delivered 9
February 2024, The Kremlin, Moscow, Russia
[The following text of Mr. Putin's remarks appears as transcribed by the Kremlin.
Remarks by Mr. Carlson, generally very well translated by the Kremlin, were
moderately revised for content accuracy and country appropriate style by Michael
E. Eidenmuller.]
TUCKER CARLSON:
Mr. President, thank you.
On February 22nd, 2022, you addressed your country in your nationwide address when
the conflict in Ukraine started and you said that you were acting because you
had come to the conclusion that the United States through NATO might initiate a
quote, “surprise attack on our country." And to American ears that sounds
paranoid. Tell us why you believe the United States might strike Russia out of
the blue. How did you conclude that?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: It's not that the United States was going to launch a surprise
strike on Russia, I didn't say so. Are we having a talk show or serious
conversation?
TUCKER CARLSON:
Here's the quote. Thank you -- it’s formidable, serious [question].
PRESIDENT PUTIN:
Yes...You were initially trained in history, as far as I know?
TUCKER CARLSON: Yes.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: So if you don’t mind I will take only 30 seconds or one minute
of your time for giving you a little historical background.
TUCKER CARLSON: Please.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: Let’s look where our relationship with Ukraine started from.
Where does Ukraine come from?
The Russian state started to exist as a centralized state in 862. This is
considered to be the year of creation of the Russian state because this year the
townspeople of Novgorod (a city in the North-West of the country) invited Rurik,
a Varangian prince from Scandinavia, to reign. In 1862, Russia celebrated the
1000th anniversary of its statehood, and in Novgorod there is a memorial
dedicated to the 1000th anniversary of the country.
In 882, Rurik's successor Prince Oleg, who was, actually, playing the role of
regent at Rurik's young son because Rurik had died by that time, came to Kiev.
He ousted two brothers who, apparently, had once been members of Rurik's squad.
So, Russia began to develop with two centers of power, Kiev and Novgorod.
The next, very significant date in the history of Russia, was 988. This was the
Baptism of Russia, when Prince Vladimir, the great-grandson of Rurik, baptized
Russia and adopted Orthodoxy, or Eastern Christianity. From this time the
centralized Russian state began to strengthen. Why? Because of a single
territory, integrated economic ties, one and the same language and, after the
Baptism of Russia, the same faith and rule of the Prince. The centralized
Russian state began to take shape.
Back in the Middle Ages, Prince Yaroslav the Wise introduced the order of
succession to the throne, but after he passed away, it became complicated for
various reasons. The throne was passed not directly from father to eldest son,
but from the prince who had passed away to his brother, then to his sons in
different lines. All this led to the fragmentation and the end of Rus as a
single state. There was nothing special about it, the same was happening then in
Europe. But the fragmented Russian state became an easy prey to the empire
created earlier by Genghis Khan. His successors, namely, Batu Khan, came to Rus,
plundered and ruined nearly all the cities. The southern part, including Kiev,
by the way, and some other cities, simply lost independence, while northern
cities preserved some of their sovereignty. They had to pay tribute to the
Horde, but they managed to preserve some part of their sovereignty. And then a
unified Russian state began to take shape with its centre in Moscow.
The southern part of the Russian lands, including Kiev, began to gradually
gravitate towards another ”magnet“ -- the centre that was emerging in Europe.
This was the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It was even called the Lithuanian-Russian
Duchy, because Russians were a significant part of its population. They spoke
the Old Russian language and were Orthodox. But then there was a unification,
the union of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland. A few years
later, another union was signed, but this time already in the religious sphere.
Some of the Orthodox priests became subordinate to the Pope. Thus, these lands
became part of the Polish-Lithuanian state.
During decades, the Poles were engaged in the ”Polonization“ of this part of the
population: they introduced their language there, tried to entrench the idea
that this population was not exactly Russians, that because they lived on the
fringe (u kraya) they were “Ukrainians." Originally, the word ‘Ukrainian’ meant
that a person was living on the outskirts of the state, near the fringe, or was
engaged in border service. It didn't mean any particular ethnic group.
So, the Poles were trying in every possible way to polonize this part of the
Russian lands and actually treated it rather harshly, not to say cruelly. All
that led to the fact that this part of the Russian lands began to struggle for
their rights. They wrote letters to Warsaw demanding that their rights be
observed and that people be commissioned here, including to Kiev....
TUCKER CARLSON: I
-- I beg your pardon, can you tell us what period -- I'm losing
track of where in history we are? The Polish oppression of Ukraine --
PRESIDENT PUTIN: It was in the 13th century.
TUCKER CARLSON:
Okay.
Now I will tell what happened later and give the dates so that there is no
confusion. And in 1654, even a bit earlier, the people who were in control of
the authority over that part of the Russian lands, addressed Warsaw, I repeat,
demanding their rights be observed that they send to them rulers of Russian
origin and Orthodox faith. When Warsaw did not answer them and in fact rejected
their demands, they turned to Moscow so that Moscow took them away.
So that you don't think that I am inventing things -- [pauses for assistant who
hands President Putin some documents] -- I'll give you these documents....
TUCKER CARLSON:
Well, I -- I -- It doesn’t sound like you are inventing it. I'm not sure
why it’s relevant to what happened two years ago.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: But still, these are documents from the archives, copies. Here
are letters from Bogdan Khmelnitsky, the man who then controlled the power in
this part of the Russian lands that is now called Ukraine. He wrote to Warsaw
demanding that their rights be upheld, and after being refused, he began to
write letters to Moscow asking to take them under the strong hand of the Moscow
Tsar. There are copies of these documents. I will leave them for your good
memory. There is a translation into Russian, you can translate it into English
later.
Russia would not agree to admit them straight away, assuming this would trigger
a war with Poland. Nevertheless, in 1654, the Zemsky Sobor, which was a
representative body of power of the Old Russian state, made the decision: those
Old Russian lands became part of the Tsardom of Muscovy.
As expected, the war with Poland began. It lasted 13 years, and then a truce was
concluded. In all, after that act of 1654, 32 years later, I think, a peace
treaty with Poland was concluded, “the eternal peace,” as it said. And those
lands, the whole left bank of the Dnieper, including Kiev, reverted to Russia,
while the entire right bank of the Dnieper remained in possession of Poland.
Under the rule of Catherine the Great, Russia reclaimed all of its historical
lands, including in the south and west. This all lasted until the Revolution.
Before World War I, Austrian General Staff relied on the ideas of
Ukrainianization and started actively promoting the ideas of Ukraine and the
Ukrainianization. Their motive was obvious. Just before World War I they wanted
to weaken the potential enemy and secure themselves favourable conditions in the
border area. So the idea which had emerged in Poland that people residing in
that territory were allegedly not really Russians, but rather belonged to a
special ethnic group, Ukrainians, started being propagated by the Austrian
General Staff.
As far back as the 19th century, theorists calling for Ukrainian independence
appeared. All those, however, claimed that Ukraine should have a very good
relationship with Russia. They insisted on that. After the 1917 Revolution, the
Bolsheviks sought to restore the statehood, and the Civil War began, including
the hostilities with Poland. In 1921, peace with Poland was proclaimed, and
under that treaty, the right bank of the Dnieper River once again was given back
to Poland.
In 1939, after Poland cooperated with Hitler -- it did collaborate with Hitler,
you know --Hitler offered Poland peace and a treaty of friendship and alliance
(we have all the relevant documents in the archives), demanding in return that
Poland give back to Germany the so-called Danzig Corridor, which connected the
bulk of Germany with East Prussia and Konigsberg. After World War I this
territory was transferred to Poland, and instead of Danzig, a city of Gdansk
emerged. Hitler asked them to give it amicably, but they refused.
TUCKER CARLSON:
Of course.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Still they
collaborated with Hitler and engaged together in the partitioning of
Czechoslovakia.
TUCKER CARLSON:
But....may I ask, you -- you're making the case that -- that Ukraine, certainly parts
of Ukraine, Eastern Ukraine, is, in effect, Russia, has been for hundreds of years, why
wouldn’t you just take it when you became President 24 years ago? Your have
nuclear weapons. They don’t. It’s actually your land. Why did you wait so long?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: I’ll tell you. I’m coming to that. This briefing is coming to an
end. It might be boring, but it explains many things.
TUCKER CARLSON: It’s not boring.
I just don't know how it's relevant.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: Good. Good. I am so gratified that you appreciate that. Thank
you.
So before World War II, Poland collaborated with Hitler and although it did not
yield to Hitler’s demands, it still participated in the partitioning of
Czechoslovakia together with Hitler. As the Poles had not given the Danzig
Corridor to Germany, and went too far, pushing Hitler to start World War II by
attacking them. Why was it Poland against whom the war started on 1 September
1939? Poland turned out to be uncompromising, and Hitler had nothing to do but
start implementing his plans with Poland.
By the way, the U.S.SR -- I have read some archive documents -- behaved very
honestly. It asked Poland’s permission to transit its troops through the Polish
territory to help Czechoslovakia. But the then Polish foreign minister said that
if the Soviet planes flew over Poland, they would be downed over the territory
of Poland. But that doesn’t matter. What matters is that the war began, and
Poland fell prey to the policies it had pursued against Czechoslovakia, as under
the well-known Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, part of that territory, including
western Ukraine, was to be given to Russia. Thus Russia, which was then named
the U.S.SR, regained its historical lands.
After the victory in the Great Patriotic War, as we call World War II, all those
territories were ultimately enshrined as belonging to Russia, to the U.S.SR. As
for Poland, it received, apparently in compensation, the lands which had
originally being German: the eastern parts of Germany (these are now western
lands of Poland). Of course, Poland regained access to the Baltic sea, and Danzig, which was once again given its Polish name. So this was how this
situation developed.
In 1922, when the U.S.SR was being established, the Bolsheviks started building
the U.S.SR and established the Soviet Ukraine, which had never existed before.
