over the last two decades, the former spy claims, Putin has carried out “loyalty purges” in all levels of his government.
He claimed that the distrustful leader has sacked or imprisoned anyone who “came under his personal insane suspicions or raised concerns” “methodically, carefully, and calculatingly.”
General Roman Gavrilov, the deputy leader of Russia’s Rosgvardia unit, which led the initial advance into Ukrainian territory, was supposedly detained by Russian security forces just this week.
Although the reason for Gavrilov’s detention was not immediately known, it was rumored that he was being held on a serious accusation of “leaks of military information that resulted in loss of life.”
According to The Times, Sergey Beseda, the chief of the FSB’s international intelligence section, has been arrested, along with Anatoly Bolyukh, his deputy.
According to The Times, Sergey Beseda, the chief of the FSB’s international intelligence section, has been arrested, along with Anatoly Bolyukh, his deputy.
Putin’s rage over “unreliable, fragmentary, and partially misleading information about the political situation in Ukraine” is likely to be the underlying reason for the arrests.
Putin, who is known for being an abnormally paranoid leader, is believed to have instructed a team of people to taste his meals before he eats it, out of fear of being wiped out by a lethal combination.
According to a source, Russian President Vladimir Putin has also replaced his whole personal staff of 1,000 employees, according to Daily Beast contributing editor Craig Copetas.
“Laundresses, secretaries, chefs – to a whole other group of people,” Copetas remarked. The verdict of the jury
The Russian leader was so intent on keeping his invasion plans hidden that he kept top military commanders in the dark about the assault’s date and scope.
Because of Putin’s great secrecy, Russia’s security services and military are now catching up and struggling to make any significant progress in Ukraine.
Officials in the Kremlin are said to have called the February 24 assault a “mistake” because Putin’s men were slaughtered on the battlefield.
Russian planes have been shot down, tanks have been ambushed, and soldiers have been captured on camera sobbing after surrendering to the Ukrainians.
Ukraine claims to have killed roughly 13,500 Russian invaders, and Russia is claimed to be having problems replenishing its depleted soldiers.
Last week, defense experts predicted that the dictator would have only ten days to win the battle before his men surrendered.
However, since the war began, Putin has made multiple strong-worded comments on Russian state television, calling Russians who oppose his war with Ukraine “scum” and “traitors.”
He has repeatedly threatened the West with “untold repercussions” if he is pushed, insisting that the invasion is “growing successfully.”
Putin’s forces have been damaged, according to former Nato chief Rose Gottemoeller, by Ukraine’s tenacious resistance.
“I think the Russians threw some of their most elite forces against Kyiv to begin with,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
“They were looking for a lightning strike to assassinate President Zelensky, to destabilize the Kyiv government, and to overthrow the government.”
“However, things didn’t go as planned, and they got up stranded on the highway outside of Kyiv.” Those troops have now dispersed, dispersing into the woods.
“However, because their logistics are in such horrible shape, I’m questioning if they have the ability to reorganize at this point.”
“They don’t have the fuel supplies they need to continue on to Kyiv.” So, at least with those forces, I’m skeptical that they’ll have much success in an assault on Kyiv.”
It comes after a former Russian deputy prime minister criticized the Russian government’s activities in Ukraine.
When Arkady Dvorkovich, Russia’s deputy prime minister from 2012 to 2018, declared his thoughts were with Ukrainian citizens being bombarded, he became one of Russia’s most senior individuals to question the war.
Thousands of protesters have been imprisoned in protest of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow describes as a “special military operation” aimed at demilitarizing and “de-nazifying” its former Soviet ally.


















