Megyn Kelly, as silly as she is, has ended up being a conveyer of Russian truth to Americans
Megyn
Kelly, as silly as she is, has ended up being a conveyer of Russian truth to
Americans
Paul
Craig Roberts
Let’s
give her a big hand. Clearly, as her stupid questions indicate, she is a
brainwashed dumbshit American. Megyn Kelly cannot help being an imbecile as she
is an American presstitute, but still Putin comes across as the leader he is.
There is no one in the West comparable to Putin. To present Putin in his true
light is not Megyn’s intention, but it is what she achieves regardless of her
intent.
Nevertheless,
Megyn Kelly is a huge embarrassment to the United States. All by herself she
has completely discredited the American media. We need to come up with an even
more damning word that presstitutes.
It
is not clear to me why Putin puts up with Megyn Kelly’s rudness and brainwashed
ignorance. My hat is off to Putin. I would not be able to put up with her
malevolent evil. I am concerned that Putin, being an honest person of
integrity, does not understand that there are no such people in the US
government or in the US media.
A
person as important as Putin should not subject himself to cross examination by
a dumbshit American presstitute who repeats lies endlessly.
March
10, 2018
Interview to American TV channel NBC (complete transcript)
http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/57027
Interview to American TV channel NBC (complete transcript)
http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/57027
Vladimir
Putin answered questions from NBC anchor Megyn Kelly. The interview was
recorded in the Kremlin on March 1, 2018, and in Kaliningrad on March 2, 2018.
Part
1. The Kremlin, Moscow, March 1, 2018
Megyn
Kelly: So, thank you very much for doing this, Mr President. I thought that
we’d start with some of the news you made today at your State of the Nation
Address, then we will move into some facts about you in preparation for our
long piece that we are putting together, and then tomorrow when we will have a
longer time together, we will talk about more substantive issues together, if
that is ok with you.
Vladimir
Putin: Fine.
Megyn
Kelly: You announced today that Russia has developed new nuclear-capable
weapons systems, including an intercontinental ballistic missile that you say
renders defence systems useless. Several analysts in the West have said this is
a declaration of a new Cold War. Are we in a new arms race right now?
Vladimir
Putin: In my opinion, the people you have mentioned are not analysts. What they
do is propaganda. Why? Because everything I spoke about today was done not on
our initiative, it is a response to the US ballistic missile defence programme
and Washington’s unilateral withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
in 2002.
If
we speak of the arms race, it began at that very moment, when the United States
pulled out of the ABM Treaty. We wanted to prevent this. We called on our
American partners to work together on these programmes.
Firstly,
we asked them not to withdraw from the treaty, not to destroy it. But the US
pulled out. It was not us who did this but the US.
Yet
we again suggested we work together even after this. I told my colleague then,
“Imagine what would happen if Russia and the US joined forces in the crucial
area of strategic security. The world would change for a long period to come,
and the level of global security would rise to an all-time high.” The reply
was, “This is very interesting.” But they ultimately rejected all our
proposals.
Then
I said, “You understand that we will have to improve our offensive arms systems
to maintain a balance and to have the ability to overcome your BMD systems.”
They replied that they were not developing the BMD systems to counter us, that
we were free to do as we pleased, and that they would not view our actions as
spearheaded against the US.
Megyn
Kelly: That happened right after 9/11, three months after 9/11.
Vladimir
Putin: No, it was after the US withdrew from the ABM Treaty in 2002, and the
conversations I mentioned were in 2003-2004.
Megyn
Kelly: At the time that happened, I believe you were quoted as saying that you
thought it was a mistake on the part of the United States, but not a threat. Do
you perceive the United States as a threat today?
Vladimir
Putin: We have always said that developing the missile defence system creates a
threat to us. We have always said that. Our American partners would not
publicly admit it, claiming that the system was spearheaded mainly against
Iran. But eventually, in conversations and during talks they admitted that, of
course, the system will destroy our nuclear deterrence potential.
Imagine
the situation. What was the point of signing the treaty back in 1972? The United
States and the Soviet Union had only two regions that they defended from
missile attacks: one in the United States and one in the Soviet Union. That
created a threat for a potential aggressor who would be struck in response. In
2002, the United States said, “We do not need this anymore. We will create
anything we want, globally, all over the world.”
Megyn
Kelly: Again, it was in the wake of 9/11, just to make it clear. 9/11 happened
on September 11, 2001, and the United States was reassessing its security
posture in the world for good reason, wouldn’t you admit?
Vladimir
Putin: No, not for good reason.This is complete nonsense. Because the missile
defence system protects from the kind of ballistic missiles that no terrorists
have in their arsenal. This is an explanation for the housewives watching your
programme. But if these housewives can hear what I am saying, if you show it to
them and they hear me, they will understand that 9/11 and the missile defence
system are completely unrelated. To defend themselves from terrorist attacks,
the major powers must join their efforts against the terrorists rather than
create threats for each other.
Megyn
Kelly: About the weapon that you announced today, the ICBM, have you actually
tested it and it works? Because some analysts are suggesting that you have
tested it, and it failed. And that is why you only showed animations of it
today, and have not yet produced any actual videos.
Vladimir
Putin: I spoke about several systems today. Which one are you referring to, the
heavy-duty intercontinental ballistic missile?
Megyn
Kelly: Yes, the one that you claimed renders defence systems useless.
Vladimir
Putin: All the systems I mentioned today easily overcome missile defence. Each
one of them. This is the point of all these developments.
Megyn
Kelly: But you have tested it?
Vladimir
Putin: Yes, of course.
Megyn
Kelly: And it worked?
Vladimir
Putin: It did, very well.
Some
of these systems require additional work. Some of them are already deployed.
