Exclusive: Russia Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov Describes the War With the US and How to End It

1h 24m
Russia’s longtime foreign minister describes the war with the United States and how to end it.

(00:00) Is the US at War With Russia?
(12:56) Russia’s Message to the West Through Hypersonic Weapons
(17:47) Is There Conversation Happening Between Russia and the US?
(23:18) How Many Have Died in the Ukraine/Russia War?
(28:21) What Would It Take To End the War?
(36:11) What Happened to Alexei Navalny?
(39:45) Boris Johnson Wants the War to Continue
(45:43) Sanctions on Russia
(56:31) The Chinese/Russian Alliance
(1:02:18) Who Is Making Foreign Policy Decisions in the US?
(1:05:05) Biden Pushes the US Toward Nuclear War Before Trump Takes Office
(1:08:52) What’s Happening in Syria?
(1:13:08) Lavrov’s Thoughts on Trump
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Runtime: 1h 24m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Welcome to the Tucker Carlson Show. We bring you stories that have not been showcased anywhere else.
And they're not censored, of course, because we're not gatekeepers.

Speaker 1 We are honest brokers here to tell you what we think you need to know and do it honestly. Check out all of our content at tuckercarlson.com.

Speaker 2 Here's the episode.

Speaker 1 In the weeks since we left Russia, Moscow, where we are now, in February after interviewing Vladimir Putin, we've watched from the United States as the Biden administration has driven the U.S.

Speaker 1 ever closer to a nuclear conflict with Russia, the country that possesses the world's largest nuclear arsenal.

Speaker 1 It has accelerated ever since, and it's reached its apogee so far in the weeks after Trump's election. He's now the president-elect.

Speaker 1 In that time, just a few weeks ago, the Biden administration, American military personnel, launched missiles into into mainland Russia and killed at least a dozen Russian soldiers.

Speaker 1 So we are, unbeknownst to most Americans, in a hot war with Russia, an undeclared war, a war you did not vote for and that most Americans don't want, but it is ongoing.

Speaker 1 And because of that war, because of the fact that the U.S. military is killing Russians in Russia right now, we are closer to nuclear war than at any time in history.

Speaker 1 Far closer than we were during the Cuban Missile Crisis. That would mean the elimination of Russia, the United States, and most of the rest of the world.

Speaker 1 We felt there must be someone behind the scenes in Washington working to make sure that this conflict doesn't become a nuclear holocaust. But we found out that no, in fact, there is nobody.

Speaker 1 Tony Blinken, the current Secretary of State, cut off all contact between the U.S. and Russian governments.
There is no back channel. There is no conversation.

Speaker 1 There hasn't been for more than two years. That's shocking.
Meanwhile, most Americans have no access to any perspective other than that granted to them by NBC News and the New York Times.

Speaker 1 They don't know how close we are. They don't know the Russian perspective.

Speaker 1 We've been trying for over a year to get that perspective out to American news consumers. We've also tried for over a year to get an interview with Zelensky, the president of Ukraine.

Speaker 1 We've attacked that from a bunch of different angles. We've spoken to a lot of different people around him, had dinner with them.
We've been in talks continuously.

Speaker 1 And those efforts have been thwarted by the U.S. government.
The American embassy in Kiev, which our tax dollars pay for, told the Zelensky government, no, you may not do the interview.

Speaker 1 You can talk to CNN. You can't talk to us.
So we've been unable to speak to him.

Speaker 1 So we came back to Moscow yesterday to interview the foreign minister of Russia, Sergei Lavrov, the longest-serving foreign minister in the world. He's been a part of this government for 25 years.

Speaker 1 He's been in the diplomatic corps for over 40, and asked him, where exactly are we? Are we headed toward

Speaker 1 an unprecedented conflict between Russia and the United States? Is there any way to peel Russia back from the East, from the sphere of China, back back into the West? Is that alliance permanent?

Speaker 1 And does the election of Donald Trump mean an end to this war, which is reshaping the world, the U.S. economy, the global economy, and risking the life of every person on this planet?

Speaker 2 Is that possible?

Speaker 1 Minister Levrot, thank you for doing this.

Speaker 1 Do you believe the United States and Russia are at war with each other right now?

Speaker 2 I wouldn't say so. And

Speaker 2 in any case, this is not what we want.

Speaker 2 We would like to have normal normal relations with all our neighbors, of course, but generally with all countries on Earth, especially with the great country like the United States.

Speaker 2 President Putin repeatedly expressed his respect for the American people, for the American history, for the American achievements in the world.

Speaker 2 And we don't see any

Speaker 2 reason why Russia and the United States cannot cooperate for the sake of the universe.

Speaker 1 But the United States is funding a conflict that you're involved in, of course, and now is allowing

Speaker 1 attacks on Russia itself. So that doesn't constitute war?

Speaker 2 Well,

Speaker 2 we

Speaker 2 officially are not at war. But what is going on in Ukraine

Speaker 2 is the some people call it hybrid war.

Speaker 2 I would call it hybrid war as well.

Speaker 2 But it is obvious that the Ukrainians would not be able to do what they are doing with long-range modern weapons without direct participation of the American servicemen. And

Speaker 2 this is dangerous, no doubt about this. We don't want to aggravate the situation, but since ATACOMs and other

Speaker 2 long-range weapons are being used against mainland Russia, as it were,

Speaker 2 we are sending signals and we hope that the last one, a couple of weeks ago, the signal with the new weapon system called Dereshnik

Speaker 2 was

Speaker 2 taken seriously.

Speaker 2 However, we also know that some

Speaker 2 officials in the Pentagon and in other places, including NATO, they started saying in the last few days something like, well, NATO is a defensive alliance, but sometimes you can strike first because the attack is the best defense.

Speaker 2 Some others in Stratcom, I think

Speaker 2 Eukinen is his name,

Speaker 2 representative of Stratcom, he said

Speaker 2 something which allows for

Speaker 2 an eventuality of exchange of limited nuclear strikes.

Speaker 2 And this kind of threats are really worrying, because if they are following the logic which some

Speaker 2 Westerners have been pronouncing lately, that well

Speaker 2 don't believe that Russia has red lines. They announced their red lines.
These red lines are being moved again and again and again.

Speaker 2 This is a very serious mistake. That's what

Speaker 2 I would like to say in response to this question.

Speaker 2 It is not us who started the war. Putin repeatedly said that we started the operation in order to end the war which the Kyiv regime was conducting against its own people in the parts of Donbass.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 just in his later statement, the President clearly indicated that we are ready for any eventuality, but we strongly prefer peaceful solution through negotiations on the basis of respecting legitimate security interests of Russia and on the basis of respecting the people

Speaker 2 who live in Ukraine,

Speaker 2 who

Speaker 2 still live in Ukraine being Russians, and their

Speaker 2 basic human rights, language rights, religious rights have been exterminated by

Speaker 2 series of legislation passed by the Ukrainian parliament and they started long before the special military operation. Since 2017, legislation was passed prohibiting Russian education in Russian.

Speaker 2 prohibiting Russian media operating in Ukraine, then prohibiting Ukrainian media working in Russian language. And the latest, of course, there were also steps to cancel any cultural events in Russia.

