Sickly Putin will die of cancer VERY soon, Ukraine spy chief claims as Kremlin plot to replace Vlad ‘already underway’
SICKLY tyrant Vladimir Putin will die of cancer very soon, Ukraine's spy chief has said.
It comes as a leading cheerleader for Russia's war claimed the race for his crown is under way as rival camps in the Kremlin jostle to seize power.
Rumours have persisted that Putin is "critically ill" after he became bloated and was seen trembling and shaking alarmingly.
Bombshell spy emails leaked to The Sun appeared to confirm he has early-stage Parkinson's disease and pancreatic cancer.
Sources also claimed he had emergency surgery last year and was shadowed by a team of top doctors.
Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine's chief of defence intelligence, said last night he is certain Putin does have terminal cancer.
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He : "He has been sick for a long time.
"I am sure he has cancer. I think he will die very quickly. I hope very soon."
He added his security agency has obtained intelligence from sources close to the Kremlin despot.
Budanov said: "We just know it - from people, from sources."
He believes Putin will die soon but not before a humiliating final defeat in Ukraine.
The spy chief said: "This war must end before his death... We will win it in 2023."
He also said there will be a change of power in Russia after the death of Putin, who has ruled for more than two decades.
Budanov said: "We should not be afraid of its transformation, as it will benefit the whole world."
However others warned the future direction of the regime is far from certain.
It depends on the outcome of a power struggle which has already begun in anticipation of Putin's exit, said Russian war analyst and former loyalist Igor Strelkov.
“The fight for the political Olympus has begun between the groupings that surround Putin,” he said.
He added battle to replace him is raging to the extent that “even we can notice it”.
Strelkov, a former colonel in the FSB spy agency, was a key figure in Putin’s annexation of Crimea and subjugation of the Donetsk region of Ukraine in 2014.
He was among three convicted by a Dutch court in November for downing Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, killing all 298 on board.
Despite this, he remains a key voice inside Russia on the conduct of the war.
The staunchly pro-war blogger, real name Igor Girkin, said the immediate mobilisation of another half a million men is the only way for Putin to avoid defeat and ignominy in Ukraine.
But he suggested a “feudal” battle among rivals to replace Putin is stoking a "military crisis" for Russia.
Rivals for the crown
He claimed the fight at the top of the Kremlin focuses on insurgent Putin crony Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of the Wagner private army, and loyalist forces in the defence ministry around weakened defence minister Sergei Shoigu.
Others believe security apparatchiks around ex-FSB head Nikolai Patrushev - secretary of the powerful security council - are more likely to pull the trigger on Putin in a bid to save the elite ruling circle if the war continues to go wrong
Some claim the security bloc is lining up his son, Agriculture Minister Dmitry Patrushev, as the frontman to replace Putin if he is forced out by war setbacks or ill health.
Strelkov sees Prigozhin, a fixer dubbed Putin’s "chef" as he was in charge of Kremlin banquets, as aiming to be a major political force in his own right.
And he said there is evidence he was now securing prominent coverage in the state media.
There has been speculation he wants to become Defence Minister - or even president.
“The grouping of Yevgeny Prigozhin stands against grouping which includes Sergei Shoigu,” said Strelkov.
“They have already started the fight.
“They are not fighting over the number of shells…
“Now we are speaking about what comes after Putin.
“Will it happen in one year or two? We don’t know.
“But factually the fight for the political Olympus has begun between the groupings that surround Putin to the extent that even we can notice it.”
WHO ARE THE SILOVIKI?
FROM the Russian for "people of force", meet the siloviki - the real power behind Putin's throne.
Alexander Bortnikov - Head of Russia's FSB - which replaced the KGB, he has also known Putin since the 1970s, when both served in the Leningrad KGB. He controls thousands of people, covering everything from counter-terrorism to intimidating opposition parties.
Sergei Chemezov - Head of state-owned defence company Rostec, Chemezov was stationed with Putin in East Germany in the 80s when both were in the KGB. Has become filthy rich through his ties to Putin, amassing luxury yachts as well as a number of Spanish villas.
Sergei Naryshkin - Head of Russia's foreign intelligence service. Reportedly ex-KGB, he has worked with Putin since the 90s, when the president was deputy mayor of St Petersburg. Last year, he accused the West of being behind Alexei Navalny's poisoning.
Nikolai Patrushev - Head of Russia's security council, Patrushev has known Putin since his KGB days in the 1970s. He is accused of masterminding the 2006 assassination in London of ex-Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.
Igor Sechin - Considered Putin's "de-facto deputy", Sechin is head of state-owned oil firm Rosneft. He was gifted the powerful company by Putin, just before it took over Yukos, a company controlled by now-exiled Russian billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky.
Sergei Shoigu - Russia's defence minister since 2012, he regularly goes hunting and fishing with Putin. Seen by some as a potential successor. Following the disastrous Ukraine invasion, he was not seen in public for more than a month, sparking rumours he had been sidelined.
Prigozhin wants to become a “political actor” and “he is clearly pumping up his authority, including in public”, Strelkov said.
And he warned: “His latest appearances in the media clearly showed that now he positions himself not just like a war commander, but as a public and a political figure.
“Prigozhin stands against the grouping which Shoigu either heads or belongs to.
“They have already started to fight.”
He continued: “The military crisis led to a power crisis.
“In turn the power crisis will deepen the military crisis.
“And it’ll keep going down the spiral, unless urgent measures I mentioned earlier are taken.”
This involves a cull of top commanders and mass mobilisation.
“There will be a second wave of mobilisation,” he forecast.
“They will be forced to have it, a second and then perhaps a third wave.
“To win in Ukraine we would need about half a million more soldiers.”
Strelkov has key support among army and secret services commanders below the top level.
He has so far avoided arrest despite biting criticisms of Putin and his leading henchmen.
He spoke amid claims Putin has approved in principle a huge new mobilisation drive.
Telegram channel General SVR claimed Putin has agreed plans to call up two million for mobilisation this year, with some going to the front as cannon fodder and others working in military-linked industries.
The first to be called up will be men in debt to their ex-wives over alimony payments, it claimed.
Such a move for mass mobilisation could come next month.
It would be hugely unpopular, coming just months after a chaotic draft of 300,000 reservists.
Thousands of young men scrambled over the borders to escape.
Those who were enlisted said they were forced to sleep on cold barracks floors with not enough food or equipment.
READ MORE SUN STORIES
Last week a new Western intelligence analysis claimed Putin is suffering from megalomania caused by cancer drugs.
A senior spy official from Denmark alleged “delusions of grandeur” and the tyrant’s “moon-shaped face” in early 2022 were signs of the side effects of hormone treatment.