Some are in serial production.
Getting
back to the beginning of our conversation, there is a US missile defence system
deployed in Alaska. The distance between Russia’s Chukotka and Alaska is only
60 kilometres.
Two
US systems are being deployed in Eastern Europe. One is already in place in
Romania. Construction of another one is almost finished in Poland. There is
also the navy. US ships are based very close to Russian shores both in the
south and the north.
Imagine
if we placed our missile systems along the US-Mexico or the US-Canada border in
their territories on both sides and brought our ships in from both sides. What
would you say? Would you take action? Meanwhile we would respond that you are
escalating the arms race? Ridiculous, isn’t it? This is exactly what is
happening.
Megyn
Kelly: Just to come back. Are you saying that we are in a new arms race?
Vladimir
Putin: I want to say that the United States, when it withdrew from the ABM
Treaty in 2002, forced us to begin developing new weapon systems. We told our
partners about it, and they said, “Do whatever you like.” Fine, that is what we
did – so enjoy.
Megyn
Kelly: You disclosed that Russia was developing an intercontinental ballistic
missile that was powered by nukes that could render defence systems useless?
Vladimir
Putin: Of course not. I did not know at the time how we could respond, to be
honest. So it seems that our partners believed we would have nothing to respond
with. Our economy was in dire straits, as well as the defence sector and the
army. Therefore, I do not think anobody could have thought that in such a short
period of time we would be able to make such a gigantic leap in the development
of strategic weapons. I think the CIA must have told the US President that we
would not do anything in response. While the Pentagon said something like, “And
we will develop a powerful cutting-edge global anti-missile system.” So they
did.
But
I will answer your question directly. I can tell you what we told our American
partners, what I said personally at the time.
Megyn
Kelly: Just to clarify, do you mean George W. Bush?
Vladimir
Putin: Who was President in 2002, 2003 and 2004?
Megyn
Kelly: But did this happen continuously or just during that timeframe?
Vladimir
Putin: Actually, we kept going on about it for 15 years. I said, almost
literally, that we would not develop a system of anti-missile defence the way
you are doing. Firstly, because it is too expensive, and we do not have the
resources. And secondly, we do not know yet how it would work: you do not know,
and we certainly do not either.
But,
to preserve the strategic balance so that you would not be able to zero out our
nuclear deterrence forces, we will develop strike systems that will be able to
break your anti-missile systems.
We
said this plainly and openly, without any aggression, I just told stated we
would do. Nothing personal.
And
the response was, “We are not doing this against you, but you do whatever you
want and we will presume that it is not directed against us, not against the
United States.”
Megyn
Kelly: Let us talk about present day and going forward, because what you said
today was that you would use these weapons if Russia or her allies come under
attack. And the question is whether you meant any attack or only a nuclear
attack on Russia or its allies?
Vladimir
Putin: I heard you.
I
would also like to say that in 2004 — I mentioned this today — I said at a news
conference that we will be developing weapons and even mentioned a concrete
missile system, Avangard as we call it.
It
is called Avangard now, but then I simply spoke of how it would work. I openly
said how it would work. We hoped that this would be heard and the US would
discuss it with us and discuss cooperation. But no, it was as if they had not
heard us. Strategic offensive arms reduction and an antimissile defence system
are different things.
Megyn
Kelly: So, you didn’t feel like you needed to disclose.
Vladimir
Putin: We will be reducing the number of delivery vehicles and warheads under
the New START Treaty. This means that the numbers will be reduced on both
sides, but at the same time, one party, the United States, will be developing
antimissile systems.
This
will ultimately lead to a situation where all our nuclear missiles, Russia’s
entire missile potential will be reduced to zero. This is why we have always
linked this. This is how it was in the Soviet-American times; these are natural
things, everyone understands this.
Megyn
Kelly: But is it your contention that the 4,000 nukes that Russia now has
cannot penetrate the existing military defence system?
Vladimir
Putin: They can. Today they can. But you are developing your antimissile
systems. Antimissiles’ range is increasing, and so is their accuracy. These
weapons are being upgraded. This is why we need to respond to this appropriately,
so that we are able to penetrate the system not only today but also tomorrow,
when you acquire new weapons.
Megyn
Kelly: That is why it would be a big deal if you really did have a
nuclear-powered ICBM, which people are questioning, whether you have a usable
one right now. When you said earlier that you have some that had tested
positively and were excellent, you said others had not. So, for the record,
right now, do you have a workable ICBM that is powered by nukes that you have
tested successfully?
Vladimir
Putin: Look, I did not say that the testing of some of these systems had been
unsuccessful. All the tests were successful. It is just that each of these
weapon systems is at a different stage of readiness. One is already on alert
duty in line units. Another is in the same status. The work is proceeding on
schedule with regard to some systems. We have no doubt that they will be in
service, just as we had no doubt in 2004 that we would make a missile with the
so-called cruise glide re-entry vehicle.
You
have been referring all the time to intercontinental ballistic missiles, new
missiles…
Megyn
Kelly: You keep mentioning ICBMs.
Vladimir
Putin: No. I am saying that we are developing just one brand of new heavy
missile, which will replace a missile that we call Voyevoda, and you have
dubbed it Satan. We will replace it with a new and more powerful missile. Here
it is: a ballistic missile. All the other missiles are not ballistic.
Therein
lies the entire meaning of this, because any antimissile defence system
operates against ballistic missiles. But we have created a set of new strategic
weapons that do not follow ballistic trajectories and the antimissile defence
systems are powerless against them. This means that the US taxpayers’ money has
been wasted.
Megyn
Kelly: But again, you say that you are going to use these weapons, these
nuclear-powered weapons if Russia or its allies come under attack. Any attack
or only a nuclear one?