Speaker 2 Russian books were thrown out of libraries and

Speaker 2 exterminated. And the latest was the law prohibiting canonic

Speaker 2 Orthodox Church, Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

Speaker 2 While, and you know it's very interesting when

Speaker 2 people

Speaker 2 in the West say we want

Speaker 2 this conflict to be resolved on the basis of the UN Charter and respect for territorial integrity of Ukraine, Russia must withdraw.

Speaker 2 The Secretary General of the United Nations says similar things.

Speaker 2 Recently, his representative repeated that the conflict must be resolved on the basis of international law, UN Charter, General Assembly resolutions, while respecting territorial integrity of Ukraine.

Speaker 2 It's a misnomer because if you

Speaker 2 want to respect the United Nations Charter, you have to respect it in its entirety. And the United Nations Charter, among other things, says that all countries must respect equality

Speaker 2 of states

Speaker 2 and the right of people for self-determination.

Speaker 2 And they also mentioned the United Nations General Assembly resolutions, and

Speaker 2 this is clear that what they mean is the series of resolutions

Speaker 2 which they passed after the beginning of the special military operation and which demand condemnation of Russia, Russia get out of Ukraine territory in nineteen ninety one borders.

Speaker 2 But there are other United Nations General Assembly resolutions which were not voted, but which were consensual.

Speaker 2 And among them is a declaration on principles of relations between states on the basis of the Charter.

Speaker 2 And it clearly says by consensus,

Speaker 2 everybody must respect territorial integrity of states whose governments respect the right of people for self-determination

Speaker 2 and because of that,

Speaker 2 represent the entire population living on a given territory.

Speaker 2 To argue that the people who came to power through military coup d'état in February 2014 represented Crimeans or the citizens of eastern and southern Ukraine is absolutely useless.

Speaker 2 It is obvious that Crimeans rejected the coup. They said, leave us alone, we don't want to have anything with you.
So did Donbass. Crimeans held referendum and they rejoined Russia.

Speaker 2 Donbass was declared by the putschis who came to power, a terrorist group.

Speaker 2 They were shelled, attacked by artillery. The war started, which was stopped in February 2015.

Speaker 2 And the Minsk agreements were signed. And we were very sincerely interested in closing this drama by seeing Minsk agreements implemented fully.

Speaker 2 It was sabotaged by the government which was established after the coup d'état in Ukraine. There was a demand that they enter into a direct dialogue with the people who did not accept the coup.

Speaker 2 There was a demand that they

Speaker 2 promote economic relations with that part of Ukraine, and so on and so forth. None of this was done.

Speaker 2 The people in Kyiv were saying we would never talk to them directly.

Speaker 2 And this is in spite of the fact that the demand to talk to them directly was endorsed by the Security Council.

Speaker 2 And they said they are terrorists, we would be, you know, fighting them, and they would be dying in cellars because we are stronger.

Speaker 2 Had the

Speaker 2 coup in February 2014

Speaker 2 had it not happened

Speaker 2 and had the deal which was reached the day before between the then president and the opposition implemented, Ukraine would have stayed one peace by now with Crimea in it.

Speaker 2 It's absolutely clear.

Speaker 2 They did not deliver on the deal, instead they staged the coup. The deal, by the way, provided for creation of a government of national unity in February 2014 and holding early elections which the

Speaker 2 then president

Speaker 2 would have lost.

Speaker 2 Everybody knew that. But they were

Speaker 2 impatient and they took the government buildings next morning. They went to this Maidan Square and announced that they created the government of the winners.

Speaker 2 Compare the government of national unity to prepare for elections and the government of the winners. How can the people

Speaker 2 whom they,

Speaker 2 in their view, defeated,

Speaker 2 how can they pretend that they respect the authorities and Kiev?

Speaker 2 You know, the right for self-determination is the international legal basis for decolonization process, which took place in Africa on the basis of this charter principle right for self-determination the people in the colonies they never treated the colonial powers colonial masters as somebody who represent them as somebody whom they want to see

Speaker 2 in the in the

Speaker 2 structures which govern those lands. By the same token, the people in east and south of Ukraine,

Speaker 2 people in Donbass and Novorossiyah, they don't consider the Zelensky regime as

Speaker 2 something which represents their interests.

Speaker 2 How can they, when their culture, their language, their traditions, their religion, all this

Speaker 2 was prohibited. Yes.

Speaker 2 And the last point is that if we speak about the UN Charter, resolutions, international law, the very first article of the UN Charter, which the West never, never recalls in the Ukrainian context, says, respect human rights of everybody,

Speaker 2 irrespective of race,

Speaker 2 gender, language, or religion.

Speaker 2 Take any conflict. The United States, UK, Brussels, they would interfere saying, oh, human rights have been grossly violated.
We must restore the human rights in such and such territory. On Ukraine,

Speaker 2 never,

Speaker 2 ever they mumbled the words human rights,

Speaker 2 seeing these human rights for the Russian and Russian-speaking population being totally exterminated by law.

Speaker 2 So when people say let's resolve the conflict on the basis of the charter, yes.

Speaker 2 But don't forget that the charter is not only about territorial integrity and territorial integrity must be respected only if the governments are legitimate and if they respect the right of their own people.

Speaker 1 I want to go back to what you said a moment ago about the introduction or the unveiling of the hypersonic weapon system that you said was a signal to the West.

Speaker 1 What signal exactly, I think many Americans are not even aware that this happened. What message were you sending by showing it to the world?

Speaker 2 Well, the message is that you, I mean, you, the United States, and the

Speaker 2 allies of the United States who also provide this long-range

Speaker 2 weapons to the Kiev regime, they must understand that we would be ready to use any means not to allow them to succeed in what they call strategic defeat of Russia.

Speaker 2 They

Speaker 2 fight fight

Speaker 2 for

Speaker 2 keeping their hegemony over the world, on any country, any region, any continent. We fight for our legitimate security interests.

Speaker 2 They say, for example, 1991 borders.

Speaker 2 Lindsey Gremp, who visited some time ago Zelensky for another

Speaker 2 talk,

Speaker 2 he bluntly, in presence of Zelensky, I think, said that Ukraine is very rich with rare earth metals

Speaker 2 and we cannot leave

Speaker 2 this richness to the Russians. We must take it.

Speaker 2 We fight, so they fight for

Speaker 2 the regime which is ready to sell or to give to the West

Speaker 2 all the natural and human resources.

Speaker 2 We fight for the people

Speaker 2 who have been living on these lands, whose ancestors were actually developing those lands, building cities, building factories for centuries and centuries. We care about people, not about

Speaker 2 natural resources,

Speaker 2 which somebody in the United States

Speaker 2 would like to keep.

Speaker 2 and to have Ukrainians just as

Speaker 2 servants sitting on these natural resources. So, the message which we wanted to sell by

Speaker 2 testing

Speaker 2 in real action this hypersonic system

Speaker 2 is that we will

Speaker 2 be ready to do anything to defend our legitimate interests. We hate even to think about war with the United States, which will take

Speaker 2 a nuclear character. Our military doctrine says that the most important thing is to avoid a nuclear war.
And it was us, by the way, who initiated in January 2022

Speaker 2 the message, the joint statement by the leaders of the five permanent members of the Security Council saying that we will do anything to avoid confrontation between us, acknowledging and respecting each other's security interests and concerns.

Speaker 2 This was our initiative. And the security interests of Russia were totally ignored when they rejected, about the same time, when they rejected the proposal to conclude a treaty.

