Headline News
Russian President Vladimir Putin Lands In Tehran With Seemingly Non-Functioning Right Arm Apparently Confirming Rumours Of Dictator’s Declining Health

Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in Tehran for talks Tuesday on the Syrian war at a three-way summit overshadowed by fallout from his country’s war on Ukraine.
The video shows Russian president Vladimir Putin debarking his plane with a smile on his lips and a bounce in his step, but a closer look reveals something quite troubling. His right arm appears to be nearly completely immobile. The Bible shows an amazing prophecy regarding Antichrist, who has an immobile right arm and a blind right eye, but I’m sure that’s just a coincidence. It’s a wonderful bit of prophetical type, at the very least.
“Woe to the idol shepherd that leaveth the flock! the sword shall be upon his arm, and upon his right eye: his arm shall be clean dried up, and his right eye shall be utterly darkened.” Zechariah 11:17 (KJB)
So Putin is now in Iran for the Syria Summit, further the end times alliance between Russia, Iran and China, with Iran reportedly agreeing to send 100’s of drones to aid the Kremlin in their war against Ukraine. Putin will be meeting with leaders from Iran and Turkey, getting Turkey onboard would be a nice jolt to the end times timeline. The summit comes days after U.S. President Joe Biden visited the Middle East for the first time in his presidency, with stops in Iran’s regional foes Israel and Saudi Arabia. It is the first hosted by Iran’s ultra-conservative president Ebrahim Raisi since he took office last year and is ostensibly aimed at ending more than 11 years of conflict in Syria. All three are involved in the conflict, with Iran and Russia supporting Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and Turkey backing rebel forces.
Jerusalem warily eyes Putin’s Tehran visit
FROM THE JERUSALEM POST: Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit to Tehran Tuesday is not about Israel, but it comes amid tensions in Russian-Israeli relations. So a meeting with Iranian leaders, who call for Israel’s destruction, could exacerbate the tension. Those tensions come against the background of the Ukraine war. Prime Minister Yair Lapid, who was foreign minister at the time, condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine within days and Israel voted against Russia in the UN General Assembly. Israel has sent large quantities of humanitarian aid and some protective gear to Ukraine.
NOW – Putin, Raisi, and Erdogan holding hands in Iran.pic.twitter.com/qQRx4VMist
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) July 19, 2022
At the same time, then-prime minister Naftali Bennett was careful not to criticize Moscow directly and Israel did not send any military aid to Kyiv, so as not to threaten the deconfliction mechanism that allows Israel to bomb Iranian targets in Syria, where there is a significant Russian Army presence.
In addition, Jerusalem wanted to make sure it could continue to help Russian and Ukrainian Jews who want to immigrate to Israel. That strategy has had mixed results. The deconfliction mechanism is mostly intact, though Moscow was sharply and publicly critical of a strike on the Damascus International Airport last month.
The Russian government is obstructing the Jewish Agency’s efforts to help Russian Jewry move to Israel, labeling the organization a “foreign agent.” Other points of friction, like Russian remarks against Israel at the UN and disputes over Russian Orthodox Church land in Jerusalem, continue, as well.
Putin’s visit to Iran is also about the war in Ukraine. More isolated than ever and under massive sanctions from the West, Russia needs all the friends it can get, and new markets to sell its wares – especially weapons, since Iran has its own energy sources – and to buy drones. Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman Ram Ben Barak told Kan Bet that Putin’s visit is “disconcerting.” Israel is “working with the Americans on a regional alliance on economics and security…Iran doesn’t like what’s happening and wants to show who’s in charge,” Ben Barak said. READ MORE
Watch Putin Getting Off Plane In Tehran With Immobile Right Arm And A Noticeable Hobble To His Gait
Putin can’t walk: Watch him hobble along red carpet arriving in Iran. Vladimir Putin has arrived in Iran to forge a fearsome new alliance, with both sanction-hit countries united by their hatred for the West. The Russian leader was seen hobbling along the red carpet with his arm hanging limp by his side. Is Putin showing mobility issues? Comment below.
Putin in Tehran for Syria summit with leaders of Iran and Turkey
Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived Tuesday in Iran for a visit intended to deepen ties with regional heavyweights as part of Moscow’s challenge to the United States and Europe amid its grinding campaign in Ukraine.
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