SOCHI — Vladimir Putin, rugged outdoorsman and tough-guy Russian president, promoted a cuddly image yesterday as his Olympics drew near.
Putin checked in at a preserve for endangered Persian leopards and visited a group of cubs born last summer in the mountains above the growing torrent of activity in Sochi for the Winter Games.
"We've decided to restore the population of the Persian leopard because of the Olympic Games," Putin said. "Let's say that because of the Olympic Games, we have restored parts of the destroyed nature."
Putin entered the cage and petted the leopard on the head. "We liked each other," he said.
Not so the accompanying journalists. They apparently upset the big cat, which scratched one of them on the hand and bit another on the knee, Russian news agencies reported.
At a gathering of the International Olympic Committee later yesterday, Putin said nothing about the hard issues confronting the Sochi Games. But he boasted that Russia had undertaken the monumental effort of starting from scratch in Sochi and completing the needed construction in a short time, something he said it took other countries decades to prepare.
"We realize what a difficult decision this was to hold the games in a city that barely had 10 to 15 percent of the necessary infrastructure," Putin said. "You believed in us, you believed in the Russian character which can overcome all difficulties."
And he closed his remarks in English, saying: "Let me declare the 126th session of the International Olympic Committee open."
The Russian leader spoke after IOC President Thomas Bach criticized politicians for attacking the Sochi Olympics "on the backs of the athletes."
Bach also has slammed politicians who publicly snubbed the games even though they had not even been invited.
Bach said sports should not be "used as a stage for political dissent or for trying to score points in internal or external political contests."
Putin's first step on the Olympic stage at the leopard preserve was designed as a show of environmental consciousness during the Sochi Games, which open Friday. The sanctuary was established five years ago as an Olympics-related project.
The leopards are living in Sochi National Park in between seaside Sochi and the Alpine venues in the towering Caucasus Mountains. Some of the new leopard population is to be released next year in hopes of repopulating southern Russia, where they became extinct in the 1970.
The former KGB operative has thrown open the Kremlin treasury to finance the Olympics, lavishing a record $51 billion on sports facilities and transportation infrastructure in the resort city on the Black Sea coast.
He has gambled big on the games, determined to host an event in a fashion befitting his image of a newly powerful Russia that is a global economic and political power.
Putin drove to the reserve in an SUV, with two International Olympic Committee officials riding in the back seat. Later yesterday, the Russian leader was due in Sochi to address the IOC.
With the vast sum Putin invested in the games, he has turned the once-sleepy resort into a kind of Disneyland of phantasmagorical structures — new highways, sweeping overpasses and top-notch sports venues. Winding roads and rail lines were cut upward into the mountains to newly built Alpine facilities.
While the massive project doesn't represent a do-or-die moment for Russia, the most expensive Olympics in history — with billions of dollars reportedly lost to graft — will still reverberate through the economy and Kremlin politics. Putin's third term as president will end in 2018.
What's more, the games are being shunned by President Barack Obama and key European leaders. The US leader, in open protest of new Russian anti-gay laws, dispatched an official American delegation made up of three openly gay athletic greats — former tennis star Billie Jean King, 2006 Olympic hockey medalist Caitlin Cahow and figure skating wizard Brian Boitano. Former Homeland Security chief Janet Napolitano leads the delegation.
Top officials from Olympic heavyweights like France and Germany also won't be in Sochi. Same for Britain. The paucity of national leaders of major world powers leaves Putin with a schedule of meetings that will begin Thursday with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Chinese President Xi Jinping. In the following days he see sit down with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Japanese leader Shinzo Abe. No Western-aimed diplomacy is scheduled.
While Putin stepped in in Syria to convince leader Bashar Assad to turn over his chemical weapons, thus saving Obama from having to initiate airstrikes, the White House remains angry that Russia have given asylum to Edward Snowden, the contract worker who has leaked volumes of secrets about US intelligence-gathering efforts.