Speaker 2 on security guarantees for Russia, for Ukraine, in the context of

Speaker 2 coexistence, and in the context when Ukraine would not be ever member of NATO or any other military bloc.

Speaker 2 These security interests of Russia were presented to the West, to NATO, and to the United States in December 2021.

Speaker 2 We discussed them several times, including during my meeting with Tony Brinkin in Geneva in January, late January 2022, and this was rejected.

Speaker 2 So we

Speaker 2 would certainly like

Speaker 2 to avoid any misunderstanding. And since the people,

Speaker 2 some people in Washington and some people in London, in Brussels,

Speaker 2 seem to be

Speaker 2 not very capable to understand,

Speaker 2 we will send additional messages

Speaker 2 if they don't draw necessary conclusions.

Speaker 1 Aaron Powell, Jr.: The fact that we're having a conversation about a potential nuclear exchange and it's real

Speaker 1 is remarkable. Not something I thought I'd ever see.
And it raises the question, how much

Speaker 1 back-channel dialogue is there between Russia and the United States? Has there been for the last two and a half years? Is there any conversation?

Speaker 2 There are several channels, but mostly on

Speaker 2 exchange of people who serve terms in Russia and in the United States. There were several swaps.

Speaker 2 There are also channels which are not advertised or publicized,

Speaker 2 but basically the Americans send through these channels the same message which they sent publicly.

Speaker 2 You have to stop.

Speaker 2 You have to

Speaker 2 accept the

Speaker 2 way which will be based on the Ukrainian needs and Ukrainian position.

Speaker 2 They support this absolutely pointless peace formula by Zelensky, which was additioned recently by victory plan.

Speaker 2 They held several series of meetings, Copenhagen format, Bjürgenstock, what have you.

Speaker 2 And they

Speaker 2 brag

Speaker 2 that next year, first half of next year, they will convene another conference and they will graciously invite Russia at that time. And then Russia would be presented an ultimatum.
All this is

Speaker 2 seriously

Speaker 2 repeated through various confidential channels. Now we hear something different,

Speaker 2 including Zelensky's statements that we can stop now at the line of engagement, line of contact.

Speaker 2 The

Speaker 2 Ukrainian government

Speaker 2 will be admitted to NATO, but NATO guarantees at this stage would cover only the territory controlled by the government, and the rest

Speaker 2 would be subject to negotiations, but the end result of these negotiations must be total withdrawal of Russia from

Speaker 2 Russian soil, basically.

Speaker 2 Leaving Russian people to the NASIS regime, which exterminated all the rights of the Russian and Russian-speaking citizens of their own country.

Speaker 1 If I just go back to the question of nuclear exchange, so there is no mechanism by which the leaders of Russia and the United States can speak to each other to avoid the kind of misunderstanding that could kill hundreds of millions of people.

Speaker 2 No, no, no. We have this channel which is automatically engaged when ballistic missile launch is

Speaker 2 taking place.

Speaker 2 As regards this Areshnik hypersonic ballistic missile, mid-range ballistic missile,

Speaker 2 30 minutes in advance, this system sent the message to the United States and they knew that

Speaker 2 this was the case and that they don't mistake it for anything bigger and real dangerous.

Speaker 1 I think the system sounds very dangerous.

Speaker 2 Well,

Speaker 2 it was a test launch, you know. Yes.

Speaker 1 Oh, you're speaking of the test, okay. But I just wonder how worried you are that.

Speaker 1 Considering there doesn't seem to be a lot of conversation between the two countries, both sides are speaking about exterminating the other's populations, that this could somehow get out of control in a very short period and no one could stop it.

Speaker 1 It seems incredibly no, we are not.

Speaker 2 We are not talking about exterminating anybody's population. We did not start this war.
We have been

Speaker 2 for years and years and years sending warnings that pushing NATO closer and closer to our borders

Speaker 2 is going to create a problem.

Speaker 2 In 2007,

Speaker 2 Putin started

Speaker 2 to explain

Speaker 2 to the people who seem to be overtaken by the end of history and being dominant,

Speaker 2 no challenge and so on and so forth. And of course, when the

Speaker 2 coup

Speaker 2 took place, the Americans did not hide that they were behind it. There is

Speaker 2 a conversation between Victoria Nuland and the then American ambassador in Kyiv when they discuss

Speaker 2 personalities to be included in the new government after the coup.

Speaker 2 The figure of five billion bucks

Speaker 2 spent on Ukraine after independence was mentioned as the guarantee that everything would be like the Americans want.

Speaker 2 So we don't have any intention to exterminate Ukrainian people. They They are

Speaker 2 brothers and sisters to the Russian people.

Speaker 1 How many have died so far, do you think, on both sides?

Speaker 2 It is not disclosed by Ukrainians. Zelensky was

Speaker 2 saying that it is much less than 80,000 persons on Ukrainian side. But there is one very, very reliable figure.

Speaker 2 In

Speaker 2 Palestine,

Speaker 2 during one year

Speaker 2 after the Israelis started the operation in response to this terrorist attack, which we condemned, and this operation, of course, acquired

Speaker 2 the proportion of collective punishment, which is

Speaker 2 against international humanitarian law as well. So during one year after the operation started in Palestine, the number of civilians, Palestinian civilians,

Speaker 2 killed is estimated

Speaker 2 45,000.

Speaker 2 This is almost twice as many as the number of civilians on both sides of Ukrainian conflict who died during 10 years after the coup. One year and ten years.

Speaker 2 So it is a tragedy

Speaker 2 in Ukraine, it's disaster in Palestine,

Speaker 2 but

Speaker 2 we never ever

Speaker 2 had as our goal killing people. And the Ukrainian regime did.

Speaker 2 The

Speaker 2 head of the office of Zelensky

Speaker 2 once said that

Speaker 2 we will

Speaker 2 make sure that

Speaker 2 cities like Kharkov and Nikolaev will forget what Russian means at all.

Speaker 2 Another guy in his office

Speaker 2 stated that Ukrainians must exterminate Russians through law or if necessary physically.

Speaker 2 Ukrainian former ambassador to Kazakhstan, forgot his name.

Speaker 2 became famous when giving an interview and looking into the camera being recorded and broadcast. He said, our main task is to kill as many Russians as we can

Speaker 2 so that our kids have less things to do.

Speaker 2 And the statements like this are all over the vocabulary of the regime.

Speaker 1 How many Russians in Russia have been killed since February of 2022?

Speaker 2 It's not for me to disclose this information.

Speaker 2 In the time of military operations, special rules exist, and our Ministry of Defense follows these rules. But

Speaker 2 the

Speaker 2 very interesting fact that when Zelensky was

Speaker 2 playing

Speaker 2 not

Speaker 2 in international arena, but at his

Speaker 2 comedy club or whatever it is called,

Speaker 2 he was

Speaker 2 there are

Speaker 2 videos

Speaker 2 from that period when he was

Speaker 2 bluntly defending the Russian language. He was saying,

Speaker 2 what is wrong with Russian language? I speak Russian. Russians are our neighbors.
Russian is

Speaker 2 one of our languages.

Speaker 2 And get lost, he said, to those who wanted to

Speaker 2 attack the Russian language and Russian culture. When he became president, he changed very fast.
And

Speaker 2 before the military operations, in September 2021, he was interviewed.

