Ranting & sniffling Putin rambles through ‘state of the nation’ speech and warns Russia could NUKE the West

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DERANGED despot Vladimir Putin has warned the West is in danger of being nuked as he rants through his annual state of the nation speech.

It comes just two weeks before a sham election that is set to hand the tyrant another six years in power.

AFPPutin delivering his state of the nation address[/caption]

AFPPutin arriving at the Gostiny Dvor conference centre in central Moscow[/caption]

AFPHe is addressing both houses of the Russian parliament[/caption]

In his venom-filled speech, sniffling Putin accused the West of trying to “destroy” Russia.

He also lashed out at the US, claiming it is trying to defeat Russia and “drag us into an arms race”.

Putin went on to insist western Russia must be “properly protected” after Nato welcomed Sweden and Finland into the military alliance.

The rambling tyrant claimed Nato forces are “preparing to strike out territory”.

But he insisted the retaliation would be “much more tragic”.

In a thinly veiled threat Putin warned the West was in “danger of nuclear conflict” if they sent troops to Ukraine.

He bragged how his unstoppable nuclear rocket Sarmat – known as Satan-2 – will be deployed to Russian forces.

Putin also boasted how Russia has weapons “could defeat them on their own territory” in a chilling warning.

The US and key European allies this week said they had no plans to send ground troops to Ukraine, after France hinted at the possibility.

Earlier in the speech, the dictator hailed the “overwhelming support” of the Russian population for what he still calls the “special military operation” in Ukraine.

Before pausing for a moment of silence for what he called Russia’s “fallen heroes”, the tyrant claimed Moscow is fighting for its “freedom and independence”.

Power-mad Vlad went on to crow how Moscow had used advanced weapons systems, including Zircon hypersonic missiles, and claimed it held the military advantage in Ukraine

Kremlin puppet spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin personally worked on the content of the speech and has “dozens of phone and face-to-face contacts” with officials.

It is the first time in several years Western journalists have been invited – but they have not been allowed in the hall itself.

At least 17 cinemas in Russia are screening the address free of charge and it is being aired on giant advertising screens in Moscow.

In last year’s rambled speech, Putin accused the West of trying to start a “global” war and made a veiled nuclear threat.

And while his speech was a near two-hour diatribe, the central message was clear – he blames the West for the war in Ukraine.

It comes as Putin is all but certain to be elected for a fifth time in March after two already brutal decades of his iron-fist rule.

The aging dictator, 71, has been in power since 1999 – and re-election would keep him in power until at least 2030.

As Putin continues to cement his power in Moscow, it is feared he is on the brink of another Hitler-style land grab as a breakaway region of Moldova has called on Russia for “protection.”

The Russian-controlled enclave of Transnistria, which shares a border with Ukraine begged Moscow for help against “pressure” from Chișinău.

The move came from pro-Russian officials who feared the region could become a new flashpoint in Russia‘s war with neighbouring Ukraine.

Meanwhile, leaked Russian military files have revealed Putin is much closer to unleashing a nuclear strike than ever feared.

The bombshell papers reveal what it would take for Putin to hit the red button – including an invasion by China.

Sabre-rattling Putin has repeatedly made chilling nuke threats – including vowing to wipe the UK off the map for supporting Ukraine.

The cache outlines in what scenarios Putin would trigger a nuclear response.

Despite Putin cozying up to Xi Jinping, the files reveal Russia’s eastern military district has rehearsed how a Chinese invasion could unfold.

Unrelated to the China war games, the files say an enemy landing on Russian soil or an imminent enemy attack using conventional weapons could also spark a nuclear response.

Meanwhile, the explosive papers also reveal a nuke could be deployed in the case of a defeat of units responsible for securing border areas.

EPAUkrainian flags wave in front of damaged residential buildings in Orikhiv, near the frontline in the Zaporizhzhia region[/caption]

East2WestRussian troops with Yars mobile nuclear missile launchers[/caption]

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