Putin's comments showed that a conspiracy theory widespread on the internet that the Russian strongman has been impersonated over the years or even replaced by a lookalike is not entirely without basis.
TASS state news agency showed Putin a list of popular Russian-language Internet searches including "Putin double proof".
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"Are you real?" the interviewer asked. "Yes," said Putin. He said he has never had a double but when asked if the idea had ever been discussed, he confirmed it had.
"I refused to have doubles," said Putin.
"It was during the hardest times of the fight against terrorism."
Putin as prime minister and then president oversaw the second war against separatists in Chechnya from 1999 to 2000.
After Russian armed forces claimed victory, Islamist insurgent attacks became frequent in the North Caucasus while suicide bombers targeted Russia's main cities.
"Was that in the early 2000s?" asked interviewer Andrei Vandenko, who is doing a series of interviews with Putin to mark 20 years since he became president.
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"Yes," said Putin.
"The double would go where things were dodgy?" asked Vandenko.
"Well yes, go, put in appearances," Putin confirmed.
These centred on the 67-year-old's apparent lack of signs of ageing, the disappearance of bags under his eyes and his seemingly worsening knowledge of German, which he learned when working as a Soviet agent in East Germany.
In 2015, Putin disappeared from public view for 10 days, unleashing a frenzy of speculation that he had once again become a father, been deposed in a palace coup, fallen ill, had cosmetic surgery or even died.
"It's boring without gossip," Putin said after reappearing.
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