Its kind of unique for a country to consistently have grotesque governments and Putin might not want to draw attention to this.
Sure, but in Putin's narrative, they weren't grotesque. When he talks about the historical land of Russia, there's no real acknowledgement of the fact that Russia conquered most of it. Or rather, his narrative is that the Russian race appeared, then had their territory stolen, and subsequently
recovered it - implicitly justly.
For instance, he talks about Lithuania to picture it as sort of Russian, which was then subverted by the Poles. In doing so he is claiming ownership over the territories of
medieval Lithuania, which included much of Belarus and Western Ukraine. However, this also could be read to imply he thinks Russia should own
current Lithuania as well. This is backed up with when he says Russia had its historical territories at the time of Catherine the Great, which had by then conquered the Baltic States. I would be inclined to view Putin's history lesson as telling us he thinks the Baltic States should be Russian, too, and for NATO to prepare defences accordingly.
His story of WW2 is also illustrative. The real instigator of WW2 was... Poland. Poland first sold out Czechoslovakia for their own gain, and then
made the Nazis attack it. Neat little bit of victim-blaming to skip over the whole Molotov-Ribbentrop pact.