Speaker 2 And at that time, he was conducting war against Donbass

Speaker 2 in violation of the Minsk agreements. And the interviewer asked him what he thought about the people on the other side of the line of contact.
And he answered very thoughtfully:

Speaker 2 you know, there are people and there are species.

Speaker 2 And if you living in Ukraine feel associated with the Russian culture, my advice to you, for the sake of your kids, for the sake of your grandkids, get out to Russia.

Speaker 2 And if if

Speaker 2 this guy

Speaker 2 wants to bring Russians and people of Russian culture

Speaker 2 back

Speaker 2 under his territorial integrity.

Speaker 2 I mean,

Speaker 2 it shows that he is not adequate.

Speaker 1 So what are the terms under which Russia would cease hostilities? Like,

Speaker 1 what are you asking for?

Speaker 2 Ten years ago, in February 2014,

Speaker 2 we were asking only

Speaker 2 for the deal between the president and the opposition. Yes.
to have government of national unions to hold early elections to be implemented.

Speaker 2 The deal was signed and we were asking for the implementation of this deal.

Speaker 2 They were absolutely impatient and aggressive and they were of course pushed, I have no slightest doubt, by the Americans because if Victoria Noland and the US ambassador agreed the composition of the government, why wait for five weeks, for five months to hold early elections?

Speaker 2 The

Speaker 2 next time we were in favor of something was when the Minsk agreements were signed.

Speaker 2 I was there, the negotiations lasted for 17 hours.

Speaker 2 And the deal was, well, Crimea was lost

Speaker 2 by that time

Speaker 2 because of referendum and nobody, including my colleague John Kerry, meeting with us, nobody in the West was raising the issue of Crimea. Everybody was concentrated on Donbass.

Speaker 2 And the Minsk agreements provided for

Speaker 2 territorial integrity of Ukraine, minus Crimea. This was not even raised,

Speaker 2 and a special status for a very tiny part of Donbas, not for the entire Donbass. not for

Speaker 2 Novorossi at all.

Speaker 2 Part of Donbass under these Minsk agreements endorsed by the Security Council should have the right to speak Russian language, to teach Russian language, to study in Russian, to have local law enforcement like in the states of US,

Speaker 2 to be consulted when judges and prosecutors are appointed by the central authority, and to have some some facilitated economic connections with neighboring regions of Russia.

Speaker 2 That's it.

Speaker 2 Something which President Macron promised to give to Corsica and still is

Speaker 2 considering how to do this.

Speaker 2 And when

Speaker 2 these

Speaker 2 agreements

Speaker 2 were sabotaged all along by first by Parashenko and then by Zelensky. Both of them, by the way, came to presidency running on the promise of peace, and both of them

Speaker 2 lied.

Speaker 2 So when these Minsk agreements were sabotaged to the extent that we

Speaker 2 saw the attempts to take this tiny part of Donbass by force,

Speaker 2 and we, as Putin explained,

Speaker 2 we have

Speaker 2 at that time, we suggested these security arrangements to NATO and the United States,

Speaker 2 which was rejected.

Speaker 2 And when the Plan B was launched by Ukraine and its sponsors,

Speaker 2 trying to take this part of Donbass by force, it was then that

Speaker 2 we launched the special military operation.

Speaker 2 Had they implemented the Minsk agreements, Ukraine would be one piece minus Crimea. But even then, when Ukrainians, after we started the operation, suggested to negotiate, we agreed.

Speaker 2 There were several rounds in Belarus, and one later they moved to Istanbul. And in Istanbul, Ukrainian delegation put

Speaker 2 a paper on the table saying those are the principles on which we are ready to agree.

Speaker 2 And we accepted those principles.

Speaker 1 The Minsk principles.

Speaker 2 No, no, no. The Istanbul principles.
That was April 22. Right.

Speaker 2 Which was no NATO,

Speaker 2 but

Speaker 2 security guarantees to Ukraine collectively provided with the participation of Russia.

Speaker 2 And these security guarantees

Speaker 2 would not cover Crimea or the east of Ukraine. It was their proposal.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 it was initialed. And the head of the Ukrainian delegation in Istanbul, who is now the

Speaker 2 chair of the Zelensky faction in the parliament,

Speaker 2 he recently, a few months ago, in an interview, he confirmed that this was the case. And on the basis of these principles, we were ready to draft a treaty.

Speaker 2 But then this gentleman who headed the Ukrainian delegation in Istanbul, he said that

Speaker 2 Boris Johnson visited and told them to continue to fight.

Speaker 2 Then there was

Speaker 1 But Boris Johnson on behalf of Ukraine?

Speaker 2 He said no, but you know, the guy who

Speaker 2 initialed the paper, he said it was Boris Johnson.

Speaker 2 Other people say it was Putin who ruined the deal because of the massacre in Bucha. But massacre in Bucha is is something which

Speaker 2 they never mentioned anymore, massacre in Bucha. I do, and we do.

Speaker 2 In a sense,

Speaker 2 they are on the defensive. Several times in the United Nations Security Council, sitting at the table with Antonio Guterres,

Speaker 2 I, two years ago and last year,

Speaker 2 last year and this year at the General Assembly, I raised the issue of Butcher and said, guys, it is strange that you are silent about Butcher because you were very vocal when BBC team found itself on the street where the bodies were located.

Speaker 2 And can we,

Speaker 2 I inquired, can we get the names of the persons whose bodies were broadcast by BBC?

Speaker 2 Total silence. I addressed Antonio Guteros personally in the presence of the Security Council members.

Speaker 2 He did not respond. Then at my press conference in New York after the end of the General Assembly last September,

Speaker 2 I asked all the correspondents, guys, you

Speaker 2 are journalists.

Speaker 2 Maybe you're not an investigative journalist, but journalists normally are interested to get the truth. And butcher thing, which was played all over the media outlets condemning Russia,

Speaker 2 is not of any interest to anyone. Politicians, UN officials, and now even journalists.
I asked them when I talked to them in September, please, as

Speaker 2 professional people,

Speaker 2 try to get the names of those whose bodies were shown and butcher. No answer.
Just like we don't have any answer to the

Speaker 2 question:

Speaker 2 where is the results of

Speaker 1 medical analysis of Alexei Navalny,

Speaker 2 who died recently,

Speaker 2 but who was treated

Speaker 2 in Germany in the fall of 2020 when he fell bad on a plane over Russia, the plane landed, he was treated by the Russian doctors in Siberia, then the Germans wanted to take him.

Speaker 2 We immediately allowed the plane to come. They took him.
In less than 24 hours, he was in Germany. And then the Germans continued to say that we poisoned him.

Speaker 2 And we asked them, can you...

Speaker 2 And they announced that the analysis confirmed. that he was poisoned.
We asked for the test results to be given to us. They said, no, we give it to the organization on chemical weapons.

Speaker 2 We went to this organization, we are members, and we said, can you show it to us, because this is our citizen, we are

Speaker 2 accused of having poisoned him. They said, the Germans told us not to give it to you

Speaker 2 because

Speaker 2 they found nothing in the civilian hospital.

Speaker 2 And the

Speaker 2 announcement that he was poisoned was

Speaker 2 made

Speaker 2 after

Speaker 2 he was treated in a military hospital, Bundeswar hospital.

Speaker 2 So it seems that

Speaker 2 this

Speaker 2 secret is not going to be.

Speaker 1 So how did Navalny die?