TUCKER CARLSON: Right.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: Stalin insisted that those republics be included in the
U.S.SR as
autonomous entities. For some inexplicable reason, Lenin, the founder of the
Soviet state, insisted that they be entitled to withdraw from the U.S.SR. And,
again for some unknown reasons, he transferred to that newly established Soviet
Republic of Ukraine some of the lands together with people living there, even
though those lands had never been called Ukraine; and yet they were made part of
that Soviet Republic of Ukraine. Those lands included the Black Sea region,
which was received under Catherine the Great and which had no historical
connection with Ukraine whatsoever.
Even if we go as far back as 1654, when these lands returned to the Russian
Empire, that territory was the size of three to four regions of modern Ukraine,
with no Black Sea region. That was completely out of the question.
TUCKER
CARLSON: In 1654?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: Exactly.
TUCKER CARLSON:
What -- I'm just -- You obviously have encyclopedic knowledge of this region,
but why
didn’t you make this case for the first 22 years as President, that Ukraine
wasn’t a real country?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: The Soviet Ukraine was given a great deal of territory that had
never belonged to it, including the Black Sea region. At some point, when Russia
received them as an outcome of the Russo-Turkish wars, they were called “New
Russia” or Novorossiya. But that does not matter. What matters is that Lenin,
the founder of the Soviet State, established Ukraine that way. For decades, the
Ukrainian Soviet Republic developed as part of the U.S.SR, and for unknown reasons
again, the Bolsheviks were engaged in Ukrainianization. It was not merely
because the Soviet leadership was composed to a great extent of those
originating from Ukraine. Rather, it was explained by the general policy of
indigenization pursued by the Soviet Union. Same things were done in other
Soviet republics. This involved promoting national languages and national
cultures, which is not bad in principle. That is how the Soviet Ukraine was
created.
After World War II, Ukraine received, in addition to the lands that had belonged
to Poland before the war, part of the lands that had previously belonged to
Hungary and Romania (today known as Western Ukraine). So Romania and Hungary had
some of their lands taken away and given to the Ukraine and they still remain
part of Ukraine. So in this sense, we have every reason to affirm that Ukraine
is an artificial state that was shaped at Stalin’s will.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Do you believe Hungary has a right to take
its land back from
Ukraine? And that other nations have a right to go back to their 1654 borders?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: I am not sure whether they should go back to the 1654 borders,
but given Stalin’s time, so-called Stalin’s regime -- which as many claim saw
numerous violations of human rights and violations of the rights of other states
-- one may say that they could claim back those lands of theirs, while having no
right to do that, it is at least understandable....
TUCKER CARLSON: Have you told Viktor Orbán that he can have part of Ukraine?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Never. I have never told him. Not a single time. We have not
even had any conversation on that, but I actually know for sure that Hungarians
who live there wanted to get back to their historical land.
Moreover, I would like to share a very interesting story with you, I'll digress,
it's a personal one. Somewhere in the early 80's, I went on a road trip on a car
from then-Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) across the Soviet Union through Kiev,
made a stop in Kiev, and then went to Western Ukraine. I went to the town of
Beregovoye, and all the names of towns and villages there were in Russian and in
a language I didn't understand -- in Hungarian . In Russian and in Hungarian. Not
in Ukrainian -- in Russian and in Hungarian.
I was driving through some kind of a village and there were men sitting next to
the houses and they were wearing black three-piece suits and black cylinder
hats. I asked, ”Are they some kind of entertainers?“ I was told, ”No, they're
not entertainers. They're Hungarians. ‘I said, ‘What are they doing here?’ --
‘What do you mean? This is their land, they live here.’ This was during the
Soviet time, in the 1980’s. They preserve the Hungarian language, Hungarian
names, and all their national costumes. They are Hungarians and they feel
themselves to be Hungarians. And of course, when now there is an infringement.....
TUCKER CARLSON:
Well, that -- that is -- and there’s a lot of that though. I think many nations
are
upset about -- Transylvania as well, as you obviously know -- but
many nations feel frustrated by the re-drawn borders of the wars of the
20th century, and wars going back a thousand years, the ones I think you mentioned.
But the fact is that you didn’t make this case in public until two years ago
February, and in the case that you made, which I read today, you -- you explain at great
length that you felt a physical threat from the West, in NATO, including
potentially a nuclear threat, and that’s what got you to move.
Is that a fair
characterization of what you said?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I understand that my long speeches probably fall outside of the
genre of an interview. That is why I asked you at the beginning: ”Are we going
to have a serious talk or a show?“ You said -- a serious talk. So bear with me
please.
We are coming to the point where the Soviet Ukraine was established. Then, in
1991, the Soviet Union collapsed. And everything that Russia had generously
bestowed on Ukraine was ”dragged away“ by the latter.
I'm coming to a very important point of today's agenda. After all, the collapse
of the Soviet Union was effectively initiated by the Russian leadership. I do
not understand what the Russian leadership was guided by at the time, but I
suspect there were several reasons to think everything would be fine.
First, I think that the then Russian leadership believed that the fundamentals
of the relationship between Russia and Ukraine were: in fact, a common language
-- more than 90 percent of the population there spoke Russian; family ties --
every third person there had some kind of family or friendship ties; common
culture; common history; finally, common faith; co-existence within a single
state for centuries; and deeply interconnected economies. All of these were so
fundamental. All these elements together make our good relations inevitable.
The second point is a very important one. I want you as an American citizen and
your viewers to hear about this as well. The former Russian leadership assumed
that the Soviet Union had ceased to exist and therefore there were no longer any
ideological dividing lines. Russia even agreed, voluntarily and proactively, to
the collapse of the Soviet Union and believed that this would be understood by
the so-called (now in scare quotes) ”civilized West“ as an invitation for
cooperation and associateship. That is what Russia was expecting both from the
United States and the so-called collective West as a whole.
There were smart people, including in Germany. Egon Bahr, a major politician of
the Social Democratic Party, who insisted in his personal conversations with the
Soviet leadership on the brink of the collapse of the Soviet Union that a new
security system should be established in Europe. Help should be given to unify
Germany, but a new system should also be established to include the United
States, Canada, Russia, and other Central European countries. But NATO needs not
to expand. That's what he said: if NATO expands, everything would be just the
same as during the Cold War, only closer to Russia's borders. That's all. He was
a wise old man, but no one listened to him. In fact, he got angry once (we have
a record of this conversation in our archives): ”If, he said, you don't listen
to me, I'm never setting my foot in Moscow once again.“ He was frustrated with
the Soviet leadership. He was right, everything happened just as he had said.
TUCKER CARLSON: Yeah, well, of course, it did come true, and
I -- and you’ve mentioned this many
times. I think it’s a fair point. And many in America thought that relations
between Russia and the United States would be fine with the collapse of the Soviet
Union and the end of the Cold War, [but] the opposite happened. But you've never explained why you
think that happened, except to say that the West fears a strong Russia. But we
have a strong China the West doesn’t seem very afraid of. What about
Russia do you think convinced policymakers had to take it down [sic]?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: The West is afraid of a strong China more than it fears a strong
Russia because Russia has 150 million people, and China has a 1.5 billion
population, and its economy is growing by leaps and bounds -- over five percent a
year, it used to be even more. But that's enough for China. As Bismark once put
it, potentials are most important. China's potential is enormous -- it is the
biggest economy in the world today in terms of purchasing power parity and the
size of the economy. It has already overtaken the United States, quite a long
time ago, and it is growing at a rapid clip.
Let's not talk about who is afraid of whom, let's not reason in such terms. And
let's get into the fact that after 1991, when Russia expected that it would be
welcomed into the brotherly family of ”civilized nations,“ nothing like this
happened. You tricked us (I don't mean you personally when I say ”you“, of
course, I'm talking about the United States), the promise was that NATO would
not expand eastward, but it happened five times, there were five waves of
expansion. We tolerated all that, we were trying to persuade them, we were
saying: ”Please don't, we are as bourgeois now as you are, we are a market
economy, and there is no Communist Party power. Let's negotiate.“ Moreover, I
have also said this publicly before (let's look at Yeltsin's times now), there
was a moment when a certain rift started growing between us. Before that,
Yeltsin came to the United States, remember, he spoke in Congress and said the
good words: ”God bless America." Everything he said were signals -- let us in.
Remember the developments in Yugoslavia, before that Yeltsin was lavished with
praise, as soon as the developments in Yugoslavia started, he raised his voice
in support of Serbs, and we couldn't but raise our voices for Serbs in their
defense. I understand that there were complex processes underway there, I do.
But Russia could not help raising its voice in support of Serbs, because Serbs
are also a special and close to us nation, with Orthodox culture and so on. It's
a nation that has suffered so much for generations. Well, regardless, what is
important is that Yeltsin expressed his support. What did the United States do?
In violation of international law and the UN Charter it started bombing
Belgrade.
It was the United States that let the genie out of the bottle. Moreover, when
Russia protested and expressed its resentment, what was said? The UN Charter and
international law have become obsolete. Now everyone invokes international law,
but at that time they started saying that everything was outdated, everything
had to be changed.
Indeed, some things need to be changed as the balance of power has changed, it's
true, but not in this manner. Yeltsin was immediately dragged through the mud,
accused of alcoholism, of understanding nothing, of knowing nothing. He
understood everything, I assure you.
Well, I became President in 2000. I thought: okay, the Yugoslav issue is over,
but we should try to restore relations. Let's reopen the door that Russia had
tried to go through. And moreover, I've said it publicly, I can reiterate. At a
meeting here in the Kremlin with the outgoing President Bill Clinton, right here
in the next room, I said to him, I asked him, ” Bill, do you think if Russia
asked to join NATO, do you think it would happen?“ Suddenly he said: ”You know,
it's interesting, I think so.“ But in the evening, when we had dinner, he said,
”You know, I've talked to my team, no-no, it's not possible now.“ You can ask
him, I think he will watch our interview, he'll confirm it. I wouldn't have said
anything like that if it hadn't happened. Okay, well, it's impossible now.
TUCKER CARLSON: Were you sincere? Would you have joined NATO?
PRESIDENT PUTIN:
Look, I asked the question, ”Is it possible or not?“ And the answer I got was
"no." If I was insincere in my desire to find out what the leadership's position
was....
