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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers his annual address to the Federal Assembly in Moscow on April 21, 2021.
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers his annual address to the Federal Assembly in Moscow on April 21, 2021.

Live Blog: Putin's Annual State-Of-The-Nation Address As It Happened

Follow as our team of Russia experts monitored the speech, highlighted the news, and offered personal takes on Putin's remarks.

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin used his 17th annual state-of-the-nation address to a joint session of the Russian parliament to issue threats against what he called foreign provocations, vowing amid several widening rifts with the West that Moscow would respond in a harsh and swift way.
  • Putin said that Moscow strived to have good relations with other countries, but warned no foreign state should cross Russia's "red lines" without elaborating. "Anyone who stages any provocations that threaten our safety will regret it in a way they've never regretted anything before," Putin said.
  • At the start of his address, Putin focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hit Russia hard. Putin said that Russians should attain collective immunity from COVID-19 by this autumn and urged all citizens to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.
  • Read our news summary here.

*Time stamps on the blog refer to local time in Moscow.

10:07 21.4.2021

Says it is important the the nation's highways function as a single system for the development of all regions of the country.

10:06 21.4.2021

Says central government is offering regions more and more forms of assistance for their development. Calls for modern highway from St. Petersburg to Moscow to Yekaterinburg to be built by 2024.

10:03 21.4.2021

The fact that Putin mentioned climate change in his speech is interesting, but not necessarily for the reasons you might think.

Though rising global temperatures potentially could wreak havoc on Russia's economy (or even might give it a powerful jolt), the Kremlin hasn't really given much beyond lip service to the issue.

Speaking at an Arctic forum in 2017, Putin said that the goal is “not to stop it...because that’s impossible, since it could be tied to some global cycles on Earth or even on a planetary scale,” as opposed to human activity.

"The [goal] is to somehow adapt to it," he said.

Putin made similar remarks in December 2019, asserting that it is “very difficult, if even possible at all, to quantify mankind’s influence on global climate change.”

What's interesting about Putin mentioning it today is because in the coming days he'll be attending a virtual climate summit hosted by none other than the man who recently suggested that Putin was a "killer" -- U.S. President Joe Biden.

U.S.-Russian relations are unquestionably now at the lowest ebb they've been since the Cold War. Both the White House and the Kremlin are doing a bit of a diplomatic dance, trying to figure out who exactly their dance partner is, and what sort of moves he's capable of.

Biden has also proposed a full-blown summit with Putin himself -- a solo dance, as it were. Putin hasn't accepted the invitation though, in part because Biden's administration has hit Russia with major sanctions on two occasions, and is lining up more, if Russia's policies don't change.

Stay tuned.

10:02 21.4.2021

10:00 21.4.2021

Says regional leaders must develop detailed infrastructure projects so that the federal government can help implement them. "You can't just run around waving maps," he says.

09:59 21.4.2021

Discussing details of proposed infrastructure development -- roads, urban bypasses, tourism sector, etc.

09:58 21.4.2021

Meduza has launched a real-time map tracking the location and number of detentions as mass protests calling for the release of imprisoned opposition politician Aleksei Navalny begin.

As Putin's speech neared the one-hour mark, the number of detentions had passed 40 people, with Irkutsk leading the way with five.

Demonstrations are expected to be held in 188 cities nationwide.

09:57 21.4.2021

Putin's urge that Russians go and get vaccinated is a shift from his earlier policy of insisting that inoculation is a personal choice. Russia was first to approve a vaccine in August, before its Sputnik V shot had passed crucial Phase III trials. Subsequent assessments proved Sputnik V's safety and efficacy, but in a Russia that is traditionally skeptical of vaccines and where trust in state institutions has cratered, Sputnik V has been stymied by a very low uptake.

Putin himself chose not to follow other world leaders in being vaccinated on camera to encourage the population to follow suit. He only got immunized from the coronavirus last month, and the Kremlin did not clarify which vaccine he took.

09:57 21.4.2021

Putin's emphasized "preserving the Russian people" and called for all Russians to get vaccinated to an audience seated with no social distancing and sporadic mask use, in apparent violation of Moscow's COVID-19 rules.

09:53 21.4.2021

Says government must continue to stabilize the macroeconomic situation and control inflation. Says the government is in a position to increase investment in infrastructure. Thanks all the factions in parliament by name for their help through the pandemic. Makes first mention of the preparations for this year's elections to the State Duma (due by September 19).

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