It is a standard walk, except with the
non-dominant hand swinging freely, but the other in place, near a pocket or a
holster, so that the individual is ready to draw a
gun at a moment's notice if there were to be an unexpected threat. This type of walk is taught in the manuals for KGB officers and it is where it is believed to have originated, but it is a recurring behavior in the Red Army and other
military, security, and
espionage organizations. The term "gunslinger's gait" was coined by a group of British researchers in 2015, who published a study analysing this unusual walking pattern in
Vladimir Putin and other several high-ranked Russian government officials;
Dimitry Medvedev,
Anatoly Serdyukov,
Sergei Ivanov, and
Anatoly Sidorov. Serdyukov, Ivanov, and Sidorov all have had prior KGB or Red Army training, but Medvedev is an exception. == Vladimir Putin ==