Speaker 2 Well he died

Speaker 2 serving the term in Russia. But he

Speaker 2 during, during, as far as it was reported, every now and then he felt not well, which was another reason why we continued to ask the Germans, can you show us the results which you found?

Speaker 2 Because we did not find what they found.

Speaker 2 And what they did to him, I don't know.

Speaker 1 What the Germans did to him.

Speaker 2 Yeah, because

Speaker 2 they don't explain to anybody, including us.

Speaker 2 Or maybe they explained to the Americans,

Speaker 2 maybe this is credible. But they never told us how they treated him, what they found,

Speaker 2 and what methods they were using.

Speaker 1 How do you think he died?

Speaker 2 I am not a doctor. But for anybody to guess, even for the doctors to try to guess, they need to have information.

Speaker 2 And if the person was taken to Germany to be treated after he had been poisoned, the results of then of the tests cannot be secret.

Speaker 2 We still cannot

Speaker 2 get

Speaker 2 anything credible on the fate of Skripal, Sergei Skripal and his daughter.

Speaker 2 The information is not provided to us.

Speaker 2 He is

Speaker 2 our citizen, she is our citizen.

Speaker 2 And we have

Speaker 2 all the rights under conventions which the UK is party to to get information.

Speaker 1 Why do you think so many threads, but why do you think that Boris Johnson, former Prime Minister of the UK, would have stopped the peace process in Istanbul? On whose behalf was he doing?

Speaker 2 Well, I met with him a couple of times, and

Speaker 2 I wouldn't be surprised if

Speaker 2 he was motivated by some immediate desire or by some long-term strategy. He is not very predictable.

Speaker 2 Okay.

Speaker 1 Do you think he was acting on behalf of the U.S. government, on behalf of the Biden administration? He was doing this independently? I mean, on.

Speaker 2 I don't know.

Speaker 2 I don't know, and I wouldn't guess. The fact that

Speaker 2 the Americans and the Brits are leading in

Speaker 2 this quote-unquote situation is obvious.

Speaker 2 Now it is

Speaker 2 becoming also clear that there is a fatigue

Speaker 2 in some capitals and there are talks every now and then that the Americans would like to leave it with the Europeans and to concentrate on something more important.

Speaker 2 I wouldn't guess.

Speaker 2 We would be judging by

Speaker 2 specific steps.

Speaker 2 It's obvious though that Biden administration would like to leave legacy to the Trump administration as bad as they can. Yes.

Speaker 2 And similar to what Obama did to Trump during his first term, when late December 2016,

Speaker 2 Obama expelled Russian diplomats, just

Speaker 2 very late December, 120 persons with family members,

Speaker 2 did it on purpose, demanded them on leave on the day when there was no direct flight from Washington.

Speaker 2 So they had to move to New York by buses with all their luggage, with children and so on and so forth. And at the same time, Obama announced the arrest of pieces of diplomatic property of Russia.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 we still never were able. to come and see what is the state of

Speaker 2 this

Speaker 2 Russian property. They never allowed us to come and see, though, under all conventions.

Speaker 2 They just say that these pieces we don't consider as being covered by diplomatic immunity, which is a unilateral decision never substantiated by any international court.

Speaker 1 So, you believe the Biden administration is doing something similar again to the incoming Trump administration?

Speaker 2 Because that episode with the expulsion and the seizure of property certainly did not create the

Speaker 2 promising ground for the beginning of our relations with the Trump administration.

Speaker 2 So I think they're doing the same.

Speaker 1 But this time, President Trump was elected on the explicit promise to bring an end to the war in Ukraine.

Speaker 1 So, I mean, he said that in

Speaker 1 appearance after appearance. So given that, there is hope for a resolution, it sounds like.
What are the terms to which you'd agree?

Speaker 2 Well, the terms I basically alluded to them

Speaker 2 when

Speaker 2 President Putin spoke in this ministry on the 14th of June, he once again reiterated that we were ready to negotiate on the basis of the principles which were agreed in Istanbul and rejected by Boris Johnson, according to the statement of the head of the Ukrainian delegation.

Speaker 2 The key principle is

Speaker 2 no non-bloc status of Ukraine, and we would be ready to be part of the group of countries who would provide collective security guarantees to Ukraine.

Speaker 1 No NATO.

Speaker 2 No NATO, absolutely. No military bases, no

Speaker 2 military exercises on the Ukrainian soil with participation of

Speaker 2 foreign troops. And this is something which he reiterated.
But of course, he said it was

Speaker 2 April 2022.

Speaker 2 Now some time has passed. And the realities on the ground would have to be taken into account and accepted.

Speaker 2 The realities on the ground are not only the line of contact, but also the changes in the Russian constitution after referenda was held in

Speaker 2 Donetsk, Lugansk republics, and Kherson and Zaporozhye regions.

Speaker 2 And they are now part of the Russian Federation according to the constitution and this is a reality.

Speaker 2 And of course

Speaker 2 we cannot

Speaker 2 tolerate a deal which would keep

Speaker 2 the legislation which I

Speaker 2 quoted prohibiting Russian language, Russian media, Russian culture,

Speaker 2 Ukrainian Orthodox Church, because it is a violation of the obligations of Ukraine under the UN Charter, and somebody must be done about it. And the fact that the West, since this russophobic

Speaker 2 legislative offensive started in 2017, since the West was totally silent, and it is silent until now, of course, we would have to pay attention to this in a very special way.

Speaker 1 Would dropping sanctions against Russia be a condition?

Speaker 2 I would say

Speaker 2 probably many people in Russia would like to make it a condition,

Speaker 2 but the more we live under sanctions, the more we understand

Speaker 2 that it is better to rely on yourself and to develop mechanisms, to develop platforms for cooperation with normal countries who are not unfriendly to you

Speaker 2 and don't mix economic interest and policies and especially politics.

Speaker 2 And we learned a lot after the sanctions started.

Speaker 2 Sanctions started under Obama. They continued in a very big way under the first term of Trump.

Speaker 2 And these

Speaker 2 sanctions under the Biden administration are absolutely unprecedented. But

Speaker 2 what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, you know.

Speaker 2 Well, but it also just drives you strong. They would never kill us, so they are making us stronger.

Speaker 1 And driving Russia east. And so the vision that I think sane policymakers in Washington had 20 years ago is why not bring Russia into a Western bloc

Speaker 1 sort of as a balance against the rising East.

Speaker 1 But it doesn't seem like that. Do you think that's still possible?

Speaker 2 I don't think so. Recently, Putin was

Speaker 2 speaking at Waldai club,

Speaker 2 palatologists and experts.

Speaker 2 He said we would never

Speaker 2 be back at the situation of early 2022.

Speaker 2 That's when

Speaker 2 he

Speaker 2 realized for himself, apparently,

Speaker 2 not only he, but he spoke publicly about this, that all attempts to be

Speaker 2 on equal terms with the West have failed. It started

Speaker 2 after the demise of the Soviet Union. There was euphoria.
We are now part of the

Speaker 2 liberal world, the democratic world, end of history. But very soon it was it became clear to most of the Russians that

Speaker 2 in the 90s we were treated as

Speaker 2 at best as junior partner, maybe not even as a partner, but as a place

Speaker 2 where

Speaker 2 the West can organize things like it like it wants,

Speaker 2 striking deals with oligarchs, buying

Speaker 2 resources and assets.