Vladimir
Putin: There are two reasons why we would respond with our nuclear deterrence
forces: a nuclear attack on the Russian Federation or a conventional attack on
the Russian Federation, given that it jeopardises the state’s existence.
Megyn
Kelly: That is consistent with the existing Russian doctrine on the use of
nuclear weapons.
Vladimir
Putin: Exactly, there are two possible reasons for a nuclear retaliation.
Megyn
Kelly: Are you interested in new talks to extend the new strategic arms control
treaty?
Vladimir
Putin: The START-3 Treaty will expire soon. We are ready to continue this
dialogue. What do we consider important? We agree to a reduction or to
retaining current terms, to a reduction in delivery vehicles and warheads.
However, today, when we are acquiring weapons that can easily breach all
anti-ballistic missile systems, we no longer consider the reduction of
ballistic missiles and warheads to be highly critical.
Megyn
Kelly: So will these weapons be part of those discussions?
Vladimir
Putin: In the context that the number of delivery vehicles and the number of
warheads they can or will carry should, of course, be included in the grand
total. And we will show you from a distance what this will look like.
Our
military experts know how to conduct these inspections. In this sense, there
are fine-tuned mechanisms and a sufficiently high level of trust. Generally,
military experts are working together professionally. Politicians talk a lot,
but military experts know what they are doing.
Megyn
Kelly: You are a politician
Vladimir
Putin: I am also an officer, and I am the Commander-in-Chief. I also served as
a military intelligence officer for 17 years.
Megyn
Kelly: Are you proud of that fact? Do you like the fact that you were in the
KGB? Do you like people to know that?
Vladimir
Putin: I do not see it from an emotional perspective. This gave me a lot of
experience in the most diverse fields. I found it useful when I moved on to the
civilian sector. Of course, this positive experience helped me in this sense.
Megyn
Kelly: How so? How did it help?
Vladimir
Putin: You know, after I left the intelligence service, I worked as Assistant
Rector at St Petersburg University. I worked with people, established contacts,
motivated people to act and brought them together. This is very important in
the academic environment. Later, I was Deputy Mayor of St Petersburg. I assumed
even greater and broader responsibility. I dealt with St Petersburg’s
international ties, and that is a metropolis with a population of five million
people. While working in this capacity in St Petersburg, I first met Henry
Kissinger. Of course, all this helped me in my work at that time, and my
additional experience later helped me in my work in Moscow.
Megyn
Kelly: Do you think it gives you an advantage over your adversaries and your
allies?
Vladimir
Putin: It is hard for me to say. I have no other experience. The only thing I
know is that my partners, including heads of state and government, are
exceptional and outstanding people. They have gone through stringent selection
and elimination procedures. There are no chance people at this level. And each
of them has his or her own advantages.
Megyn
Kelly: What about that? You have been in power for a long time here in Russia,
poised to go into another term as president. You have had four American
presidents come and go during that time. I am wondering if you had a favourite,
if there was one you liked more than the others?
Vladimir
Putin: I am sorry, but this is not a very tactful question. Each of my partners
is good in their own right. In all, we had good relations with practically all
of them. With Bill Clinton, though he was leaving office, we were able to work
together for several months. Then with presidents Bush, Obama, and with the
current President too, but to a lesser extent, of course. All of them have
something to respect them for. At the same time, we can argue and disagree with
each other, and it happens often, we have diverging views on many issues, even
on key ones, but we nevertheless managed to maintain normal, human relations.
If it were not for that, it would have been not only harder, but much worse for
everyone.
Megyn
Kelly: How important do you think it is to project strength as a President?
Vladimir
Putin: It is important not to project strength, but to show it. It is also
important how we understand power. It does not mean banging the table with a
fist or yelling. I think power has several dimensions.
Firstly,
one should be confident that he is doing the right thing. Secondly, he must be
ready to go all the way to achieve the goals.
Megyn
Kelly: I wonder this because one of the images that we see of you in the United
States is without the shirt on a horse. What is that about?
Vladimir
Putin: Well, I have breaks. There are your Russian colleagues, there is the
internet. But we do not do this on purpose. They take the photos they like. I
have lots of photos of me in the office, working with documents, but nobody is
interested in them.
Megyn
Kelly: (Laughs.) You are saying they like the shirtless photos?
Vladimir
Putin: You know, I have seen “photos” of me riding a bear. I have not ridden a
bear yet, but there are such photos already.
Megyn
Kelly: Now what about you personally? Your elections are coming up in two
weeks. You are 65 years old now. Most people would be slowing down a little in
their lives. Do you see that for yourself at all in the future?
Vladimir
Putin: First, there are many politicians around the world who are older than I
am and who are still working active.
Megyn
Kelly: Including in my country.
Vladimir
Putin: Not only in the United States, in other countries, too. There are many
such people, in Europe and everywhere in the world. But if a person assumes the
highest offices, he must work as if he is doing it for the first and last day
of his life.
There
is the Constitution. I have never violated it and have never changed it. Of
course, if voters give me the opportunity to serve another term, I will do it
to the best of my ability.
Megyn
Kelly: Last question for tonight, it is late. Forgive me; this may be a long
one. What do you see as your greatest accomplishment as president and what do
you see as your biggest mistake? And what did you learn from it?
Vladimir
Putin: You know, these would be very close.
Our
biggest achievement is that our economy has changed radically. It has almost
doubled in scale. The number of people living below the poverty line has
decreased by half.
At
the same time, the number of people living below the poverty line remains
large, and we must work on that. We must remove the gap between people with
very high and very low incomes. In this context, we have many achievements and
many unresolved issues.
Back
in the early 2000s, our population shrank by nearly a million people a year.