TUCKER CARLSON:
But if he had said "yes," would you have
joined NATO?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN:
If he had said "yes," the process of rapprochement
would have commenced and eventually it might have happened if we had seem some
sincere wish, on the other side, of our partners. But it didn't happen. Well,
"no" means no. Okay, fine.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Why do you think that is? Just to get to motive. I know, you’re
clearly bitter about it. I understand. But why do you think the West rebuffed
you then? Why the hostility? Why did the end of the Cold War not fix the
relationship? What motivates this from your point of view?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You said I was bitter about the answer. No, it's not bitterness,
it's just a statement of fact. We're not the bride and groom, bitterness,
resentment, it's not about those kinds of matters in such circumstances. We just
realised we weren't welcome there, that's all. Okay, fine. But let's build
relations in another manner, let's look for common ground elsewhere. Why we
received such a negative response, you should ask your leader. I can only guess
why: too big a country, with its own opinion and so on. And the United States --
I have seen how issues are being resolved in NATO.
I will give you another example now, concerning Ukraine. The U.S. leadership
exerts pressure, and all NATO members obediently vote, even if they do not like
something. Now, I'll tell you what happened in this regard with Ukraine in 2008,
although it's being discussed, I’m not going to open a secret to you, say
anything new. Nevertheless, after that, we tried to build relations in different
ways. For example, the events in the Middle East, in Iraq, we were building
relations with the United States in a very soft, prudent, cautious manner.
I repeatedly raised the issue that the United States should not support
separatism or terrorism in the North Caucasus. But they continued to do it
anyway. And political support, information support, financial support, even
military support came from the United States and its satellites for terrorist
groups in the Caucasus.
I once raised this issue with my colleague, also the President of the United
States. He says, ”It’s impossible! Do you have proof?“ I said, ”Yes.“ I was
prepared for this conversation and I gave him that proof. He looked at it and,
you know what he said? I apologise, but that's what happened, I'll quote. He
says, ”Well, I’m gonna kick their ass." We waited and waited for some response
--
there was no reply.
I said to the FSB Director: ”Write to the CIA. What is the result of the
conversation with the President?“ He wrote once, twice, and then we got a reply.
We have the answer in the archive. The CIA replied: ”We have been working with
the opposition in Russia. We believe that this is the right thing to do and we
will keep on doing it.“ Just ridiculous. Well, okay. We realized that it was out
of the question.
TUCKER CARLSON: Forces in opposition to you?
So you're saying the CIA is trying to
overthrow your government?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: Of course, they meant in that particular case the separatists,
the terrorists who fought with us in the Caucasus. That's who they called the
opposition. This is the second point.
The third moment, a very important one, is the moment when the U.S. missile
defense (ABM) system was created. The beginning. We persuaded for a long time
not to do it in the United States. Moreover, after I was invited by Bush Jr.'s
father, Bush Sr. to visit his place on the ocean, I had a very serious
conversation with President Bush and his team. I proposed that the United
States, Russia and Europe jointly create a missile defense system that, we
believe, if created unilaterally, threatens our security, despite the fact that
the United States officially said that it was being created against missile
threats from Iran. That was the justification for the deployment of the missile
defense system. I suggested working together -- Russia, the United States, and
Europe. They said it was very interesting. They asked me, ”Are you serious?“ I
said, “Absolutely."
TUCKER CARLSON: May I ask what year was this?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: I don't remember. It is easy to find out on the Internet, when I
was in the U.S.A at the invitation of Bush Sr. It is even easier to learn from
someone, I’m going to tell you about.
I was told it was very interesting. I said, ”Just imagine if we could tackle
such a global, strategic security challenge together. The world would change.
We'll probably have disputes, probably economic and even political ones, but we
could drastically change the situation in the world.“ He says, ”Yes.“ And asks:
”Are you serious?“ I said, ”Of course.“ ”We need to think about it,“ I'm told.
I said, ”Go ahead, please.“
Then Secretary of Defense [Robert] Gates, former Director of the CIA, and Secretary of
State [Condoleezza] Rice came here, in this cabinet. Right here, at this table, they sat on
this side. Me, the Foreign Minister, the Russian Defense Minister -- on that
side. They said to me, ”Yes, we have thought about it, we agree.“ I said, ”Thank
God, great.“ -- ”But with some exceptions.“
TUCKER CARLSON: So, twice you've described
U.S. presidents making decisions and
then being undercut by their agency heads. So, it sounds like you're describing
a system that's not run by the people who are elected, in your telling.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: That's right, that's right. In the end they just told us to get
lost. I am not going to tell you the details, because I think it is incorrect,
after all, it was a confidential conversation. But our proposal was declined,
that’s a fact.
It was right then when I said: ”Look, but then we will be forced to take counter
measures. We will create such strike systems that will certainly overcome
missile defense systems.“ The answer was: ”We are not doing this against you,
and you do what you want, assuming that it is not against us, not against the
United States." I said, ”Okay.“
Very well, that’s the way it went. And we created hypersonic systems, with
intercontinental range, and we continue to develop them. We are now ahead of
everyone -- the United States and other countries -- in terms of the development
of hypersonic strike systems, and we are improving them every day.
But it wasn’t us, we proposed to go the other way, and we were pushed back.
Now, about NATO's expansion to the East. Well, we were promised, no NATO to the
East, not an inch to the East, as we were told. And then what? They said, ”Well,
it's not enshrined on paper, so we'll expand.“ So there were five waves of
expansion, the Baltic States, the whole of Eastern Europe, and so on.
And now I come to the main thing: they have come to Ukraine ultimately. In 2008
at the summit in Bucharest they declared that the doors for Ukraine and Georgia
to join NATO were open.
Now about how decisions are made there. Germany, France seemed to be against it
as well as some other European countries. But then, as it turned out later,
President Bush, and he is such a tough guy, a tough politician, as I was told
later, ”He exerted pressure on us and we had to agree.“ It's ridiculous, it's
like kindergarten. Where are the guarantees? What kindergarten is this, what
kind of people are these, who are they? You see, they were pressed, they agreed.
And then they say, ”Ukraine won't be in NATO, you know.“ I say, ”I don't know, I
know you agreed in 2008, why won't you agree in the future?“ ”Well, they pressed
us then.“ I say, ”Why won't they press you tomorrow? And you'll agree again.“
Well, it's nonsensical. Who's there to talk to, I just don't understand. We're
ready to talk. But with whom? Where are the guarantees? None.
So, they started to develop the territory of Ukraine. Whatever is there, I have
told you the background, how this territory developed, what kind of relations
there were with Russia. Every second or third person there has always had some
ties with Russia. And during the elections in already independent, sovereign
Ukraine, which gained its independence as a result of the Declaration of
Independence, and, by the way, it says that Ukraine is a neutral state, and in
2008 suddenly the doors or gates to NATO were open to it. Oh, come on! This is
not how we agreed. Now, all the presidents that have come to power in Ukraine,
they've relied on an electorate with a good attitude to Russia in one way or
another. This is the south-east of Ukraine, this is a large number of people.
And it was very difficult to desuade this electorate, which had a positive
attitude towards Russia.
Viktor Yanukovych came to power, and how: the first time he won after President
Kuchma -- they organized a third round, which is not provided for in the
Constitution of Ukraine. This is a coup d'état. Just imagine, someone in the
United States wouldn’t like the outcome....
TUCKER CARLSON: In 2014?
PRESIDENT PUTIN:
No, before that. No, this was before that. After President Kuchma,
Viktor Yanukovich won the elections. However, his opponents did not recognize
that victory, the U.S. supported the opposition and the third round was scheduled.
What is this? This is a coup. The U.S. supported it and the winner of the third
round came to power. Imagine if in the U.S., something was not to someone’s liking
and the third round of election, which the U.S. Constitution does not provide for,
was organized, Nonetheless, it was done in Ukraine. Okay, Viktor Yushchenko who
was considered a pro-Western politician, came to power. Fine, we have built
relations with him as well. He came to Moscow with visits, we visited Kiev. I
visited it too. We met in an informal setting. If he is pro-Western, so be it.
It’s fine, let people do their job. The situation should develop inside the
independent Ukraine itself. As a result of Kuchma’s leadership, things got worse
and Viktor Yanukovich came to power after all.
Maybe he wasn’t the best President and politician. I don’t know, I don’t want to
give assessments. However, the issue of the association with the EU came up. We
have always been lenient to this: suit yourself. But when we read through that
treaty of association it turned out to be a problem for us, since we had a
free-trade zone and open customs borders with Ukraine which, under this
association, had to open its borders for Europe, which could have led to
flooding of our market.
We said, “No, this is not going to work. We shall close our borders with Ukraine
then." The customs borders, that is. Yanukovich started to calculate how much
Ukraine was going to gain, how much to lose and said to his European partners:
“I need more time to think before signing." The moment he said that, the
opposition began to take destructive steps which were supported by the West. It
all came down to Maidan and a coup in Ukraine.
TUCKER CARLSON: So, he did more trade with Russia than with the EU?
Ukraine did.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Of course. It’s not even the matter of trade volume, although
for the most part it is. It is the matter of cooperation ties which the entire
Ukrainian economy was based on. The cooperation ties between the enterprises
were very close since the times of the Soviet Union. One enterprise there used
to produce components to be assembled both in Russia and Ukraine and vice versa.
There used to be very close ties.
A coup d’etat was committed, although, I shall not delve into details now as I
find doing it inappropriate, the U.S. told us, “Calm Yanukovich down and we will
calm the opposition. Let the situation unfold in the scenario of a political
settlement." We said, “Alright. Agreed. Let’s do it this way." As the Americans
requested us, Yanukovich did use neither the Armed Forces, nor the police, yet
the armed opposition committed a coup in Kiev. What is that supposed to mean?
“Who do you think you are?," I wanted to ask the then U.S. leadership.
TUCKER CARLSON: With the backing of whom?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: With the backing of CIA, of course. The organization you wanted
to join back in the day, as I understand. Maybe we should thank God they didn’t
let you in. Although, it is a serious organization. I understand. My former
vis-à-vis, in the sense that I served in the First Main Directorate -- Soviet
Union’s intelligence service. They have always been our opponents. A job is a
job.
