
Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
President of Russia; former prime minister and former KGB officer
of 100 · declining trend · Some good traits but inconsistent
Standing
30/100
Raw Score
28/85
Confidence
90%
Evidence
Strong
About
Putin has shaped Russia and the wider world for decades, but the strongest observable pattern in his record is the use of concentrated state power in ways that harm civilians, suppress dissent, and weaken trust.
The public record shows real discipline, endurance, and visible religious signaling, yet those positives are outweighed by the full-scale war in Ukraine, the deportation-of-children case that produced an ICC arrest warrant, and repeated moves to tighten coercive control at home.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Putin shows discipline, endurance, and public religious identification, but the central public pattern is coercive power used with grave human cost. The humanitarian positives visible in his record are real but too limited to offset war, repression, and the children-transfer case.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public Orthodox identification is clear, but religious language is often fused with state ideology.
Public accountability language is limited compared with state-power language.
He uses sacred and civilizational language, but mostly in service of national power narratives.
Scripture-shaped public reasoning is present only indirectly.
Public moral framing references tradition more than prophetic imitation.
Contribution to Others
Public record is thin on family-care evidence beyond image management.
The Circle of Kindness initiative helps children, but the wider record includes grave child-harm allegations in Ukraine.
State welfare rhetoric exists, but the strongest evidence cluster is not poverty-centered care.
The wider record toward displaced and neighboring populations is strongly negative.
Some hostage or prisoner exchanges and state support measures exist, but not as a dominant pattern.
Domestic dissent, media, and civil-society freedom have narrowed under his rule.
Personal Discipline
He visibly attends major Orthodox services and uses faith language in public.
Charitable initiatives are visible, but mostly through state power rather than personal sacrificial giving.
Reliability
The public record is dominated by coercion, propaganda disputes, and rule changes that preserve power.
Stability Under Pressure
He has navigated sanctions and economic strain, though with heavy costs shifted onto society.
He maintains composure and long-horizon control under personal and political strain.
His political endurance under battlefield and coup-like pressure is strong, even when used for harmful ends.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Constitutional changes cleared a path for rule until 2036
A nationwide vote approved constitutional changes that reset Putin's presidential term count and allowed him to seek two more six-year terms.
→ Putin's grip on office was extended and concerns about rule-by-rules rather than rule-of-law deepened.
highCreated the Circle of Kindness fund for severely ill children
Putin signed the executive order establishing a state-backed foundation to fund treatment for children with severe and rare diseases.
→ The program created a real channel of medical support for vulnerable children, though it remained fully state-directed.
mediumLaunched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine
Putin publicly announced a special military operation, beginning the all-out invasion that has killed large numbers of people and destabilized the region and beyond.
→ The war became the dominant moral fact of Putin's later rule and drove immense human suffering.
highICC issued an arrest warrant over the transfer of Ukrainian children
The International Criminal Court said there were reasonable grounds to believe Putin bore responsibility for the unlawful deportation and transfer of children from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia.
→ Putin became the subject of an active ICC arrest warrant tied to harm against children.
highSigned a law expanding confiscation against critics of the war
Putin signed legislation allowing authorities to confiscate assets from people convicted of discrediting the military or related speech offenses.
→ The domestic crackdown widened and the cost of dissent grew more severe.
highSecured a fifth term after the harshest crackdown of his rule
Putin won another six-year term in an election held after opposition exclusion, media suppression, and the death in prison of Alexei Navalny one month earlier.
→ His political durability remained undeniable, but the path reinforced the coercive character of the system around him.
highAccepted a short Victory Day ceasefire and 1,000-for-1,000 prisoner swap
Around Victory Day, Russia agreed to a brief U.S.-brokered ceasefire window and a large prisoner exchange with Ukraine, reducing immediate tension without resolving the wider war.
→ A limited humanitarian step occurred, but it did not materially change the underlying war pattern.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Prigozhin mutiny
2023A mercenary rebellion briefly exposed cracks in the coercive system built around Putin.
Response: He regained control within a day and reasserted the state line, but the episode showed both resilience and brittleness.
high resilience inside a coercive political orderPost-Navalny election cycle
2024Putin faced a global legitimacy test after Navalny's death and a tightly managed presidential election.
Response: He framed the result as a mandate and intensified state confidence rather than softening the system.
resilience paired with low openness to correctionVictory Day security pressure
2026Fears of escalation around the Moscow parade and front-line fighting raised the cost of miscalculation.
Response: He accepted a short truce and prisoner exchange but kept the broader war frame intact.
tactical de-escalation without deep changeProgression
crisis years
The invasion of Ukraine, child-transfer allegations, and repression of dissent turned later-rule harms into the defining public pattern.
decliningcurrent stage
He remains globally influential and tactically resilient, but the moral profile is dominated by coercion, war, and weakened institutional trust.
decliningearly years
KGB service and municipal advancement built a reputation for discipline, secrecy, and operational control.
upwardgrowth years
National power expanded through centralized rule, security-state methods, and political durability.
upwardBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Durable political endurance under extreme pressure
- • Some real state-backed support for ill children and families
Concerns
- • Full-scale war and mass civilian harm in Ukraine
- • Power-consolidating repression of dissent and law
- • Use of religious and patriotic language to justify coercive state action
Evidence Quality
10
Strong
1
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.