Can you imagine the scale of the disaster? Almost 900,000 people. We have
reversed this trend. We have even achieved a natural population increase. We
have very low infant mortality, and we have reduced maternal mortality to
almost zero. We have prepared and are implementing a large-scale programme of
supporting mothers and children. Our life expectancy is growing at a high rate.
Much
has changed in our economy. But we have not achieved our main economic goal: we
have not yet changed the economic structure as we need to. We have not yet
reached the required growth of labour efficiency. But we know how to do it, and
I am confident that we will do it. The thing is that we had no opportunity to
do this before, because until recently we did not have the macroeconomic
conditions for taking specific measures in these areas.
At
the beginning of our path, inflation was about 30 percent, but now it is 2.2
percent. Our gold and currency reserves are growing, and we have achieved
macroeconomic stability. This offers us an opportunity to take the next step
towards enhancing labour efficiency, attracting investment, including private
funds, and changing the structure of our economy.
I
am talking in large blocks. There are also more specific areas, such as modern
technology and artificial intelligence, digitalisation, biology, medicine,
genome research, and so on.
Megyn
Kelly: Much more on the economy and how Russia is doing – tomorrow, and on your
re-election. Thank you so much for your time. You have had a long day. I look
forward to meeting up with you in Kaliningrad.
Vladimir
Putin: Thank you.
*
* *
Part
2, Kaliningrad, March 2, 2018
Megyn
Kelly: Mr President, good to see you again.
Vladimir
Putin: Good afternoon.
Megyn
Kelly: So, we are here in Kaliningrad. Why is that? This is a port that, I am
told, could not be more threatening to NATO, to Europe. It is a Russian
military base. It is a Russian military port. It is home to some of your nukes.
Are you trying to send a message?
President
of Russia Vladimir Putin: Why Kaliningrad? Because I regularly visit Russian
regions. This is one of these regions. This time, I came here to attend a
conference of the regional media, which they decided to hold here. It was not
my decision but theirs, your colleagues from the Russian regional media. I have
an agreement with them that I attend such meetings once a year and meet with
them, and that is why I am here today. It does not have anything to do with any
external signals; it is our domestic affair.
Megyn
Kelly: Understood. So, the last time we met in June, I asked you about the
conclusion of our American intelligence agencies that Russia interfered in our
presidential election. You told me that there was nothing specific in these
reports, that if there is anything specific, you said, then there will be
something to discuss. You told me, as they used to say in the KGB: addresses,
houses, names. Since then, 13 Russians and three Russian-owned companies have
been indicted by a special prosecutor named Robert Mueller in the United States
for interfering in our election. The IRA agency, Yevgeny Prigozhin and others
running a cyber warfare operation out of an office at 55 Savushkina Street, St
Petersburg, Russia. Addresses, houses, names. So, can we have that discussion now?
Vladimir
Putin: Of course. We not only can but I think we must discuss this issue if it
keeps bothering you. But if you think that the question has been asked, I am
ready to answer it.
Megyn
Kelly: Why would you allow an attack like this on the United States?
Vladimir
Putin: What makes you think that the Russian authorities and I gave our
permission to anyone to do anything? You just named some people; I have heard
about some of them, some of them I do not know, but they are just individuals,
they do not represent the Russian government. Even if we suppose, though I am
not 100 percent certain, that they did something during the US presidential
election campaign (I simply do not know anything about it), it has nothing to
do with the position of the Russian government. Nothing has changed since we
spoke last time in St Petersburg. There are some names, so what? It could just
as well be some Americans who while living here, interfered in your own
political processes. It has not changed anything.
Megyn
Kelly: But it was not Americans. It was Russians. And it was hundreds of
people, a monthly budget of 2.5 billion dollars, all designed to attack the
United States in a cyber warfare campaign. You are up for re-election right
now. Should the Russians be concerned that you had no idea this was going on in
your own home country, in your own hometown?
Vladimir
Putin: You know, the world is very large and diverse. We have rather
complicated relations between the United States and the Russian Federation. And
some of our people have their own opinion on these relations and react
accordingly. At the level of the Russian Government and at the level of the
Russian President, there has never been any interference in the internal
political processes in the United States.
You
have named some individuals and said that they are Russian. So what? Maybe,
although they are Russian, they work for some American company. Maybe one of
them worked for one of the candidates. I have no idea about this, these are not
my problems. Do you know that, for example, after the presidential election in
the US, some Ukrainian officials sent messages congratulating Hillary Clinton,
even though Trump had won? Listen, what do we have to do with this?
Now,
in my opinion, Mr Manafort, that is his name, he was initially accused of
having something to do with Russia’s interference in the presidential election
in the United States. It turned out that just the opposite was true: in fact,
he had connections to Ukraine. And he had some issues with Ukraine. What do we
have to do with this?
You
know, we have no desire to interfere in the internal affairs of other
countries. But if you are interested in talking about this, I would like to
widen the scope of our discussion.
Megyn
Kelly: I want to go through it. I do want to go through it. If we can do it
step by step that would be more clear for the viewers who are following us. Let
me ask you this: you say the Russian Federation did not order it. Do you
condone these activities?
Vladimir
Putin: We do not condone or order. But I say that there are internal political
processes in the United States itself and there are people who wanted to
achieve some result. They could have used some tools in other countries: such
technologies exist. They could have sent relevant information from France, from
Germany, from Asia, from Russia. What do we have to do with this?
Megyn
Kelly:But it was not the Russians.
Vladimir
Putin: Well, all right, Russians, but they were not state officials. Well, Russians,
and so what? The are 146 million Russian people, so what?
Megyn
Kelly: What have you done to satisfy yourself with that fact?
Vladimir
Putin: What fact?