Technically they did everything right, they achieved their goal of changing the
government. However, from political standpoint, it was a colossal mistake.
Surely, it was political leadership’s miscalculation. They should have seen what
it would evolve into.
So, in 2008 the doors of NATO were opened for Ukraine. In 2014, there was a
coup, they started persecuting those who did not accept the coup, and it was
indeed a coup, they created a threat to Crimea which we had to take under our
protection. They launched a war in Donbass in 2014 with the use of aircraft and
artillery against civilians. This is when it started. There is a video of
aircraft attacking Donetsk from above. They launched a large-scale military
operation, then another one. When they failed, they started to prepare the next
one. All this against the background of military development of this territory
and opening of NATO’s doors.
How could we not express concern over what was happening? From our side, this
would have been a culpable negligence -- that’s what it would have been. It’s
just that the U.S. political leadership pushed us to the line we could not cross
because doing so could have ruined Russia itself. Besides, we could not leave
our brothers in faith and, in fact, a part of Russian people, in the face of
this “war machine."
TUCKER CARLSON: What was
the -- so, but that was eight years before the current conflict started.
So, what was the trigger for you? What was the moment where you decided you had to
do this?
PRESIDENT PUTIN: Initially, it was the coup in Ukraine that provoked the
conflict.
By the way, back then the representatives of three European countries
-- Germany,
Poland and France -- arrived. They were the guarantors of the signed agreement
between the Government of Yanukovich and the opposition. They signed it as
guarantors. Despite that, the opposition committed a coup and all these
countries pretended that they didn’t remember that they were guarantors of
peaceful settlement. They just threw it in the stove right away and nobody
recalls that.
I don’t know if the U.S. know anything about that agreement between the opposition
and the authorities and its three guarantors who, instead of bringing this whole
situation back in the political field, supported the coup. Although, it was
meaningless, believe me, because President Yanukovich agreed to all conditions,
he was ready to hold early election which he had no chance to win, frankly
speaking, Everyone knew that. Then why the coup, why the victims? Why
threatening Crimea? Why launching an operation in Donbass? This I do not
understand. That is exactly what the miscalculation is. CIA did its job to
complete the coup. I think one of the Deputy Secretaries of State said that it
cost a large sum of money, almost 5 billion. But the political mistake was
colossal! Why would they have to do that? All this could have been done legally,
without victims, without military action, without losing Crimea. We would have
never considered to even lift a finger, if it hadn’t been for the bloody
developments on Maidan.
Because we agreed with the fact that after the collapse of the Soviet Union our
borders should be along the borders of former Union’s republics. We agreed to
that. But we never agreed to NATO’s expansion and moreover we never agreed that
Ukraine would be in NATO. We did not agree to NATO bases there without any
discussion with us. For decades we kept asking: don’t do this, don’t do that.
And what triggered the latest events? Firstly, the current Ukrainian leadership
declared that it would not implement the Minsk Agreements, which had been
signed, as you know, after the events of 2014, in Minsk, where the plan of
peaceful settlement in Donbass was set forth. But no, the current Ukrainian
leadership, Foreign Minister, all other officials and then President himself
said that they don’t like anything about the Minsk Agreements. In other words,
they were not going to implement it. A year or a year and a half ago, former
leaders of Germany and France said openly to the whole world that they indeed
signed the Minsk Agreements but they never intended to implement them. They
simply led us by the nose.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Was there anyone free to talk to? Did you call the
U.S. President, the Secretary of State, and say, "If you keep militarizing Ukraine with NATO forces,
this is going to get -- this is going to be a -- we're going to act?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: We talked about this all the time. We addressed the United
States’ and European countries’ leadership to stop these developments
immediately, to implement the Minsk Agreements. Frankly speaking, I didn’t know
how we were going to do this but I was ready to implement them. These Agreements
were complicated for Ukraine; they included lots of elements of those Donbass
territories’ independence. That’s true. However, I was absolutely confident, and
I am saying this to you now: I honestly believed that if we managed to convince
the residents of Donbass -- and we had to work hard to convince them to return to
the Ukrainian statehood -- then gradually the wounds would start to heal. When
this part of territory reintegrated itself into common social environment, when
the pensions and social benefits were paid again, all the pieces would gradually
fall into place.
No, nobody wanted that, everybody wanted to resolve the issue by military force
only. But we could not let that happen. And the situation got to the point, when
the Ukrainian side announced: ”No, we will not do anything." They also started
preparing for military action. It was they who started the war in 2014. Our goal
is to stop this war. And we did not start this war in 2022. This is an attempt
to stop it.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Do you think you have stopped it now? I mean, have you achieved
your aims?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: No, we haven't achieved our aims yet, because one of them is
denazification. This means the prohibition of all kinds of neo-Nazi movements.
This is one of the problems that we discussed during the negotiation process,
which ended in Istanbul early last year, and it was not our initiative, because
we were told (by the Europeans, in particular) that ”it was necessary to create
conditions for the final signing of the documents." My counterparts in France
and Germany said, ”How can you imagine them signing a treaty with a gun to their
heads? The troops should be pulled back from Kiev. ‘I said, ‘All right.’ We
withdrew the troops from Kiev.
As soon as we pulled back our troops from Kiev, our Ukrainian negotiators
immediately threw all our agreements reached in Istanbul into the bin and got
prepared for a longstanding armed confrontation with the help of the United
States and its satellites in Europe. That is how the situation has developed.
And that is how it looks now. Yes....
TUCKER
CARLSON: But -- But what is -- pardon my English, what is "denazification?" What would that mean?
What --
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: That is what I want to talk about right now. It is a very
important issue.
Denazification. After gaining independence, Ukraine began to search, as some
Western analysts say, its identity. And it came up with nothing better than to
build this identity upon some false heroes who collaborated with Hitler.
I have already said that in the early 19th century, when the theorists of
independence and sovereignty of Ukraine appeared, they assumed that an
independent Ukraine should have very good relations with Russia. But due to the
historical development, these territories were part of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth -- Poland, where Ukrainians were persecuted and treated quite
brutally as well as were subject to cruel behavior. There were also attempts to
destroy their identity. All this remained in the memory of the people. When
World War II broke out, part of this extremely nationalist elite collaborated
with Hitler, believing that he would bring them freedom. The German troops, even
the SS troops made Hitler's collaborators do the dirtiest work of exterminating
the Polish and Jewish population. Hence this brutal massacre of the Polish and
Jewish population as well as the Russian population too. This was led by the
persons who are well known -- Bandera, Shukhevich. It was these people who were
made national heroes -- that is the problem. And we are constantly told that
nationalism and neo-Nazism exist in other countries as well. Yes, there are
seedlings, but we uproot them, and other countries fight against them. But
Ukraine is not the case. These people have been made into national heroes in
Ukraine. Monuments to these people have been erected, they are displayed on
flags, their names are shouted by crowds that walk with torches, as it was in
Nazi Germany. These were the people who exterminated Poles, Jews and Russians.
It is necessary to stop this practice and prevent the dissemination of this
concept.
I say that Ukrainians are part of the one Russian people. They say, ”No, we are
a separate people.“ Okay, fine. If they consider themselves a separate people,
they have the right to do so, but not on the basis of Nazism, the Nazi ideology.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Would you be satisfied with the territory that you have now?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I will finish answering the question. You just asked a question
about neo-Nazism and denazification.
Look, the President of Ukraine visited Canada. This story is well known, but is
silenced in the Western countries:1 The Canadian parliament introduced a man who,
as the speaker of the parliament said, fought against the Russians during the
World War II. Well, who fought against the Russians during World War II? Hitler
and his accomplices. It turned out that this man served in the SS troops. He
personally killed Russians, Poles, and Jews. The SS troops consisted of
Ukrainian nationalists who did this dirty work. The President of Ukraine stood
up with the entire Parliament of Canada and applauded this man. How can this be
imagined? The President of Ukraine himself, by the way, is a Jew by nationality.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Really, my question is: What do you do about it? I mean, Hitler's been dead for
80 years; Nazi Germany no longer exists. And, so, true.
And so, you -- I think what you're saying is, you want to extinguish or at least control
Ukrainian nationalism. But how? How do you do that?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Listen to me. Your question is very subtle.
And can I tell you what I think? Do not take offense.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Of course.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: This question appears to be subtle, it is quite pesky.
You say Hitler has been dead for so many years, 80 years. But his example lives
on. People who exterminated Jews, Russians and Poles are alive. And the
president, the current president of today's Ukraine applauds him in the Canadian
Parliament, gives a standing ovation! Can we say that we have completely
uprooted this ideology if what we see is happening today? That is what
denazification is in our understanding. We have to get rid of those people who
maintain this concept and support this practice and try to preserve it -- that is
what denazification is. That is what we mean.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Right. My question was a little more specific.
It was, of course, not a
defense of --of Nazi's, "Neo[-Nazis]" or otherwise. It was a practical question. You don't control the
entire country. You don't control Kiev. You don’t seem like you want to. So, how
-- how do you eliminate a culture, or an ideology, or feelings, or a view of history, in a country that
you don’t control? What do you do about that?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You know, as strange as it may seem to you, during the
negotiations in Istanbul we did agree that -- we have it all in writing --
neo-Nazism would not be cultivated in Ukraine, including that it would be
prohibited at the legislative level.
Mr. Carlson, we agreed on that. This, it turns out, can be done during the
negotiation process. And there is nothing humiliating for Ukraine as a modern
civilized State. Is any state allowed to promote Nazism? It is not, is it? That
is it.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Will there be talks? And why haven’t there been talks about
resolving the conflict in Ukraine? Peace talks.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: They have been. They reached a very high stage of coordination
of positions in a complex process, but still they were almost finalized. But
after we withdrew our troops from Kiev, as I have already said, the other side
(Ukraine) threw away all these agreements and obeyed the instructions of Western
countries, European countries and the United States to fight Russia to the
bitter end.
