<p>In recent months, the usually bombastic Vladimir Putin appears to be sweating a lot – figuratively speaking. The Russian president, who once strutted across the world stage with bare-chested bravado and fiery speeches that rattled the West, now presents a far different picture. Reports from multiple intelligence sources and independent observers paint a portrait of a man who is rapidly losing his grip on power and his once-iron confidence. The once-defiant despot looks increasingly beleaguered, confined, and paranoid as cracks widen in the foundation of his authoritarian rule.</p>



<p>Putin is rarely seen in public these days. He confines himself largely to the private, secure areas of the Kremlin and has taken to spending extended periods in underground bunkers far from Moscow. According to a leaked European intelligence assessment, the Kremlin has dramatically tightened security protocols around the president amid fears of assassination.</p>



<p>Putin himself is said to worry about drone strikes, not only from Ukrainian forces but potentially orchestrated by members of his own political elite.</p>



<p>Putin has reduced travel, avoided military facilities this year, and relied more on pre-recorded footage to maintain the illusion of normalcy. This is not the behavior of a confident leader. It is the conduct of a man in some stage of paranoia.</p>



<p>The annual Victory Day parade on Red Square offered further evidence of this shift. In a striking departure from tradition, Putin oversaw one of the most scaled-back celebrations in nearly two decades. No tanks or heavy military hardware rolled across the cobblestones. The event was shorter, less imposing, and conducted under heightened security. Kremlin officials cited the “current operational situation” in Ukraine, but the message was clear. Even the grand spectacle designed to project Russian military might has been toned down out of fear and necessity. Putin, who once used these parades to flaunt his strength, now appears diminished by the very conflict he launched.</p>



<p>In recent remarks, Putin has begun to speak of the Ukraine operation as “ending” or nearing its conclusion. He has referenced ongoing ceasefire efforts and suggested the conflict is winding down. Yet reality on the ground tells a different story. Russian forces continue to grind forward at enormous cost, with no decisive breakthrough after more than four years of fighting. Independent estimates place Russian military casualties in the hundreds of thousands—killed, wounded, or missing—with little territorial gain to show for the blood and treasure expended.</p>



<p>This grinding stalemate has fueled growing anger among the Russian people. Ordinary citizens, squeezed by inflation, rising food prices, and the mounting death toll, have begun to voice their discontent. Polls from even pro-Kremlin sources show Putin’s approval ratings slipping as the human and economic costs mount. Families who have lost sons and husbands in a war that delivers no clear victory are growing restless.</p>



<p>Inside the Kremlin, rumors of distrust swirl through the upper ranks. Tensions among security services have risen sharply. A European intelligence report highlights concerns over potential leaks of sensitive information and the risk of a plot or coup attempt. Former Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, now secretary of the Security Council, is reportedly viewed as a destabilizing figure who retains significant influence within the military high command. His sidelining and the recent arrest of a close associate have only heightened speculation of internal betrayal. Putin, it seems, no longer feels safe even among those who once formed his most loyal base.</p>



<p>Questions about the president’s health only add to the sense of fragility. Persistent rumors of coughing fits, physical decline, and possible underlying conditions continue to circulate, despite Kremlin efforts to suppress such speculation. He was reported to have looked “haggard” at the Victory Day parade. Whether these reports are accurate or exaggerated, they contribute to an atmosphere of uncertainty at the very top of the Russian power structure.</p>



<p>Even longtime partners appear less enthusiastic. Growing dissatisfaction from Chinese President Xi Jinping has become noticeable. While Beijing maintains public support for Moscow, reports suggest unease over the prolonged war’s impact on global stability, economic ties, and China’s own strategic interests. Xi, who once embraced Putin as an “old friend,” now appears to view the conflict as a drain rather than a strategic boon. The “no limits” partnership shows signs of &#8230; limits.</p>



<p>Is Putin coming to the end of his reign? The evidence mounts that the beleaguered despot is losing his grip. The man who built his image on strength and invincibility now hides in bunkers, scales back his spectacles, and speaks of endings while his war drags on at catastrophic cost. Public anger simmers. Elite distrust festers. External allies waver. Confidence, once his greatest asset, appears to be evaporating.</p>



<p>Vladimir Putin may still sit in the Kremlin, but the aura of the invincible strongman has cracked beyond repair. The once-mighty leader who sought to reshape the map of Europe now struggles simply to maintain control of his own shrinking domain. History has shown that despots who lose their nerve rarely recover it. For Putin, the sweat—figurative though it may be—signals a regime under siege from within and without. The end game, while not yet certain, grows closer with every uneasy step he takes.</p>



<p>So, there ‘tis.</p>

Is Putin Running Scared?