Megyn
Kelly: What have you done to satisfy yourself that it was not Russians? You
suggest maybe it was Americans, maybe it was the French. What have you done to
satisfy yourself that the 13 Russian nationals who have just been indicted,
those three Russian companies, including, as you pointed out, some of your
close friends, were not behind this? This has caused an international incident.
Vladimir
Putin: I know that they do not represent the Russian state or the Russian
government. And I have no idea what they did and what they were guided by. Even
if they did something, then our American colleagues should not just say
something in interviews with the media but give us specific data, with proof.
We are ready to consider it and talk about it. But you know what I would like
to say…
Megyn
Kelly: That would be great. Will you extradite them to the United States?
Vladimir
Putin: Never. Just like the United States, Russia does not extradite its
citizens anywhere. Have you ever extradited any of your citizens? This is my
first point.
Second,
I do not believe anything illegal was committed.
And,
third, we have repeatedly suggested that the United States and Russia establish
relations in this area and sign a corresponding interstate treaty on
extraditing criminals. The United States has evaded this proposal and does not
want to sign it with Russia. What are you hoping for? That we will extradite
people to you whereas you will not? This is not a proper way to go about
international affairs.
There
is more to it. Please listen to me and take to your viewers and listeners what
I am about to say. We are holding discussions with our American friends and
partners, people who represent the government by the way, and when they claim
that some Russians interfered in the US elections, we tell them (we did so
fairly recently at a very high level): “But you are constantly interfering in
our political life.” Would you believe it, they are not even denying it.
Do
you know what they told us last time? They said, “Yes, we do interfere, but we
are entitled to do so, because we are spreading democracy, and you are not, and
so you cannot do it.” Do you think this is a civilised and modern approach to
international affairs?
Yesterday,
you and I talked about nuclear weapons, and that once the United States and the
Soviet Union realised that they were moving towards possible mutual destruction,
they agreed on rules of conduct in the security sphere given the availability
of weapons of mass destruction. Let us now agree on how to behave in
cyberspace, which never used to have such a big role and scope.
Megyn
Kelly: Okay, so let me ask you: you have stated explicitly you believe that
America interfered in Russian elections, right?
Vladimir
Putin: We made a proposal to the United States, our partners back during
President Obama’s watch: let us agree on how we build our relations, develop
common rules acceptable for all, and adhere to them in cyberspace.
The
first reaction of the Obama Administration was negative, but then, at the very
end of his presidential term, they told us: “Yes, it is interesting, let us
talk about it.” But again, everything disappeared and vanished in some swamp.
Well, let us agree on this, we are all for it.
Megyn
Kelly: Okay, so let me ask you: you have stated explicitly you believe that
America interfered in Russian elections, right?
Vladimir
Putin: The US does this all the time.
Megyn
Kelly: But Russia did not interfere in America’s election?
Vladimir
Putin: No, and there are no plans in Russia to do so. It is impossible. It is
impossible for us.
Megyn
Kelly: Why not? Why wouldn’t you?
Vladimir
Putin: First, we have principles whereby we do not allow others to interfere in
our domestic affairs and do not poke our noses into other people’s business.
This is a principle we have. This is the first point I wanted to make.
My
second point is that we do not have a comparable number of tools.
Megyn
Kelly: Come on. Come on.
Vladimir
Putin: No, we simply cannot do that.
Megyn
Kelly: You told me just yesterday, because we were amping our missile defence
systems, we have to respond in kind with increased nuclear technology. Now you want
me to believe that we attacked your Russian elections and you say, we are going
to take that road.
Vladimir
Putin: This is not a matter of missiles. This is a completely different area.
In
addition, we lack the necessary instruments.
Megyn
Kelly: Cyber warfare.
Vladimir
Putin: This is a completely different area of activity. It has nothing to do
with cyber warfare. Russia does not have the kind of tools the US has. We do
not have global media outlets comparable to CNN. You think we do? We have
Russia Today, and nothing else. This is the only Russian media outlet, and even
then, it was designated…
Megyn
Kelly: Is that cyber tools?
Vladimir
Putin: You keep interrupting me, this is impolite.
Megyn
Kelly: Forgive me, sir.
Vladimir
Putin: We have one media outlet, Russia Today, and even it was designated as a
foreign agent so that it is unable to do its work properly. It is the only
media outlet of this kind, while the US has a whole range of outlets, and
immense possibilities online. The internet is yours. The United States control
all the internet governance tools, all located on US territory. Do you think
that a comparison can be made in any way? This is simply impossible. Let us
come together and agree on the rules of conduct in cyber space. But it is the
US who refuses to do so.
Megyn
Kelly: David and Goliath. The Mueller indictment is very specific about what
the Russians were doing. There is a specific email, a damning email that is
cited therein by a female Russian who appears to have been caught red-handed.
She says as follows, “We had a slight crisis here at work. The FBI busted our
activity. Not a joke. So I got preoccupied with covering tracks together with
the colleagues. I created all these pictures and posts and the Americans believe
that it was written by their people.” And now you want to sit here and say you
do not have the tools to do it? That we have the market cyber interference?
This is just not true.
Vladimir
Putin: I do not even understand what you are talking about. You see, this is
just nonsense. The US Congress analysed the information from Russian sources
that appeared online. The information coming from media outlets like Russia
Today was also analysed and turned out to be one hundredth of a percent of the
overall information flow in the United States, just one hundredth of a percent.
Do you think that this fraction had any impact on the election? This is just
nonsense, don’t you see? This is the same old business when the people who lost
refuse to admit it. You see, I have commented on this on a number of occasions.
It has yet to be seen what the US policy toward Russia will be like under the
current administration. Many things remain unclear, since we have not yet been
able to start working or to establish normal contacts.