Moreover, the President of Ukraine has legislated a ban on negotiating with
Russia. He signed a decree forbidding everyone to negotiate with Russia.
TUCKER
CARLSON:
Right.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: But how
are we going to negotiate if he forbade himself and everyone to do this? We know
that he is putting forward some ideas about this settlement. But in order to
agree on something, we need to have a dialog. Is not that right?
TUCKER
CARLSON: Well, but you wouldn't be speaking to the Ukrainian
President. You'd be speaking to the American President. When was the last time you
spoke to Joe Biden?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I cannot remember when I talked to him. I do not remember.
We
can look it up.
TUCKER
CARLSON: You don't remember?!
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: No, why? Do I have to remember everything? I have my own things
to do. We have domestic political affairs.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Well, he's funding the war that you're fighting, so I would think that
would be memorable?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Well, yes, he funds, but I talked to him before the Special
Military Operation, of course. And I said to him then, by the way -- I will not
go into details, I never do -- but I said to him then: ”I believe that you are
making a huge mistake of historic proportions by supporting everything that is
happening there, in Ukraine, by pushing Russia away.“ I told him, told him
repeatedly, by the way. I think that would be correct if I stop here.
TUCKER
CARLSON: What did he say?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Ask him, please. It is easier for you, you are a citizen of the
United States. Go and ask him. It is not appropriate for me to comment on our
conversation.
TUCKER
CARLSON: But...you haven’t spoken to him since before February of 2022?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: No, we haven't spoken. Certain contacts are been maintained
though. Speaking of which, do you remember what I told you about my proposal to
work together on a missile defense system?
TUCKER
CARLSON: Yes.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You can ask all of them. All of them are safe and sound, thank
God. The former President, Condoleezza is safe and sound, and, I think, Mr.
Gates, and the current Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Mr. Burns,
the then Ambassador to Russia, in my opinion, a very successful Ambassador. They
were all witnesses to these conversations. Ask them.
Same here, if you are interested in what Mr. President Biden responded to me,
ask him. At any rate, I talked to him about it.
TUCKER
CARLSON: I'm...definitely interested. But from
outside it seems
like this could devolve or evolve into something that brings the entire world into
conflict, and could initiate some -- a nuclear launch, and so why don’t you just call
Biden and say “Let’s work this out”?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: What's there to work out? It's very simple. I repeat, we have
contacts through various agencies. I will tell you what we are saying on this
matter and what we are conveying to the U.S. leadership: ”If you really want to
stop fighting, you need to stop supplying weapons. It will be over within a few
weeks. That's it. And then we can agree on some terms. Before you do that, stop.“
What's easier? Why would I call him? What should I talk to him about? Or beg him
for what?
TUCKER
CARLSON: And -- And what message did you get
back?2
PRESIDENT PUTIN: ”You're going to deliver such and such weapons to Ukraine. Oh, I'm
afraid, I'm afraid, please don't.“ What is there to talk about?
TUCKER
CARLSON: Do you think NATO is worried about this becoming a global war
or a nuclear conflict?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: At least that's what they're talking about. And they are trying
to intimidate their own population with an imaginary Russian threat. This is an
obvious fact. And thinking people, not philistines, but thinking people,
analysts, those who are engaged in real politics, just smart people, understand
perfectly well that this is a fake. They are trying to fuel the Russian threat.
TUCKER
CARLSON: The threat I think you're referring to is
a Russian invasion of
Poland, Latvia -- expansionist behavior. Is -- Can you imagine a scenario where you
send Russian troops to Poland?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Only in one case: if Poland attacks Russia. Why? Because we have
no interest in Poland, Latvia or anywhere else. Why would we do that? We simply
don't have any interest. Its just threat mongering.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Well, the argument, I know you know this, is that, well, he
invaded Ukraine. He has territorial aims across the continent. And you're
saying unequivocally, you don’t?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: It is absolutely out of the question. You just don't have to be
any kind of analyst, it goes against common sense to get involved in some kind
of global war. And a global war will bring all of humanity to the brink of
destruction. It's obvious.
There are, certainly, means of deterrence. They have been scaring everyone with
us all along: tomorrow Russia will use tactical nuclear weapons, tomorrow Russia
will use that, no, the day after tomorrow. So what? These are just horror
stories for people in the street in order to extort additional money from U.S.
taxpayers and European taxpayers in the confrontation with Russia in the
Ukrainian theatre of war. The goal is to weaken Russia as much as possible.
TUCKER
CARLSON: One of our senior United States senators from the State of New
York, Chuck Schumer, said yesterday, I believe, that we have to continue to fund
the Ukrainian effort or U.S. soldiers, citizens could wind up fighting there. How
do you assess that?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: This is a provocation, and a cheap provocation at that.
I do not understand why American soldiers should fight in Ukraine. There are
mercenaries from the United States there. The biggest number of mercenaries
comes from Poland, with mercenaries from the United States in second place, and
mercenaries from Georgia in third place. Well, if somebody has the desire to
send regular troops, that would certainly bring humanity on the brink of a very
serious, global conflict. This is obvious.
Do the United States need this? What for? Thousands of miles away from your
national territory! Don't you have anything better to do?
You have issues on the border, issues with migration, issues with the national
debt -- more than 33 trillion dollars. You have nothing better to do, so you
should fight in Ukraine? Wouldn't it be better to negotiate with Russia? Make an
agreement, already understanding the situation that is developing today,
realizing that Russia will fight for its interests to the end. And, realizing
this, actually return to common sense, start respecting our country and its
interests and look for certain solutions. It seems to me that this is much
smarter and more rational.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Who blew up Nord Stream?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You, for sure. (L a u g h i n g.)
TUCKER
CARLSON: I was busy that day. Do -- Do you -- I did not blow up Nord Stream.
Thank you, though.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You personally may have an alibi, but the CIA has no such alibi.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Do -- Do you have evidence that NATO or
the CIA did it?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You know, I won't get into details, but people always say in
such cases: ”Look for someone who is interested." But in this case we should not
only look for someone who is interested, but also for someone who has
capabilities. Because there may be many people interested, but not all of them
are capable of sinking to the bottom of the Baltic Sea and carrying out this
explosion. These two components should be connected: who is interested and who
is capable of doing it.
TUCKER
CARLSON: But I'm confused. I mean, that’s the
biggest act of industrial terrorism ever and it’s the largest emission of C02 in history. Okay, so, if you
had evidence and presumably, given your security services, your Intel services,
you would, that NATO, the U.S., CIA, the West did this, why wouldn’t you present
it and win a propaganda victory?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: In the war of propaganda it is very difficult to defeat the
United States because the United States controls all the world’s media and many
European media. The ultimate beneficiary of the biggest European media are
American financial institutions. Don't you know that? So it is possible to get
involved in this work, but it is cost prohibitive, so to speak. We can simply
shine the spotlight on our sources of information, and we will not achieve
results. It is clear to the whole world what happened, and even American
analysts talk about it directly. It's true.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Yes, I -- But -- But here's a question you may be able to answer. You
worked in Germany, famously. The Germans clearly know that their NATO partner
did this. But they -- [and] it damaged their economy greatly. It may never recover. Why
are they being silent about it? That's very confusing to me. Why wouldn’t the
Germans say something about it?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: This also confuses me. But today's German leadership is guided
by the interests of the collective West rather than its national interests,
otherwise it is difficult to explain the logic of their action or inaction.
After all, it is not only about Nord Stream-1, which was blown up, and Nord
Stream-2 was damaged, but one pipe is safe and sound, and gas can be supplied to
Europe through it, but Germany does not open it. We are ready, please.
There is another route through Poland, called Yamal-Europe, which also allows
for a large flow. Poland has closed it, but Poland pecks from the German hand,
it receives money from pan-European funds, and Germany is the main donor to
these pan-European funds. Germany feeds Poland to a certain extent. And they
closed the route to Germany. Why? I don't understand. Ukraine, to which the
Germans supply weapons and give money.
Germany is the second sponsor after the United States in terms of financial aid
to Ukraine. There are two gas routes through Ukraine. They simply closed one
route, the Ukrainians. Open the second route and, please, get gas from Russia.
They do not open it. Why don't the Germans say: ”Look, guys, we give you money
and weapons. Open up the valve, please, let the gas from Russia pass through for
us.
We are buying liquefied gas at exorbitant prices in Europe, which brings the
level of our competitiveness, and economy in general down to zero. Do you want
us to give you money? Let us have a decent existence, make money for our
economy, because this is where the money we give you comes from." They refuse to
do so. Why? Ask them. (Knocks on the table.) That is what it is like in their
heads. Those are highly incompetent people.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Well, maybe the world is breaking into two hemispheres. One with
cheap energy, the other without. And I want to ask you that, if -- if we're now a multipolar world, obviously we are, can you describe the blocs of alliances? Who...is in each side, do you think?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Listen, you have said that the world is breaking into two
hemispheres. A human brain is divided into two hemispheres: one is responsible
for one type of activities, the other one is more about creativity and so on.
But it is still one and the same head. The world should be a single whole,
security should be shared, rather than meant for the ”golden billion." That is
the only scenario where the world could be stable, sustainable and predictable.
Until then, while the head is split into two parts, it is an illness, a serious
adverse condition. It is a period of a severe disease that the world is now
going through.
But I think that, thanks to honest journalism -- this work is akin to work of the
doctors, this could somehow be remedied.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Well, let’s just give one example -- the
-- the U.S. dollar, which has,
kind of, united the world in a lot of ways, maybe not to your advantage, but
certainly to ours. Is that going away as the reserve currency, the universally
accepted currency? How have sanctions, do you think, changed the dollar’s place
in the world?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You know, to use the dollar as a tool of foreign policy struggle
is one of the biggest strategic mistakes made by the U.S. political leadership.
The dollar is the cornerstone of the United States' power. I think everyone
understands very well that, no matter how many dollars are printed, they are
quickly dispersed all over the world. Inflation in the United States is minimal.
It is about 3 or 3.4 percent, which is, I think, totally acceptable for the U.S..