Speaker 2 And then

Speaker 2 probably the Americans decided that Russia is in their pocket.

Speaker 2 Boris Yeltsin, Bill Clinton, buddies laughing,

Speaker 2 joking.

Speaker 2 But even at the end of Yeltsin's term, he started to contemplate that this was not something

Speaker 2 she wanted for Russia.

Speaker 2 And I think this was

Speaker 2 very obvious

Speaker 2 when he

Speaker 2 appointed Putin prime minister and then left

Speaker 2 earlier and

Speaker 2 blessed Putin as his successor for the elections which were coming and which Putin won.

Speaker 2 But when

Speaker 2 Putin became president, he was very much open to cooperation with the West. And he mentions about this quite regularly when he speaks with interviewers

Speaker 2 at some

Speaker 2 international events.

Speaker 2 I was present when

Speaker 2 he met with

Speaker 2 George Bush Jr., with Obama.

Speaker 2 Well,

Speaker 2 after the meeting of NATO in Bucharest, which was accompanied, which was followed by NATO-Russia meeting, summit meeting in 2008,

Speaker 2 when they announced that Georgia and Ukraine will be in NATO.

Speaker 2 And then they tried to sell it to... We asked why.

Speaker 2 There was lunch and Putin asked what was the reason for this. Good question.
And they said,

Speaker 2 you know, this is something which is not obligatory. How come?

Speaker 2 Well, you know,

Speaker 2 to

Speaker 2 start the process of joining NATO, you need

Speaker 2 a formal invitation.

Speaker 2 And this is a slogan. Ukraine and Georgia will be in NATO.

Speaker 2 But this slogan,

Speaker 2 you know, became obsession for some people in Tbilisi first, when Saakashvira lost his senses and started the war against his own people under the protection of OSC

Speaker 2 mission with the Russian peacekeepers on the ground. And the fact that he launched this was confirmed by the European Union investigation,

Speaker 2 which they launched and which concluded that he gave the order to start.

Speaker 2 And for Ukrainians it took a bit longer

Speaker 2 and they were cultivating this

Speaker 2 pro-Western mood.

Speaker 2 Well, pro-Western is not bad, basically.

Speaker 2 Pro-Eastern is also not bad. What is bad is that you tell people, either or,

Speaker 2 Either you go with me or you're my enemy. What happened before the coup in Ukraine? In 2013,

Speaker 2 the President of Ukraine, it was Mr. Yanukovych,

Speaker 2 negotiated with the European Union some association agreement which would nullify tariffs on most of the Ukrainian goods to the European Union and the other way around.

Speaker 2 And at some point, when he was meeting with Russian counterparts,

Speaker 2 we told him

Speaker 2 you have already, Ukraine had

Speaker 2 was part of the free trade area of the Commonwealth of Independent State, no tariffs for everybody.

Speaker 2 And we, Russia, negotiated agreement with

Speaker 2 the World Trade Organization for some 15, 17 years, mostly because

Speaker 2 we bargained with European Union and we achieved some protection for many of our sectors,

Speaker 2 agriculture, some others,

Speaker 2 and we explained to the Ukrainians that if you go zero in your trade with European Union, we would have to protect our customs border with you, with Ukraine.

Speaker 2 Otherwise, the zero tariff European goods would flood and would be hurting our industries, which we tried to protect and agreed for some protection. Then we suggested

Speaker 2 to the European Union, guys, Ukraine is our common neighbor. You want to have better trade with Ukraine.
We want the same. Ukraine wants to have markets both in Europe and in Russia.

Speaker 2 Why don't we see three of us

Speaker 2 and discuss it like grown-ups?

Speaker 2 The head of the

Speaker 2 European Council

Speaker 2 commission, Commission was the Portuguese

Speaker 2 Barroso, was his name.

Speaker 2 And he responded,

Speaker 2 you know, it's none of your business what we do with Ukraine.

Speaker 2 We, for example, we, the European Union, we don't ask you to discuss with us your trade with China.

Speaker 2 Absolutely arrogant answer.

Speaker 2 And then

Speaker 2 the president of Ukraine, Yanukovych, he convened his experts and the experts said, yes, it would be not very good if we have

Speaker 2 opened the border with

Speaker 2 the European Union, but the customs border with Russia would be closed and they would be checking, you know,

Speaker 2 what is coming

Speaker 2 so that the Russian market is not affected.

Speaker 2 And he

Speaker 2 announced in November 2013

Speaker 2 that he cannot sign the deal immediately and he asked the European Union to postpone it for next year, until next year. That was the trigger for Maidan, which was immediately

Speaker 2 thrown up and

Speaker 2 ended by the coup. My point is that this either or, actually

Speaker 2 the first coup took place in 2004. when after second round of elections, the same Mr.
Yanukovych

Speaker 2 won presidency, the West raised hell

Speaker 2 and

Speaker 2 put pressure on the Constitutional Court of Ukraine to rule that there must be a third round.

Speaker 2 And the Constitution of Ukraine says

Speaker 2 two rounds. And the Constitutional Court, under the pressure of the West, violated the Constitution for the first time then.
And pro-Western

Speaker 2 candidate candidate was chosen. At that time, when all this was taking place and boiling, the European leaders were publicly saying, Ukrainian people must decide, are they with us or with Russia?

Speaker 2 This either or is

Speaker 2 still very much, very much.

Speaker 1 But it is the way that big countries behave. I mean, there are certain orbits, and now it's BRICS versus NATO, US versus China.

Speaker 1 And it sounds like you're saying the Russian-Chinese alliance is permanent.

Speaker 1 um

Speaker 2 well we are neighbors we are neighbors and the geography is very important but you're also neighbors with western europe you're part of it in effect well through ukraine and the western europe wants to come to our borders

Speaker 2 and there were plans that

Speaker 2 you know were discussed almost openly to

Speaker 2 put British naval bases on the Sea of Azov.

Speaker 2 Crimea was eyed, you know,

Speaker 2 dreaming about creating NATO base in Crimea and so on and so forth.

Speaker 2 We want, look, we have been very friendly with Finland, for example.

Speaker 2 Overnight, the Finns came back to

Speaker 2 early years of preparation for World War II, when they were best allies of Hitler.

Speaker 2 And all this neutrality, all this friendship, going to sauna together, playing hockey together, all this disappeared overnight. So maybe this was

Speaker 2 deep in their hearts and the neutrality was burdening them and niceties were burdening for them. I don't know.

Speaker 1 That's totally possible. Can you negotiate with Zelensky? You've pointed out that he has exceeded his term.
He's not

Speaker 1 democratically elected president of Ukraine anymore. So do you consider him a suitable partner for negotiations?

Speaker 2 Putin addressed this issue as well many times.

Speaker 2 In

Speaker 2 September 2022, during the first year of the special operation, Zelensky,

Speaker 2 in his

Speaker 2 conviction that

Speaker 2 he would be dictating the terms of the situation also to the West, he signed a decree prohibiting any negotiations

Speaker 2 with Putin's government.

Speaker 2 And when, during public events after that episode, Putin

Speaker 2 is asked why Russia is not ready for negotiations, he said, don't turn it upside down.

Speaker 2 We are ready for negotiations, provided it will be based on the

Speaker 2 balance of interest tomorrow. But

Speaker 2 Zelensky Zelensky signed this decree prohibiting negotiations. And for Stataris, why don't you tell him to cancel it publicly? This will be a signal that he wants negotiations.