However,
it is absolutely clear that the current US President adopted a specific stance
in terms of domestic policy, and decided to reach out to the people who were
ready to support his campaign promises. This is what led to his victory, not
any kind of outside interference. To claim otherwise makes no sense. Will
anyone believe that Russia, a country located thousands of kilometres away,
could use two or three Russians, as you have said, and whom I do not know, to
meddle in the elections and influence their outcome? Don’t you think that it
sounds ridiculous?
Megyn
Kelly: Now you are talking about causation. But I am still on whether you did
it. And it is not true that you do not know the individuals who were accused of
conducting this. One of your good friends is actually accused of helping
conduct this. His name is Yevgeny Prigozhin. Do you know him?
Vladimir
Putin: I know this man, but he is not a friend of mine. This is just twisting
the facts. There is such a businessman; he works in the restaurant business or
something. But he is not a state official; we have nothing to do with him.
Megyn
Kelly: After you heard about him being indicted, did you pick up the phone and
call him?
Vladimir
Putin: Certainly not.I have plenty of other things to worry about.
Megyn
Kelly: He is your friend. He has been indicted.
Vladimir
Putin: Did you hear what I just said? He is not my friend. I know him, but he
is not a friend of mine. Was I not clear? There are many people like that.
There are 146 million people in Russia. That is less than in the US, but it is
still a lot.
Megyn
Kelly: He is a prominent businessman.
Vladimir
Putin: A prominent businessman? So what? There are many prominent people in
Russia. He is not a state official, he does not work for the government; he is
an individual, a businessman.
Megyn
Kelly: Some people say his real job is to do your dirty work.
Vladimir
Putin: Who are those people? And what dirty work? I do not do any dirty work.
Everything I do is in plain view. This is your prerogative; some people in your
country enjoy doing dirty work. You think we do the same. That is not true.
Megyn
Kelly: It is a) the fact that you know him, you admit that. He is a prominent
Russian businessman. And he is specifically accused of running this operation;
b) this is the same man who has been accused of sending Russian mercenaries
into Syria and they attacked a compound held by American back militia. This guy
gets around.
Vladimir
Putin: You know, this man could have a wide range of interests, including, for
example, an interest in the Syrian fuel and energy complex. But we do not
support him in any way. We do not get in his way but we do not support him
either. It is his own personal initiative.
Megyn
Kelly: You did not know about it?
Vladimir
Putin: Well, I know that there are several companies, several Russian companies
there, maybe his among others, but this has nothing to do with our policy in
Syria. If he does anything there, he does not coordinate it with us; he
probably coordinates it with the Syrian authorities or the Syrian businesses he
works with. We do not interfere in this. Does your government interfere in
every step your businesses take, especially small businesses? It is essentially
a medium-sized business. So, does your president interfere in the affairs of
every medium-sized US business? That is just nonsense, isn’t it?
Megyn
Kelly: If the 13 Russian nationals plus three Russian companies did in fact
interfere in our elections, is that okay with you?
Vladimir
Putin: I do not care. I do not care at all because they do not represent the
government.
Megyn
Kelly: You do not care?
Vladimir
Putin: Not at all. They do not represent state interests. If you are worried
about anything, state it officially, send us documents proving it and explain
what exactly those people are accused of. We will see if they have violated
Russian laws…
Megyn
Kelly: I did that.
Vladimir
Putin: No, this is not true. If they violated Russian law, we will prosecute
them. If they did not, there is nothing to prosecute them for in Russia. But
after all, you must understand that people in Russia do not live under US law
but under Russian law. This is how it is. If you want to reach an agreement
with us, let us negotiate, choose the subject, make an agreement and sign it.
But you refuse to do this. I am telling you for the third time: we have
proposed working together on cyberspace issues. But the US refuses to work like
this and instead throws 13 Russians to the media. Maybe they are not even
Russians, but Ukrainians, Tatars or Jews, but with Russian citizenship, which
should also be checked: maybe they have dual citizenship or a Green Card;
maybe, the US paid them for this. How can you know that? I do not know either.
Megyn
Kelly: I will give you one piece of evidence. Andrei Krutskikh is an advisor to
the Kremlin when it comes to cyber issues. In his speech to an information
security forum in February 2016, he reportedly said, quote, “I am warning you.
We are on the verge of having something in the information arena which will
allow us to talk to the Americans as equals.” What do you think he meant?
Because it certainly sounds like a threat right before an election hack.
Vladimir
Putin: Sometimes I think you are joking.
Megyn
Kelly: No, I am deadly serious.
Vladimir
Putin: A man says something about how he sees our contacts and our work with
our foreign partners, the US in this case, in a certain area. I have no idea
what he said. Ask him what he meant. Do you think I control everything?
Megyn
Kelly: He is an advisor to the Kremlin on cyber.
Vladimir
Putin: So what? There are 2,000 people working in the administration; do you
think I control everyone? Peskov is sitting in front of me, he is my press
secretary and he sometimes says things that I see on television and think, what
is he talking about? Who told him to say this?
I
have no idea what he said. Ask him. Do you really think I can comment on
everything administration or government personnel say? I have my own work to
do.
Megyn
Kelly: I think when it comes to our two countries you know exactly what is
going on. And this is Russia’s problem now. It is. The heads of the US
intelligence agencies just testified to Congress that Russia, Russia poses the
greatest threat in the world to the American security, greater than ISIS. You
cannot get the sanctions lifted. The relationship between our two countries is
nearly non-existent right now. Did not this interference, whether you knew or
you did not know about it, backfire against Russia?
Vladimir
Putin: Listen, you are exaggerating. I do not know about someone saying
something and I am not going to comment on it, and neither do I follow what is
going on at your Congress.