But they won't stop printing. What does the debt of 33 trillion dollars tell us
about? It is about the emission.
Nevertheless, it is the main weapon used by the United States to preserve its
power across the world. As soon as the political leadership decided to use the
U.S. dollar as a tool of political struggle, a blow was dealt to this American
power. I would not like to use any strong language, but it is a stupid thing to
do, and a grave mistake.
Look at what is going on in the world. Even the United States' allies are now
downsizing their dollar reserves. Seeing this, everyone starts looking for ways
to protect themselves. But the fact that the United States applies restrictive
measures to certain countries, such as placing restrictions on transactions,
freezing assets, etc., causes grave concern and sends a signal to the whole
world.
What did we have here? Until 2022, about 80 percent of Russia's foreign trade
transactions were made in U.S. dollars and euros. U.S. dollars accounted for
approximately 50 percent of our transactions with third countries, while
currently it is down to 13 percent. It was not us who banned the use of the U.S.
dollar, we had no such intention. It was the decision of the United States to
restrict our transactions in U.S. dollars. I think it is a complete foolishness
from the point of view of the interests of the United States itself and its tax
payers, as it damages the U.S. economy, undermines the power of the United States
across the world.
By the way, our transactions in Yuan accounted for about 3 percent. Today, 34
percent of our transactions are made in Rubles, and about as much, a little
over 34 percent, in Yuan.
Why did the United States do this? My only guess is self-conceit. They probably
thought it would lead to a full collapse, but nothing collapsed. Moreover, other
countries, including oil producers, are thinking of and already accepting
payments for oil in yuan. Do you even realize what is going on or not? Does
anyone in the United States realize this? What are you doing? You are cutting
yourself off...all experts say this. Ask any intelligent and thinking person in
the United States what the dollar means for the U.S.? You are killing it with your
own hands.
TUCKER
CARLSON: I think that's a -- I -- I think
that's a fair assessment. The question is what comes
next? And maybe you trade one colonial power for another, much less sentimental
and forgiving colonial power? I mean, are -- is the -- the BRICS, for example, in danger of being
completely dominated by the Chinese -- the Chinese economy in a way that' not good for their
sovereignty. Do you worry about that?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: We have heard those boogeyman stories before. It is a boogeyman
story. We are neighbors with China. You cannot choose neighbors, just as you
cannot choose close relatives. We share a border of 1000 kilometers with them.
This is number one.
Second, we have a centuries-long history of coexistence, we are used to it.
Third, China's foreign policy philosophy is not aggressive, its idea is to
always look for compromise, and we can see that.
The next point is as follows. We are always told the same boogeyman story, and
here it goes again, though in a euphemistic form, but it is still the same
bogeyman story: the cooperation with China keeps increasing. The pace at which
China's cooperation with Europe is growing is higher and greater than that of
the growth of Chinese-Russian cooperation. Ask Europeans: aren’t they afraid?
They might be, I do not know, but they are still trying to access China's market
at all costs, especially now that they are facing economic problems. Chinese
businesses are also exploring the European market.
Do Chinese businesses have small presence in the United States? Yes, the
political decisions are such that they are trying to limit their cooperation
with China.
It is to your own detriment, Mr. Tucker, that you are limiting cooperation with
China, you are hurting yourself. It is a delicate matter, and there are no
silver bullet solutions, just as it is with the dollar.
So, before introducing any illegitimate sanctions -- illegitimate in terms of the
Charter of the United Nations -- one should think very carefully. For
decision-makers, this appears to be a problem.
TUCKER
CARLSON: So, you said a moment ago that the world would be a lot better
if it weren't broken into competing alliances, if there was cooperation
globally. One of the reasons you don’t have that is because the current American
Administration is dead set against you. Do you think if there were a new
Administration after Joe Biden that you would be able to re-establish
communication with the U.S. government? Or does it not matter who the President
is?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I will tell you. But let me finish the previous thought. We,
together with my colleague and friend President Xi Jinping, set a goal to reach
200 billion dollars of mutual trade with China this year. We have exceeded this
level. According to our figures, our bilateral trade with China totals already
230 billion, and the Chinese statistics says it is 240 billion dollars.
One more important thing: our trade is well-balanced, mutually complementary in
high-tech, energy, scientific research and development. It is very balanced.
As for BRICS, where Russia took over the presidency this year, the BRICS
countries are, by and large, developing very rapidly.
Look, if memory serves me right, back in 1992, the share of the G7 countries in
the world economy amounted to 47 percent, whereas in 2022 it was down to, I
think, a little over 30 percent. The BRICS countries accounted for only 16
percent in 1992, but now their share is greater than that of the G7. It has nothing
to do with the events in Ukraine. This is due to the trends of global
development and world economy that I mentioned just now, and this is inevitable.
This will keep happening, it is like the rise of the sun -- you cannot prevent
the sun from rising, you have to adapt to it. How do the United States adapt?
With the help of force: sanctions, pressure, bombings, and use of armed forces.
This is about self-conceit. Your political establishment does not understand
that the world is changing (under objective circumstances), and in order to
preserve your level -- even if someone aspires, pardon me, to the level of
dominance -- you have to make the right decisions in a competent and timely
manner.
Such brutal actions, including with regard to Russia and, say, other countries,
are counterproductive. This is an obvious fact; it has already become evident.
You just asked me if another leader comes and changes something. It is not about
the leader, it is not about the personality of a particular person. I had a very
good relationship with, say, Bush. I know that in the United States he was
portrayed as some kind of a country boy who does not understand much. I assure
you that is not the case. I think he made a lot of mistakes with regard to
Russia, too. I told you about 2008 and the decision in Bucharest to open the
NATO’s doors to for Ukraine and so on. That happened during his presidency. He
actually exercised pressure on the Europeans.
But in general, on a personal human level, I had a very good relationship with
him. He was no worse than any other American, or Russian, or European
politician. I assure you, he understood what he was doing as well as others. I
had such personal relationships with Trump as well.
It is not about the personality of the leader, it is about the elites’ mindset.
If the idea of domination at any cost, based also on forceful actions, dominates
the American society, nothing will change, it will only get worse. But if, in
the end, one comes to the awareness that the world has been changing due to
objective circumstances, and that one should be able to adapt to them in time,
using the advantages that the U.S. still has today, then, perhaps, something may
change.
Look, China's economy has become the first economy in the world in purchasing
power parity; in terms of volume it overtook the U.S. a long time ago. The U.S.A
comes second, then India (one and a half billion people), and then Japan, with
Russia in the fifth place. Russia was the first economy in Europe last year,
despite all the sanctions and restrictions. Is this normal, from your point of
view: sanctions, restrictions, impossibility of payments in dollars, being cut
off from SWIFT services, sanctions against our ships carrying oil, sanctions
against airplanes, sanctions in everything, everywhere? The largest number of
sanctions in the world which are applied -- are applied against Russia. And we
have become Europe's first economy during this time.
The tools that the U.S. uses don't work. Well, one has to think about what to do.
If this realization comes to the ruling elites, then yes, then the first person
of the state will act in anticipation of what the voters and the people who make
decisions at various levels expect from this person. Then maybe something will
change.
TUCKER
CARLSON: But you -- you're describing two different systems. You say that the
leader acts in the interests of the voters, but you also say that these
decisions are not made by the leader -- they are made by the ruling classes. You've run this country for so long, you've known all these American presidents.
What are those power centers in the United States, do you think? Like, who
actually makes the decisions?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I don't know. America is a complex country, conservative on the
one hand, rapidly changing on the other. It's not easy for us to sort it all
out.
Who makes decisions in the elections -- is it possible to understand this, when
each state has its own legislation, each state regulates itself, someone can be
excluded from the elections at the state level. It is a two-stage electoral
system, it is very difficult for us to understand it.
Certainly there are two parties that are dominant, the Republicans and the
Democrats, and within this party system, the centers that make decisions, that
prepare decisions.
Then, look, why, in my opinion, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, such an
erroneous, crude, completely unjustified policy of pressure was pursued against
Russia? After all, this is a policy of pressure. NATO expansion, support for the
separatists in the Caucasus, creation of a missile defense system -- these are
all elements of pressure. Pressure, pressure, pressure.
Then, dragging Ukraine into NATO is all about pressure, pressure, pressure. Why?
I think, among other things, because excessive production capacities were
created. During the confrontation with the Soviet Union, there were many centers
created and specialists on the Soviet Union, who could not do anything else. It
seemed to them, they convinced the political leadership: it is necessary to
continue ”chiseling“ Russia, to try to break it up, to create on this territory
several quasi-state entities and to subdue them in a divided form, to use their
combined potential for the future struggle with China. This is a mistake,
including the excessive potential of those who worked for the confrontation with
the Soviet Union. It is necessary to get rid of this, there should be new, fresh
forces, people who look into the future and understand what is happening in the
world.
Look at how Indonesia is developing? 600 million people. Where can we get away
from that? Nowhere, we just have to assume that Indonesia will enter (it is
already in) the club of the world's leading economies, no matter who likes or
dislikes it.
Yes, we understand and are aware that in the United States, despite all the
economic problems, the situation is still normal with the economy growing
decently, the GDP is growing by 2.5 percent, if I am not mistaken.
But if we want to ensure the future, then we need to change our approach to what
is changing. As I already said, the world would nevertheless change regardless
of how the developments in Ukraine end. The world is changing. In the United
States themselves, experts write that the United States are nonetheless
gradually changing their position in the world, it is your experts who write
that, I just read them. The only question is how this would happen -- painfully
and quickly or gently and gradually. And this is written by people who are not
anti-American; they simply follow global development trends. That's it.
And in order to assess them and change policies, we need people who think, look
forward, can analyze and recommend certain decisions at the level of political
leaders.
