Fact Check: Putin Did NOT Say 'Don't Dare To Touch The Strait Of Hormuz' On April 1, 2026

Fact Check

  • by: Uliana Malashenko
Fact Check: Putin Did NOT Say 'Don't Dare To Touch The Strait Of Hormuz' On April 1, 2026 Parody Account

Did Russian President Vladimir Putin say "Don't dare to touch the Strait of Hormuz" on April 1, 2026? No, that's not true: The posts attributing those words to him originated from self-described satire and parody accounts. The fake story was spreading across social media platforms paired with a well-known video meme showing Putin walking.

The claim appeared in a post (archived here) by the @VladimierPutin account on X on April 2, 2026. It began:

'Don't dare to touch the Strait of Hormuz,'-- Vladimir Putin.
Putin has finally entered and openly taken Iran's side... See more

This post included a video of Putin. This is what a thumbnail from that clip looked like on X at the time of this writing:

rwhjOzvinueD-bAk.jpg

(Image source: post by @VladimierPutin on X.com.)

The 16-second video, however, showed no visual proof of such a statement being made by the Russian president. Throughout the clip, he was only seen walking to cheerful music, apparently added when the footage was edited.

The video was real. It was originally recorded in May 2018 (archived here), moments before Putin's fourth inauguration, but later became a widespread internet meme (archived here).

By early April 2026, as tensions over Iran's blockade of the Hormuz Strait (archived here) escalated, self-labeled parody and satire accounts began pairing the "Don't dare to touch the Strait of Hormuz" phrase attributed to Putin with videos of him walking.

The example that started this article was posted by an account whose handle misspelled Putin's first name as "Vladimier." That account's bio line (archived here) read:

Parody account. Not affiliated with the Russian Government.

The claim originated from a similar page on X on April 1, 2026 (archived here). That account's self-description read (archived here):

History | Politics | Satire.

A search across Google News for the direct quote attributed to Putin on social media showed no credible reporting (archived here) as of April 7, 2026, confirming that he said it in the given context.

On the day when the claim reviewed in this fact check first emerged online, Putin had suggested seeing Russia as an alternative to shipping oil through the Strait of Hormuz. According to the April 1, 2026, transcript (archived here) on the Kremlin website, Putin acknowledged that "the developments in Iran are already having a direct impact on energy markets." After that, he continued:

Increasingly, countries and companies are focusing not only on the speed and cost of transportation; the security and resilience of transport routes and supply chains that are less vulnerable to crises, military conflicts, and other external risks are becoming the decisive factor.

Russia can offer such solutions to the world and play an important role in forming a new architecture of global logistics and international trade. For our partners, Russian logistics routes can be advantageous both economically -- by reducing delivery times -- and from the point of view of diversifying global transport flows.

That was the only statement by Putin on the matter (archived here) cited by the state-run news agency RIA Novosti on that day.

On April 7, 2026, hours after U.S. President Donald Trump published a post (archived here) threatening that a "whole civilization will die tonight" if Iran does not unblock the Strait of Hormuz by 8 p.m. EST, Russia and China blocked (archived here) the already diluted UN resolution whose goal, according to the UN website (archived here), was "to coordinate defensive efforts and deter attempts to interfere with international navigation" reopening that pathway for oil tankers through the strait.

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  Uliana Malashenko

Uliana Malashenko joined Lead Stories as a freelance fact checking reporter in March 2022. Since then, she has investigated viral claims about U.S. elections and international conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, among many other things. Before Lead Stories she spent over a decade working in broadcast and digital journalism, specializing in covering breaking news and politics. She is based in New York.

Read more about or contact Uliana Malashenko

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