Russian President Vladimir Putin lost his cool during his government's first
meeting of 2023, publicly telling off the trade and industry minister.
For several minutes he accused Denis Manturov of
bureaucratic delays in ordering civilian and military planes.
"Too long, it is taking too long," said the
Russian leader, who has never been one to hold back in criticising top
officials in public.
"What are you fooling around for? When will the
contracts be signed?"
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The government's first meeting came on the same day that
President Putin replaced his top commander in Ukraine after just three months
in charge.
Gen Sergei Surovikin was appointed in October after a series
of setbacks in Russia's invasion of Ukraine but he has failed to reverse the
course of the war.
In an otherwise upbeat video call shown on Russian TV in
which President Putin praised his ministers' handling of the economy, President
Putin repeatedly interrupted Mr Manturov, as the minister detailed plans for
planes, helicopters and boats.
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"These 700 aircraft, including helicopters... you need
to sort this out with the defence ministry... several enterprises still haven't
received any orders," he complained.
Mr Manturov has been a loyal member of the Putin ministerial
team since 2012, and has regularly travelled with the president on foreign and
domestic visits. He was handed the task of overseeing Russia's weapons industry
last summer when shortcomings had already been exposed on the battlefield.
As he explained that his ministry had launched a programme
to produce helicopter engines in St Petersburg that were previously made in
Ukraine, the president butted in, complaining it was all taking too long.
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As the minister's public humiliation neared its end, he
promised his department would do its best with its economic partners. But this
was clearly not enough for an increasingly agitated president.
"No, do it within a month. Don't you understand the
situation we're in? It needs to be done in a month, no later."
The televised dressing-down echoed an even more dramatic
event three days before the war broke out, when Mr Putin ordered his top
security figures to say whether Russia should recognise two occupied areas of
eastern Ukraine as independent.
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When one of his closest allies, foreign intelligence chief
Sergei Naryshkin, hesitantly suggested Russia's Western partners should be
given one last chance, President Putin began to interrogate him.
Mr Naryshkin stumbled over his words several times before
declaring he would support the two occupied regions being brought into the
Russian Federation.
Although President Putin said incorporating Ukraine's
regions into Russia was not on the table, several months later that was exactly
what he announced.
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