TUCKER
CARLSON: I just have to ask. You've...said clearly that NATO expansion
eastward is a violation of the promise you all were made in 1990. It -- It's a
threat to your country. Right before you sent troops into Ukraine, the
Vice-President of the United States went to the Munich Security Conference and
encouraged the President of Ukraine to join NATO. Do you think that was an
effort to provoke you into military action?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I repeat once again, we have repeatedly, repeatedly proposed to
seek a solution to the problems that arose in Ukraine after the 2014 coup d’etat
through peaceful means. But no one listened to us. And moreover, the Ukrainian
leaders who were under the complete U.S. control, suddenly declared that they
would not comply with the Minsk agreements, they disliked everything there, and
continued military activity in that territory.
And in parallel, that territory was being exploited by NATO military structures
under the guise of various personnel training and retraining centers. They
essentially began to create bases there. That's all.
Ukraine announced that the Russians were (a law was adopted) a non-titular
nationality, while passing laws that limit the rights of non-titular
nationalities in Ukraine. Ukraine, having received all these southeastern
territories as a gift from the Russian people, suddenly announced that the
Russians were a non-titular nationality in that territory. Is it normal? All
this put together led to the decision to end the war that neo-Nazis started in
Ukraine in 2014.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Do you -- Do you think Zelensky has the freedom to negotiate
a
settlement to this conflict?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I don’t know the details, of course it’s difficult for me to
judge, but I believe he has, in any case, he used to have. His father fought
against the fascists, Nazis during World War II, I once talked to him about
this. I said: “Volodya, what are you doing? Why are you supporting neo-Nazis in
Ukraine today, while your father fought against fascism? He was a front-line
soldier.” I will not tell you what he answered, this is a separate topic, and I
think it’s incorrect for me to do so.
But as to the freedom of choice -- why not? He came to power on the expectations
of Ukrainian people that he would lead Ukraine to peace. He talked about this,
it was thanks to this that he won the election overwhelmingly. But then, when he
came to power, in my opinion, he realized two things: firstly, it is better not
to clash with neo-Nazis and nationalists, because they are aggressive and very
active, you can expect anything from them, and secondly, the U.S.-led West
supports them and will always support those who antagonize with Russia -- it is
beneficial and safe. So he took the relevant position, despite promising his
people to end the war in Ukraine. He deceived his voters.
TUCKER
CARLSON: But do you think at this point, as of February 2024, he has
the latitude, the freedom to speak with you or your government directly on
putting an end to this, which clearly isn't helping his country, or the world? Can he do that, do you think?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Why not? He considers himself head of state, he won the
elections. Although we believe in Russia that the coup d’etat is the primary
source of power for everything that happened after 2014, and in this sense, even
today’s government is flawed. But he considers himself the president, and he is
recognized by the United States, all of Europe and practically the rest of the
world in such a capacity -- why not? He can.
We negotiated with Ukraine in Istanbul, we agreed, he was aware of this.
Moreover, the negotiation group leader, Mr. Arakhamia is his last name, I
believe, still heads the faction of the ruling party, the party of the President
in the Rada. He still heads the Presidential faction in the Rada, the country’s
parliament, he still sits there. He even put his preliminary signature on the
document I am telling you about. But then he publicly stated to the whole world:
“We were ready to sign this document, but Mr. Johnson, then the Prime Minister
of Great Britain, came and dissuaded us from doing this saying it was better to
fight Russia. They would give everything needed for us to return what was lost
during the clashes with Russia. And we agreed with this proposal.“ Look, his
statement has been published. He said this publicly.
Can they return to this or not? The question is: do they want it or not?
Further on, President of Ukraine issued a decree prohibiting negotiations with
us. Let him cancel that decree and that’s it. We have never refused negotiations
indeed. We hear all the time: is Russia ready? Yes, we have not refused! It was
them who publicly refused. Well, let him cancel his decree and enter into
negotiations. We have never refused.
And the fact that they obeyed the demand or persuasion of Mr. Johnson, the
former Prime Minister of Great Britain, seems ridiculous and very sad to me.
Because, as Mr. Arakhamia put it: “We could have stopped these hostilities, this
war a year and a half ago already. But the British persuaded us, and we refused
this.” Where is Mr. Johnson now? And the war continues.
TUCKER
CARLSON: That' a good question. Where do you
think he is and why did he do that?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Hell knows. I don't understand it myself. There was a general
starting point. For some reason, everyone had the illusion that Russia could be
defeated on the battlefield. Because of arrogance, because of a pure heart, but
not because of a great mind.
TUCKER
CARLSON: You've described the connection between Russia and Ukraine;
you've described Russia itself, a couple of times as Orthodox -- that's
central to your understanding of Russia. You've said you're Orthodox. What does that mean for you? You're a
Christian leader by your own description. So what effect does that have on you?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You know, as I already mentioned, in 988 Prince Vladimir himself
was baptized following the example of his grandmother, Princess Olga, and then
he baptized his squad, and then gradually, over the course of several years, he
baptized all the Rus. It was a lengthy process -- from pagans to Christians, it
took many years. But in the end, this Orthodoxy, Eastern Christianity, deeply
rooted itself in the consciousness of the Russian people.
When Russia expanded and absorbed other nations who profess Islam, Buddhism and
Judaism, Russia has always been very loyal to those people who profess other
religions. This is her strength. This is absolutely clear.
And the fact is that the main postulates, main values are very similar, not to
say the same, in all world religions I’ve just mentioned and which are the
traditional religions of the Russian Federation, Russia. By the way, Russian
authorities were always very careful about the culture and religion of those
peoples who came into the Russian Empire. This, in my opinion, forms the basis
of both security and stability of the Russian statehood -- all the peoples
inhabiting Russia basically consider it their Motherland.
If, say, people move over to you or to Europe from Latin America -- an even
clearer and more understandable example -- people come, but yet they have come to
you or to European countries from their historical homeland. And people who
profess different religions in Russia consider Russia their Motherland, they
have no other Motherland. We are together, this is one big family. And our
traditional values are very similar. I’ve just mentioned one big family, but
everyone has his/hers own family, and this is the basis of our society. And if
we say that the Motherland and the family are specifically connected with each
other, it is indeed the case, since it is impossible to ensure a normal future
for our children and our families unless we ensure a normal, sustainable future
for the entire country, for the Motherland. That is why patriotic sentiment is
so strong in Russia.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Can I -- Can I say, the one way in which
the religions are different is that
Christianity is specifically a non-violent religion. Jesus says, “Turn the other
cheek" -- don’t kill. How can a leader who has to kill, of any country, how can a
leader be a Christian? How do you reconcile that to yourself?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: It is very easy: when it comes to protecting oneself and one’s
family, one’s homeland. We won’t attack anyone.
When did the developments in Ukraine start? Since the coup d'etat and the
hostilities in Donbass began, that’s when they started. And we are protecting
our people, ourselves, our homeland and our future.
As for religion in general.
You know, it’s not about external manifestations, it’s not about going to church
every day or banging your head on the floor. It is in the heart. And our culture
is so human-oriented. Dostoevsky, who is very well known in the West as the
genius of Russian culture, Russian literature, spoke a lot about this, about the
Russian soul.
After all, Western society is more pragmatic. Russian people think more about
the eternal, about moral values. I don’t know, maybe you won’t agree with me,
but Western culture is more pragmatic after all.
I’m not saying this is bad, it makes it possible for today’s “golden billion” to
achieve good success in production, even in science, and so on. There's nothing
wrong with that, I'm just saying that we kind of look the same, but our minds
are built a little differently.
TUCKER
CARLSON: So...do you see the supernatural at work?
As you look out across
what’s happening in the world now, do you see God at work? Do you ever think to
yourself: "these are forces that are not human."
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: No, to be honest, I don't think so. My opinion is that the
development of the world community is in accordance with the inherent laws, and
those laws are what they are. It's always been this way in the history of
mankind. Some nations and countries rose, became stronger and more numerous, and
then left the international stage, losing the status they had accustomed to.
There is probably no need for me to give examples, but we could start with
Genghis Khan and the Horde conquerors, the Golden Horde, and then end with the
Roman Empire.
It seems that there has never been anything like the Roman Empire in the history
of mankind. Nevertheless, the potential of the barbarians gradually grew, as did
their population. In general, the barbarians were getting stronger and began to
develop economically, as we would say today. This eventually led to the collapse
of the Roman Empire and the regime imposed by the Romans. However, it took five
centuries for the Roman Empire to fall apart. The difference with what is
happening now is that all the processes of change are happening at a much faster
pace than in Roman times.
TUCKER
CARLSON: So when does the AI empire start, do you think?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: (Laughing) You are asking increasingly more complicated
questions. To answer them, you need to be an expert in big numbers, big data and
AI.
Mankind is currently facing many threats. Due to genetic researches, it is now
possible to create a superhuman, a specialized human being -- a genetically
engineered athlete, scientist, military man.
There are reports that Elon Musk has already had a chip implanted in the human
brain in the U.S.A.
TUCKER
CARLSON: What do you think of that?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Well, I think there’s no stopping Elon Musk, he will do as he
sees fit. Nevertheless, you need to find some common ground with him, search for
ways to persuade him. I think he’s a smart person, I truly believe he is. So you
need to reach an agreement with him because this process needs to be formalized
and subjected to certain rules.
Humanity has to consider what is going to happen due to the newest developments
in genetics or in AI. One can make an approximate prediction of what will
happen. Once mankind felt an existential threat coming from nuclear weapons, all
nuclear nations began to come to terms with one another since they realized that
negligent use of nuclear weaponry could drive humanity to extinction.
It is impossible to stop research in genetics or AI today, just as it was
impossible to stop the use of gunpowder back in the day. But as soon as we
realize that the threat comes from unbridled and uncontrolled development of AI,
or genetics, or any other fields, the time will come to reach an international
agreement on how to regulate these things.
TUCKER
CARLSON: I -- I appreciate all the time you’ve given us. I just
gotta ask
you one last question and that's about someone who's very famous in the United
States, probably not here:
Evan Gershkovich, who's the Wall Street Journal
reporter. He's 32 and he’s been in prison for almost a year. This is a huge
story in the United States, and I just want to ask you directly, without getting
into the details of it or your version of what happened, if as a sign of your
decency you would be willing to release him to us and we’ll bring him back to the United
States?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: We have done so many gestures of goodwill out of decency that I
think we have run out of them. We have never seen anyone reciprocate to us in a
similar manner. However, in theory, we can say that we do not rule out that we
can do that if our partners take reciprocal steps.
