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Home » FULL TRANSCRIPT: Tucker Carlson Interviews Vladimir Putin 2024

FULL TRANSCRIPT: Tucker Carlson Interviews Vladimir Putin 2024

Read the full transcript of Tucker Carlson Interviews Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia. February 6th, 2024.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

TUCKER CARLSON: Mr. President, thank you. On February 22nd, 2022, you addressed your country in a 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?

VLADIMIR PUTIN: It’s not that America, the United States, was going to launch a surprise strike on Russia. I didn’t say that. Are we having a talk show or a serious conversation?

TUCKER CARLSON: Here’s the quote.

VLADIMIR PUTIN: Thank you. It’s a formidable series. Because your basic education is in history, as far as I understand.

TUCKER CARLSON: Yes.

VLADIMIR PUTIN: So if you don’t mind, I will take only 30 seconds or one minute to give you a short reference to history for giving you a little historical background.

TUCKER CARLSON: Please.

Early Russian History

VLADIMIR PUTIN: Let’s look where our relationship with Ukraine started from. Where did Ukraine come from? The Russian state started gathering itself as a centralized statehood. And it is considered to be the year of the establishment of the Russian state, in 862, when the townspeople of Novgorod invited a Varangian prince, Rurik, 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. It 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 the single territory, integrated economic ties, 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 a 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 defragmentation and the end of Rus as a single state. There was nothing special about it. The same was happening then in Europe.

Mongol Invasion and Rise of Moscow

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 center in Moscow. The southern part of Russian lands, including Kiev, began to gradually gravitate towards another magnet, the center 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 this population. They spoke the old Russian language and were orthodox.

Polish-Lithuanian Union and Polonization

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 Polonization of this part of the population. They introduced a language there, tried to entrench the idea that this population was not exactly Russians, that because they lived on the fringe, they were Ukrainians. Originally, the word Ukrainian meant that the person was living on the outskirts of the state, along the fringes, or was engaged in a border patrol 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 people be commissioned here, including to Kiev.

TUCKER CARLSON: I beg your pardon, could you tell us what period? I’m losing track of where in history we are. The Polish oppression of Ukraine.

VLADIMIR PUTIN: It was in the 13th century. Now I will tell you 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 that they send them to 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’m inventing things, I’ll give you these documents.

TUCKER CARLSON: Well, it doesn’t sound like you’re inventing and I’m not sure why it’s relevant to what happened a few years ago. But still,

VLADIMIR PUTIN: These are documents from the archives, copies. Here are the letters from Bohdan Khmelnytsky, the man who then controlled the power in this part of the Russian lands that is now called Ukraine.