I
am more interested in what is going on at the State Duma, if they have approved
a bill on a healthcare or utilities issue; if they delay certain discussions or
not. Is a special interest lobbying against a nature conservation, or forestry,
or environmental law? This is what I am interested in. You should follow what
they are discussing in Congress; I have enough on my plate without that.
Megyn
Kelly: You know that the sanctions have not been lifted. You know that the
relationship between our two countries is at not an all-time low but is getting
there. And this is in part the reason. And so, Russian interference in the
American elections is important.
Vladimir
Putin: Listen, sanctions have nothing to do with the myth of some Russian
interference in the US election. Sanctions are about something else entirely:
the desire to halt Russia’s progress, to contain Russia. This policy of
containing Russia has been pursued for decades, on and off. Now it is back. It
is a misguided policy, which not only affects Russian-US relations but also US
businesses because it frees up space for their competitors on our market.
You
and I were at the St Petersburg Economic Forum. The largest business delegation
was from the US. People want to work with us, but they are not allowed to; they
are contained in order to contain Russia. They have been contained and
contained so that our defence industry cannot develop, among other things. We
discussed this yesterday. Did they manage to achieve anything? No, they did
not: they have never managed to contain Russia and never will. It is simply,
you know, an attempt with tools that…
Megyn
Kelly: Can we contain Russia in cyber warfare?
Vladimir
Putin: I think it is impossible to contain Russia anywhere. You need to
understand this. Listen, you cannot even contain North Korea. What are you
talking about? Why would you do that? Why do we have to contain, attack or cast
suspicion on each other? We are offering cooperation.
Megyn
Kelly: That is my question to you. That is my question to you. Why, why would
you interfere in our election time and time again? And why would not you, for
that matter? Let me put it to you that way. You have spent a day, every time I
have seen you, in St Petersburg, in Moscow and now here in Kaliningrad, telling
me that America has interfered in Russia’s electoral process and that Russia
has a robust cyber warfare arsenal. And yet you want us to believe that you did
not deploy it. Do you understand how implausible that seems, sir?
Vladimir
Putin: That does not seem implausible to me at all, because we do not have such
a goal, to interfere. We do not see what we have to gain by interfering. There
is no such goal. Let us suppose this was our goal. Why, just for the sake of
it? What is the goal?
Megyn
Kelly: Creating chaos. That is the goal.
Vladimir
Putin: Listen to me. Not long ago President Trump said something absolutely
correct. He said that if Russia’s goal was to sow chaos, it has succeeded. But
it is not the result of Russian interference, but your political system, the
internal struggle, the disorder and division. Russia has nothing to do with it
whatsoever. Get your own affairs in order first. And the way the question is
framed, as I mentioned – that you can interfere anywhere because you bring
democracy, but we cannot – is what causes conflicts. You have to show your
partners respect, and they will respect you.
Megyn
Kelly: You once said, Mr President, that you believed the interference in our
election was done by some patriotic Russians. An answer like that, you
understand, will lead people to ask, are you the patriotic Russian?
Vladimir
Putin: I am the President of the Russian Federation. It is my constitutional
duty to address a host of issues concerning the protection of Russia’s
interests. When I spoke of patriotic people, I meant that you can imagine that,
in the face of a deteriorating Russian-US relationship, people – and people use
cyberspace – will express their points of view, their opinions, including on
this global network. Of course, they are free to do so. How can we really
prohibit it? But we cannot control it and, most importantly, we are not
directing it. Please note that this is not the position of the Russian state.
Megyn
Kelly: You cannot? The Russian intelligence services cannot find out who is
doing this, bring it to your attention? You are unable to stop it?
Vladimir
Putin: Perhaps if we looked into it carefully we would find those people, if
they exist. But we have no such goal. We propose holding official talks and you
refuse. So what do you want? For us to open investigations just because
Congress said so? Let us sit down, sign an agreement on working in cyberspace
and comply with it. How do you want to do it? There is no other way of
conducting international affairs.
Megyn
Kelly: So you have no goal to stop it. So what does that mean for our elections
in 2018 and 2020? We can expect more of the same?
Vladimir
Putin: I did not say that stopping it is not a goal. I said we had…
Megyn
Kelly: You just said that.
Vladimir
Putin: No, I did not. I said we do not interfere in our people’ private lives
and cannot stop them from expressing their opinion, including on the internet.
But I also said that Russia’s official position is that we do not interfere in
the political processes of other countries as a state. That is the most
important part. I want it to be recorded in our conversation today, for people
in the US to understand this.
Megyn
Kelly: And forgive me, but I am trying to get to one level below that, whether
you have the goal of stopping your own citizens from behaving in this manner,
which has undermined relationships between our two countries?
Vladimir
Putin: I want to say that we will stand in the way of everything that violates
Russian law or our international agreements. For the third or fourth time, I
will say that we are ready to sign a corresponding agreement with the United
States. You still refuse. Let us sit down at the negotiating table, identify
what we consider important, sign the document and comply with it with proper
verification.
Megyn
Kelly: You are the President, sir. Respectfully, I still did not hear an answer
about whether you want to crack down on the Russians who committed those
crimes. It sounds like the answer is no. If I am wrong, please correct me. I
understand you want a negotiation with the United States directly. But
internally, you could put a stop to this if you had the desire.
Vladimir
Putin: I want you to listen to me. We will counter anything that violates
current Russian law. If the actions of our citizens – no matter what they are
and whom they target – violate current Russian laws, we will respond. If they
do not violate Russian law, we cannot respond.
Megyn
Kelly With this?
Vladimir
Putin: With anything. If no Russian law has been broken, no one can be held
accountable.
Megyn
Kelly:Will this violate Russian law?
