Vladimir Putin is facing renewed scrutiny over his health after the Kremlin briefly posted and then removed an unedited video from Moscow on March 7 showing the Russian president coughing, clearing his throat and asking to restart part of his International Women's Day address. The footage, first reported by The Moscow Times, has revived long running speculation around Vladimir Putin, including oldrumours about serious illnessand even claims that body doubles are being used, though none of that has been confirmed and much of it should be treated with a grain of salt.
For context, the news follows years of recurring claims about Vladimir Putin's wellbeing, many amplified by his opponents, online conspiracy circles and foreign media, but rarely supported by hard evidence. A 2023 New York Times report on leaked US intelligence material said documents suggested Putin might have been undergoing chemotherapy while also stressing that no evidence had emerged to prove he was seriously ill or near death.
What made the latest clip spread so quickly was not just the coughing, but the glimpse behind the Kremlin's usual stage management. In the version described by The Moscow Times, Putin stops mid delivery, turns off camera and says, 'You know, let me say that again, because ... my throat's a bit scratchy. Yes, a bit scratchy. I almost started coughing. I've been talking a lot today,' before the video was taken down and replaced with a shorter edited version.
That is the part that can be verified from the reporting linked in the report. The APT video posted to YouTube also says the unedited recording was accidentally published by the Kremlin and briefly revealed Putin remarking that his throat felt scratchy and that he nearly coughed after speaking a lot during the day.
It is a small moment, really. A man with a dry throat, a second take and an editing slip. Yet Putin has spent years projecting physical control and political permanence, so even a fleeting lapse now gets parsed like a Kremlinology text from another era. That may be unfair, but it is also entirely predictable.
The louder claims swirling around the clip are much harder to substantiate. OK! Magazine says some observers have speculated for years that Putin may have suffered a stroke, or could be living with cancer or Parkinson's disease, while others have gone further and claimed he actually died in 2023 and has been replaced in public by body doubles supported by prerecorded footage and artificial intelligence. None of those claims is established by the material provided here.
Putin and his slimy regime accidentally released the wrong version of a video they were going to put out which shows Putin spluttering and coughing.They quickly deleted it but it was too late as it hit the internet there was no going back.pic.twitter.com/HJExVE00cJ
What the 2023 New York Times piece actually said was narrower and more careful than the wilder versions that tend to spread online. It reported that leaked classified documents referred to a conversation between Ukrainian officials about a possible plot against Putin at a time when he was allegedly scheduled to begin chemotherapy, while also making clear that US officials said there was no proof he was dying.
That matters because health rumours around authoritarian leaders attract fantasy as quickly as fact. The body double theory, in particular, remains in the realm of speculation. It may be irresistible copy, but it is still unverified.
The article also includes remarks by Volodymyr Zelensky and revisits earlier commentary on Vladimir Putin's appearance, including claims about shaky legs and bulging veins at a conference in November 2025, though no official medical explanation is cited. Without primary documentation or a formal statement from the Kremlin on those points, they remain part of the broader churn of allegation and counter-allegation that follows Putin almost everywhere.
Source: International Business Times UK