Speaker 2 Instead, Zelensky invented his peace formula. Later it was

Speaker 2 additioned by victory plan. And they keep saying, we know what they say when they meet with European Union ambassadors and

Speaker 2 in other formats. they say

Speaker 2 no deal

Speaker 2 unless the deal is on our terms.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 I mentioned to you that they are planning now the second summit

Speaker 2 on the basis of this peace formula. And they

Speaker 2 don't shy away from saying we will invite Russia

Speaker 2 to put in front of it the deal which we agreed already with the West. And when

Speaker 2 our Western colleagues sometimes say

Speaker 2 nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine,

Speaker 2 in effect,

Speaker 2 this

Speaker 2 implies that anything about Russia without Russia, because they discuss what kind of conditions we must accept.

Speaker 2 By the way, recently they already

Speaker 2 violate tacitly the concept, nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine. There are passes, there are messages.

Speaker 2 They know our position. We are not playing double game.

Speaker 2 What Putin announced is the goal of our operation. It's fair.
It's fully in line with the United Nations Charter.

Speaker 2 First of all, the rights, language rights, minority rights, national minority rights, religious rights, and it's fully in line with the OSC principle.

Speaker 2 There is an organization for security and cooperation in Europe which is still alive. And

Speaker 2 the

Speaker 2 summit of this organization, well, several summits of this organization, clearly stated that security must be indivisible,

Speaker 2 that

Speaker 2 nobody should expand his security at the expense of the security of others. And that, most important,

Speaker 2 no organization in Euro-Atlantic space shall claim dominance.

Speaker 2 This was

Speaker 2 last time it was confirmed by OSC 2010.

Speaker 2 And NATO was doing exactly the opposite. Yes.
So

Speaker 2 we have

Speaker 2 legitimacy, you know, in our position. No NATO on our doorsteps because OSC,

Speaker 2 you know, agreed that this should not be the case if it hurts us. And please restore the rights of Russians.

Speaker 1 Who do you think has been making foreign policy decisions in the United States? This is a question in the United States. Who is making foreign policy?

Speaker 2 I wouldn't guess. I haven't seen Tony Blinken for years.
Two years ago, I think, at the G twenty summit, was it in Rome or somewhere?

Speaker 2 In the margins, in the margins, his assistant, I was representing Putin and his assistant came up to me during a meeting and said that Tony wants to talk just for 10 minutes.

Speaker 2 I left the room, we shook hands,

Speaker 2 and he said something about the need to de-escalate and so on and so forth. I hope he is not going to be angry with me since I am disclosing this.

Speaker 2 But we were meeting in front of many people present in the room. And I said, we don't want to escalate.
You want to

Speaker 2 inflict strategic defeat upon Russia. He said, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 2 It is not strategic defeat globally. It is only in Ukraine.

Speaker 1 You've not spoken to him since? No.

Speaker 1 Have you spoken to any

Speaker 1 officials in the Biden administration since then?

Speaker 2 I don't want to ruin their career.

Speaker 1 But have you had meaningful conversations?

Speaker 2 No.

Speaker 2 No.

Speaker 2 Not at all. No,

Speaker 2 when I met

Speaker 2 in international events one or another

Speaker 2 person whom I know,

Speaker 2 an American, I mean. Yeah.

Speaker 2 Some of them say hello, some of them exchange few words, but I never impose myself.

Speaker 1 But nothing meaningful.

Speaker 2 It's becoming contagious, you know, when they see s when

Speaker 2 somebody

Speaker 2 sees

Speaker 2 an American talking to me or a European talking to me. Europeans are running away when they see me during the last G20 meeting.
It was ridiculous. Grown-up people, mature people, they behave like

Speaker 2 it's so childish.

Speaker 2 Unbelievable.

Speaker 1 So you said that when in 2016 and December, the Obama administration left a bunch of bombs basically for the incoming Trump administration in the last month since the election

Speaker 1 you have all sorts of things going on politically in bordering states in this region

Speaker 1 that you know in Georgia and Belarus in Romania and then of course most dramatically in Syria you have turmoil. Does this seem like

Speaker 1 part of an effort by the United States to make the resolution more difficult?

Speaker 2 There is nothing new, frankly, because the U.S. historically

Speaker 2 in foreign policy was motivated by making some trouble and then to see if they can fish in the muddy water.

Speaker 2 Iraqi aggression, Libyan adventure, ruining the state, basically

Speaker 2 fleeing from Afghanistan, now trying to get back through the back door,

Speaker 2 using the United Nations

Speaker 2 to organize some

Speaker 2 event where the US can be present in spite of the fact that they left Afghanistan in very bad shape and

Speaker 2 arrested money.

Speaker 2 don't want

Speaker 2 to give it back.

Speaker 2 I think this is, if you analyze the American foreign policy steps,

Speaker 2 adventures most of them is the right word,

Speaker 2 that's that's the

Speaker 2 pattern, pattern, they create some trouble and then they see how to use it. In Georgia, the OSC monitors elections.

Speaker 2 When it used to monitor elections, in Russia they would always be

Speaker 2 very negative. and on other countries as well Belarus

Speaker 2 Kazakhstan this time in Georgia the monitoring mission of OSC presented a positive report and it is being ignored so when when

Speaker 2 you need

Speaker 2 endorsement of the procedures

Speaker 2 you do it

Speaker 2 when you like the results of the election. If you don't like the results of elections, you ignore it.
It's like

Speaker 2 when the United States and

Speaker 2 other Western countries recognized unilateral

Speaker 2 Declaration of Independence of Kosovo,

Speaker 2 they said

Speaker 2 this is the

Speaker 2 self-determination being implemented.

Speaker 2 When a few years later, and there was no referendum in Kosovo, unilateral declaration of independence.

Speaker 2 By the way, after that the Serbs approached

Speaker 2 International Court of Justice

Speaker 2 which ruled that

Speaker 2 well normally they are not very specific

Speaker 2 in the judgment, but they ruled that

Speaker 2 unilateral

Speaker 2 or rather when part of a territory declares independence,

Speaker 2 it is not necessarily to be agreed with the central authorities.

Speaker 2 And when a few years later, the Crimeans were holding referenda with the invitation of many international observers,

Speaker 2 not from international organizations, but from parliamentarians in Europe, in Asia, in

Speaker 2 post-Soviet space, they said, no, we cannot accept this because this is a violation of territorial integrity.

Speaker 2 You pick and choose. The UN Charter is not a menu.

Speaker 2 You have to respect it in all its entirety.

Speaker 1 So, who's paying the rebels who've taken parts of Aleppo?

Speaker 1 Is the Assad government in danger of falling? What is happening exactly, in your view, in Syria?

Speaker 2 Well, we had a deal

Speaker 2 when this crisis started, and we organized the Astana process

Speaker 2 of

Speaker 2 Russia, Turkey and Iran,

Speaker 2 we meet regularly and another meeting is being planned before the end of the year or early next year to discuss the situation on the ground.

Speaker 2 And the rules of the game is to help Syrians to come to terms with each other and

Speaker 2 to prevent

Speaker 2 separatist trends from

Speaker 2 getting strong. That's what the Americans are doing in the east of Syria when they

Speaker 2 groom some Kurdish separatists

Speaker 2 using the

Speaker 2 profits from oil and grain,

Speaker 2 salt,

Speaker 2 the resources which they occupy. This Astana format is a useful

Speaker 2 combination of players, if you wish,

Speaker 2 and

Speaker 2 we are very much concerned. After this happened, with Aleppo and surroundings,

Speaker 2 I had a conversation with the Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs and with Iranian colleague.