When I talk about the “partners," I, first of all, refer to special services.
Special services are in contact with one another, they are talking about the
matter in question. There is no taboo to settle the issue. We are willing to
solve it, but there are certain terms being discussed via special services
channels. I believe an agreement can be reached.
TUCKER
CARLSON: So, typically, I mean, this stuff has happened for, obviously,
centuries. One country catches another spy within its borders. It trades it for
one of its own Intel guys in another country. I think what makes it -- and it’s not
my business -- but what makes it different is the guy's obviously not a
spy. He's a kid. And maybe he was breaking your law in some way but he's not a superspy and everybody knows that.
And he's being held hostage in exchange,
which is true. With respect, it’s true -- and everyone knows it’s true. So maybe he's in a different category.
Maybe it’s not fair to ask for, you know, somebody else in
exchange for letting him out. Maybe it degrades Russia to do that.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You know, you can give different interpretations to what
constitutes a “spy," but there are certain things provided by law. If a person
gets secret information, and does that in a conspiratorial manner, then this is
qualified as espionage. And that is exactly what he was doing. He was receiving
classified, confidential information, and he did it covertly. Maybe he had been
implicated in that, someone could have dragged him into that, maybe he did that
out of carelessness, or on his own initiative. Considering the sheer facts, this
is qualified as espionage. The fact has been proven, as he was caught red-handed
when he was receiving this information. If it had been some far-fetched excuse,
some fabrication, something not proven, it would have been a different story
then. But he was caught red-handed when he was secretly getting confidential
information. What is it, then?
TUCKER
CARLSON: But are you suggesting that he was working for the
U.S. government or
NATO? Or he was just a reporter who was given material he wasn’t supposed to
have? Those seem like very different, very different things.
PRESIDENT PUTIN: I don’t know who he was working for. But I would like to
reiterate that getting classified information in secret is called espionage, and
he was working for the U.S. special services, some other agencies. I don’t think
that he was working for Monaco, as Monaco is hardly interested in getting that
information. It is up to the special services to come to an agreement. Some
groundwork has been laid. There are people who, in our view, are not connected
with special services.
Let me tell you a story about a person serving a sentence in an allied country
of the U.S. That person, due to patriotic sentiments, eliminated a bandit in one
of the European capitals. During the events in the Caucasus, do you know what he
[the bandit] was doing? I don’t want to say that, but I will do it anyway. He was
laying our soldiers, taken prisoner, on the road and then he drove his car over
their heads. What kind of a person is that? Can he be even called a human? But
there was a patriot who eliminated him in one of the European capitals. Whether
he did that of his own volition or not, that is a different question.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Yeah, but Evan Gershkovich didn't do that. I mean, that’s a completely different, I mean
-- I mean, this is
a thirty-two year old, like, newspaper reporter.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: He committed something different.
TUCKER
CARLSON: He is just a journalist.3
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: He is not just a journalist, I reiterate, he is a journalist who
was secretly getting confidential information.
Yes, it is different, but still, I am talking about other people who are
essentially controlled by the U.S. authorities wherever they are serving a
sentence. There is an ongoing dialogue between the special services. This has to
be resolved in a calm, responsible and professional manner. They are keeping in
touch, so let them do their work.
I do not rule out that the person you referred to, Mister Gershkovich, may
return to his motherland. By the end of the day, it does not make any sense to
keep him in prison in Russia. We want the U.S. special services to think about
how they can contribute to achieving the goals our special services are
pursuing. We are ready to talk. Moreover, the talks are underway, and there have
been many successful examples of these talks crowned with success. Probably this
is going to be crowned with success as well, but we have to come to an
agreement.
TUCKER
CARLSON: I hope you let him out. Mr. President, thank you!
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I also want him to return to his homeland at last. I am
absolutely sincere. But let me say once again, the dialogue continues. The more
public we render things of this nature, the more difficult it becomes to resolve
them. Everything has to be done in a calm manner.
TUCKER
CARLSON: I wonder if that’s -- I wonder if
that's true with the -- with the war, though, also. I mean, I
just want to -- I guess I want to ask one more question which is, and maybe you don’t want to say
so for strategic reasons, but are you worried that what’s happening in Ukraine
could lead to something much larger and much more horrible? And how motivated are
you just to call the U.S. government and say, “Let’s come to terms?"
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I already said that we did not refuse to talk. We are willing to
negotiate. It is the Western side, and Ukraine is obviously a satellite state of
the U.S. It is evident. I do not want you to take it as if I am looking for a
strong word or an insult, but we both understand what is happening.
The financial support, 72 billion U.S. dollars, was provided. Germany ranks
second, then other European countries come. Dozens of billions of U.S. dollars
are go to Ukraine.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Of course! Yeah.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: There is a huge influx of weapons.
In this case you should tell the current Ukrainian leadership to stop and come
to the negotiating table, rescind this absurd decree. We did not refuse.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Well, sure, you already said it -- I didn’t think you meant
it as an insult -- because you already said, correctly, it's been reported
that Ukraine was prevented from negotiating a peace settlement by the former
British Prime Minister [Johnson], acting on behalf of the Biden Administration.
So, of course,
it's our satellite; big countries control small countries; that's not new. And
that's why I asked about dealing directly with the Biden Administration, which
is making these decisions, not President Zelensky of Ukraine.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Well, if the Zelensky Administration in Ukraine refused to
negotiate, I assume that they did it under the instruction from Washington. If
Washington believes it to be the wrong decision, let it abandon it, let it find
a delicate excuse so that no one is insulted, let it come up with a way out. It
was not us who made this decision, it was them, so let them go back on it. That
is it.
However, they made the wrong decision and now we have to look for a way out of
this situation, to correct their mistakes. They did it so let them correct it
themselves. We support this.
TUCKER
CARLSON: So, I just want to make sure I'm not misunderstanding what you're saying
-- and I don't think that I am. I think you're saying you want a
negotiated settlement to what's happening in Ukraine.
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: Right. And we made it, we prepared a huge document in Istanbul
that was initialed by the head of the Ukrainian delegation. He affixed his
signature to some of the provisions, not to all of it. He put his signature and
then he himself said: “We were ready to sign it and the war would have been over
long ago, eighteen months ago. However, Prime Minister Johnson came, talked us
out of it and we missed that chance.” Well, you missed it, you made a mistake,
let them get back to that, that is all. Why do we have to bother ourselves and
correct somebody else’s mistakes?
I know one can say it is our mistake, it was us who intensified the situation
and decided to put an end to the war that started in 2014 in Donbas, as I have
already said, by means of weapons. Let me get back to further in history, I
already told you this, we were just discussing it. Let us go back to 1991 when
we were promised that NATO would not be expanded, to 2008 when the doors to NATO
opened, to the Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine declaring Ukraine a
neutral state. Let us go back to the fact that NATO and U.S. military bases
started to appear on the territory of Ukraine creating threats for us. Let us go
back to coup d'état in Ukraine in 2014. It is pointless though, isn’t it? We may
go back and forth endlessly. But they stopped negotiations. Is it a mistake?
Yes. Correct it. We are ready. What else is needed?
TUCKER
CARLSON: Do you think it's too humiliating at this point for NATO to
accept Russian control of what was two years ago Ukrainian territory?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: I said let them think how to do it with dignity. There are
options if there is a will.
Up until now there has been the uproar and screaming about inflicting a
strategic defeat on Russia on the battlefield. Now they are apparently coming to
realize that it is difficult to achieve, if possible at all. In my opinion, it
is impossible by definition, it is never going to happen. It seems to me that
now those who are in power in the West have come to realize this as well. If so,
if the realization has set in, they have to think what to do next. We are ready
for this dialogue.
TUCKER
CARLSON: Would you be willing to say, ”Congratulations, NATO, you won?“
And just keep the situation where it is now?
PRESIDENT
PUTIN: You know, it is a subject matter for the negotiations no one is
willing to conduct or, to put it more accurately, they are willing but do not
know how to do it. I know they want. It is not just I see it but I know they do
want it but they are struggling to understand how to do it. They have driven the
situation to the point where we are at. It is not us who have done that, it is
our partners, opponents who have done that. Well, now let them think how to
reverse the situation. We are not against it.
It would be funny if it were not so sad. This endless mobilization in Ukraine,
the hysteria, the domestic problems -- sooner or later it all will result in an
agreement. You know, this will probably sound strange given the current
situation but the relations between the two peoples will be rebuilt anyway. It
will take a lot of time but they will heal.
I will give you very unusual examples. There is a combat encounter on the
battlefield, here is a specific example: Ukrainian soldiers got encircled (this
is an example from real life), our soldiers were shouting to them: “There is no
chance! Surrender yourselves! Come out and you will be alive!” Suddenly the
Ukrainian soldiers were screaming from there in Russian, perfect Russian,
saying: “Russians do not surrender!” and all of them perished. They still
identify themselves as Russian.
What is happening is, to a certain extent, an element of a civil war. Everyone
in the West thinks that the Russian people have been split by hostilities
forever. No. They will be reunited. The unity is still there.
Why are the Ukrainian authorities dismantling the Ukrainian Orthodox Church?
Because it brings together not only the territory, it brings together our souls.
No one will be able to separate the soul.
Shall we end here or there is anything else?
TUCKER
CARLSON: No, I think that's great. Thank you, Mr. President.
2
This line
by Mr. Carlson' does not appear in the official Kremlin transcript and
it is unclear whether that it is a linear response in the immediate
discursive context, although, if it was, it is interesting to speculate
on what discourse may have prompted it.
3
This line appears in the
official Kremlin transcript but not in the video remarks above. Given
President Putin's response and assuming linear discursive editing (and
Kremlin good faith), it seems reasonable to conclude that it, or
something very close to it, may have been delivered by Mr. Carlson..
Original Text, Video, Image Source: Kremlin.ru
Video Note: Audio enhanced,
color adjusted, frame interpolated from 25fps to 60fps