
Despite the fact that the Russian president has authorised missile strikes on important civilian and military targets in Ukraine over the last month, Putin is thought to be taking precautionary precautions to protect his own family. Experts suggest that Putin has concealed his close family in his bunker in Siberia, in the area of Ongudaysky, near Russia’s borders with Mongolia, China, and Kazakhstan.
This bunker is reported to be intended as a safe sanctuary for its people in the event of a nuclear assault.
Many of these assertions are made by Valery Solovey, the former head of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations’ Public Relations Department.
Mr Solovey said that the sanctuary is actually a luxurious high-tech bunker in the Altai Mountains constructed for nuclear war defence.
He is thought to be alluding to a vast mountain residence erected 10 years ago by Gazprom, a mainly state-owned energy business.
“In truth, it is not a bunker, but a whole subterranean metropolis equipped with the most advanced science and technology,” the political scientist explained.
“Do you think this signifies anything to you?” That the President dispatches his family to this bunker.”
Observers have noticed “several ventilation spots” in the gardens surrounding the hideaway, according to the Mail.
There is also a high voltage line connected to a contemporary 110-kilovolt substation, which is reported to be adequate to power a small city.
This underground bunker is thought to be buried somewhere in the Altai Republic’s mountainous territory.
Traveling by flying from Moscow to the Altai Republic would take around six and a half hours.
Traveling to this place by automobile would be tough because the territory is 4,000 kilometres from Moscow and would take 54 hours in ideal weather, travelling Russia from west to east.
Some claim that the Russian leader is stowed away in the bunker, but analysts feel it is doubtful.
This underground bunker is said to be located somewhere in the rocky terrain of the Altai Republic.
Flying from Moscow to the Altai Republic would take around six and a half hours.
Traveling to this location by car would be difficult because it is 4,000 kilometres from Moscow and would take 54 hours in good conditions, travelling Russia from west to east.
Some think that the Russian leader is hidden in the bunker, but specialists are sceptical.
In late February, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that if he met any provocative measures from other countries, those countries would face “such repercussions that you have never seen in your history.”
Dmitry Peskov, a Kremlin spokesperson, said on Tuesday that Moscow would only use nuclear weapons to address “an existential danger to our nation.”
Dmitry Medvedev, a senior Russian politician, stated on Saturday that the Kremlin’s nuclear strategy does not need an adversary to deploy nuclear weapons first.
Mr. Medvedev’s remarks spurred Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to warn that Moscow posed a direct threat to the globe.
Mr Zelensky remarked via video connection at Qatar’s Doha Forum, “Russia is deliberating flaunting that they can destroy with nuclear weapons not only a certain nation, but the whole globe.”
Russia possesses over 6,000 nuclear weapons.
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