Speaker 2 We agreed to try to meet this week.

Speaker 1 Did you see it coming?

Speaker 2 Hopefully, in Doha,

Speaker 2 in the margins of this international conference,

Speaker 2 we would like to discuss the need

Speaker 2 to come back to strict implementation of the deals

Speaker 2 on Idlib area, because Idlib

Speaker 2 de-escalation zone was the place from where the

Speaker 2 terrorists moved to

Speaker 2 take Aleppo.

Speaker 2 And the arrangements reached in 2019 and 2020

Speaker 2 provided for our Turkish friends to control the situation in the Idlib de-escalation zone and to separate the Hayat Takhlir Hasham from Anusra,

Speaker 2 from the opposition which is non-terrorist and which cooperates with Turkey. Apparently,

Speaker 2 it is not yet the... And another deal was the opening of

Speaker 2 M5

Speaker 2 route from Damascus to Aleppo, which is also now taken completely by the terrorists. So we as Ministers of Foreign Affairs would discuss the situation, hopefully, this coming Friday.

Speaker 2 And the military of all three countries and the security people are in contact with each other.

Speaker 1 But the Islamist groups, the terrorists you just described, who is backing them?

Speaker 2 Well,

Speaker 2 we have some

Speaker 2 information and we would like to discuss with all our partners in this and this process the

Speaker 2 way

Speaker 2 to cut the channels of

Speaker 2 financing and arming them. The

Speaker 2 information which is being floated and it's

Speaker 2 in the public domain mentions the Americans, the Brits, among others.

Speaker 2 Some people say that Israel is interested in

Speaker 2 making this situation aggravate

Speaker 2 so that Gaza is not under very close scrutiny.

Speaker 2 It's a complicated game. Many, many actors are involved, and

Speaker 2 I hope that the contacts which we are planning for this week will help stabilize the situation.

Speaker 1 What do you think of Donald Trump?

Speaker 2 I met him several times

Speaker 2 when he was having meetings with Putin and when he received me twice, I think, in the Oval Office when I was visiting for bilateral talks.

Speaker 2 Well, I think he's

Speaker 2 a very strong person,

Speaker 2 a person who wants results,

Speaker 2 who doesn't like procrastination on anything.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 this is my impression. He is very friendly in

Speaker 2 discussions.

Speaker 2 But this does not mean that

Speaker 2 he is pro-Russian, as some people try to present him. The amount of sanctions we received under the Trump administration was very, very, very big.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 we respect any

Speaker 2 choice which is made by

Speaker 2 the people

Speaker 2 when they vote.

Speaker 2 We respect the choice of American people.

Speaker 2 And we are open, as Putin said, we are open to

Speaker 2 contacts with, we have been open all along with the current administration.

Speaker 2 And we hope that when Biden,

Speaker 2 when

Speaker 2 Donald Trump is inaugurated, we will understand what the ball, as Putin said, is on this side. We never severed our contacts, our ties in the economy, trade, on security, on anything.

Speaker 1 And my final question is, how sincerely worried are you about an escalation and conflict between Russia and the United States, knowing what you do?

Speaker 2 Well, we started with this question, more or less.

Speaker 1 It seems the central question.

Speaker 2 Yes, and

Speaker 2 the Europeans say that

Speaker 2 it's not, they

Speaker 2 whisper to each other that it is not for Zelensky to dictate the terms of the deal. It's for the U.S.
and Russia.

Speaker 2 I don't think we should be presenting our relations as

Speaker 2 know, two guys decide for everybody. Not at all.

Speaker 2 It is not our style. We prefer the manners which dominate in BRICS and Shanghai Cooperation Organization,

Speaker 2 where the UN Charter principle of sovereign equality of states is really embodied.

Speaker 2 The U.S. is not used to respect sovereign equality of states.

Speaker 2 The United States,

Speaker 2 you know, when they say we cannot allow Russia to win on Ukraine, because this would undermine our

Speaker 2 rules-based world order. And rules-based world order is American domination.

Speaker 2 Now, by the way, NATO, at least under the Biden administration, is eyeing

Speaker 2 the entire Eurasian continent.

Speaker 2 Indian Pacific strategies,

Speaker 2 South China Sea, East China Sea is already on NATO agenda. NATO is moving infrastructure there.
AUKUS building quartet

Speaker 2 Indo-Pacific four, they call it.

Speaker 2 Japan, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea.

Speaker 2 US, South Korea and Japan are building military alliance with some nuclear components. So and Stoltenberg, the former Secretary General of NATO, said

Speaker 2 last year after this summit, which

Speaker 2 he said, your Atlantic security is indivisible from Indo-Pacific security. When he was asked,

Speaker 2 does it mean that you go beyond territorial defense? No, no, no, it doesn't go beyond territorial defense.

Speaker 2 But to defend our territory, we need to be present there.

Speaker 2 This

Speaker 2 element of preemption is more and more present.

Speaker 2 But with the United States, we don't want war with anybody. And as I said, nuclear, five nuclear states

Speaker 2 declared

Speaker 2 at the top level

Speaker 2 in January 2022 that we

Speaker 2 don't want confrontation with each other and that we shall respect each other's security interests and concerns. And it also stated nuclear war is

Speaker 2 nuclear war can never be won, and therefore nuclear war is not possible. And the same

Speaker 2 was

Speaker 2 reiterated bilaterally between Russia and the United States, Putin and Biden, when they met in 2021

Speaker 2 in Geneva.

Speaker 2 In June, basically, they

Speaker 2 reproduced the statement by Reagan and Gorbachev of 1987, I think, no nuclear war. And this is

Speaker 2 absolutely in our vital interest. And I hope that this is also in the vital interest of the United States.
I say so because some time ago, Mr. Kirby, who is

Speaker 2 White House Communications Coordinator or whatever,

Speaker 2 he was asking questions, answering questions, and

Speaker 2 about escalation and about possibility of nuclear weapons being employed. And he said,

Speaker 2 oh no, no, we don't want escalation because then if there is some nuclear element, then

Speaker 2 our European allies would suffer.

Speaker 2 So even mentally,

Speaker 2 he

Speaker 2 excludes that the United States can suffer. And this this is something which makes the situation a bit risky.

Speaker 2 It

Speaker 2 might, if this mentality prevails, then some reckless steps could be taken. And this is bad.

Speaker 1 So, what I think you're saying is American policymakers imagine there could be a nuclear exchange that doesn't directly affect the United States, and you're saying that's not true.

Speaker 2 That's what I said, yes.

Speaker 2 No, but you know,

Speaker 2 professionals

Speaker 2 in

Speaker 2 deterrence, nuclear deterrence policy, they know very well that it's a very dangerous game.

Speaker 2 And to speak about a limited exchange of nuclear strikes is an invitation to disaster, which we don't want to happen.

Speaker 1 Mr. Levrov, thank you very much.

Speaker 2 Thank you.

Speaker 1 Thanks for listening to Tucker Carlson Show. If you enjoyed it, you can go to tuckercarlson.com to see everything that we have made-the complete library, tuckercarlson.com.