Vladimir
Putin: I must look at what they have done. Give us the materials. Nobody has
given us anything.
Megyn
Kelly: You know this. Hacking into the Democratic National Committee, hacking
into John Podesta’s email, creating interference in our election by creating
bots that spread false information on Twitter, on Facebook. Spreading this
information when it comes to Black Lives Matter, when it comes to the shooting
we just had in Parkland, Florida, when it comes to our presidential election.
Spreading fake news in order to alter the course of the presidential race. That
is what I am talking about.
Vladimir
Putin: With all due respect for you personally and for the body of the people’s
representatives, the US Congress – and we treat all these people with respect –
I want you to really understand this. Do you have people with training in law?
Of course, you do. One hundred percent. Highly educated people. We cannot even
launch an investigation without cause. Our conversation today or an inquiry in
the US Congress is not sufficient cause. Give us at least an official inquiry
with a statement of facts, send us an official paper. After all, a conversation
on air cannot be grounds for an investigation.
Megyn
Kelly: The intelligence agencies in the United States, now a special prosecutor
with a criminal indictment – that is not enough for you to look into it?
Vladimir
Putin: Absolutely not. If you do not have legal training, I can assure you that
an inquiry is required for this.
Megyn
Kelly I do.
Vladimir
Putin: Then you should understand that a corresponding official inquiry should
be sent to the Prosecutor-General’s Office of the Russian Federation. That
said, we do not even have a treaty on how to proceed. But send us something in
writing at least.
Megyn
Kelly: Vladimir Putin could not order an investigation into whether this was
done in a way that undermines its relations with a major partner, the United
States of America?
Vladimir
Putin: Give us something in writing, an official inquiry. We will look at it.
Megyn
Kelly: You said that the last time and now I am back with an indictment.
Vladimir
Putin: There is nothing in writing. Send an inquiry to the Prosecutor-General’s
Office. It is necessary to go through official channels rather than with the
help of the media and harsh words in the US Congress, levelling accusations
against us that are totally unsubstantiated. Give us something in writing.
Megyn
Kelly: Let me ask you this: you were President back in 2001 when the FBI
arrested one of its own, Robert Hanssen, for spying for the Russian Federation.
In retaliation, President George W. Bush kicked 50 illegit Russian spies out of
the United States, and the Kremlin did the same, throwing 50 Americans out of
the US Embassy in Moscow immediately. This is a tradition that goes back for
decades. December 2016: after our intelligence agencies agreed that Russians
interfered in our election President Obama expelled dozens of Russians and
seized two Russian-owned properties. And yet, you did nothing, you did nothing
in response. Why not?
Vladimir
Putin: We believed and I still believe that there were no grounds for this
whatsoever. This is the first point.
Secondly,
this was done in clear violation of international law and the Vienna Convention
on DiplomaticRelations. The totally groundless seizure of our property
constitutes a flagrant violation of international law. We were strongly hoping
for a response from the new Administration. But since none is forthcoming – and
I have already said this and the Foreign Minister repeated this – we will turn
to the appropriate courts of the United States to protect our interests.
Megyn
Kelly: Let me ask you about President Trump. Any time he says anything about
you it is supremely deferential. Never a harsh word for you. Although if you
look at the ways he speaks about members of his own party, even members of his
own staff, never mind of the other political leaders, he frequently personally
insults them. Why do you think he is so nice to you?
Vladimir
Putin: This is not about being nice to me personally, in my view. I think he is
an experienced person, a businessman with very extensive experience and he
understands that if you need to partner with someone, you must treat your
future or current partner with respect, otherwise nothing will come of it. I
think this is a purely pragmatic approach. This is my first point.
Second,
even though this is his first term as President, he is a quick study, and he
understands perfectly well that trading accusations or insults at our level is
a road to nowhere. It would just mean depriving our countries of their last
chance for dialogue, simply the last chance. This would be extremely
unfortunate.
You
may have noticed that I, for my part, show respect to him and all my other
colleagues, not only in the United States, but also Europe and Asia.
Megyn
Kelly: You may, but the truth is our President has referred to the leader of
North Korea as “little rocket man.” So he is not quite as diplomatic depending
on who he is talking about. I am sure you saw that, yes?
Vladimir
Putin: Yes, I did. You are aware of our position on that account. We urge
everyone to show restraint.
Megyn
Kelly: So what do you think of President Trump?
Vladimir
Putin: The question is not entirely appropriate, because President Trump’s work
should be assessed by his constituents, the American people. There is one thing
I would like to say: like it or not – we may dislike certain things as well –
he does his best to keep the election promises that he made to the American
people. So, he is consistent in this sense. I think that, in fact, this is the
only proper way to show respect for the people who voted for him.
Megyn
Kelly: He has praised your leadership. Is he an effective leader?
Vladimir
Putin: Well, again, this is up to the American people to decide. He has strong
leadership qualities, of course, because he takes responsibility when he makes
decisions. To reiterate, whether some people like his decisions or not, he
still goes ahead and does it. This, of course, is a sign of leadership
qualities.
Megyn
Kelly: Do you ever read his tweets?
Vladimir
Putin: No, I do not.
Megyn
Kelly: Do you ever tweet?
Vladimir
Putin: No.
Megyn
Kelly: Why not?
Vladimir
Putin: I have other means of expressing my point of view or making decisions.
Well, Donald is a more modern person.
Megyn
Kelly: Would you say he is more colourful than you are?
Vladimir
Putin: Maybe.
Megyn
Kelly: Let me ask you one question going back to the election interference
issue. There are two theories on you at least. One is that when Hillary Clinton
was Secretary of State you felt that she interfered with the elections here in
2011 and 2012, inciting protests here, including against you and it made you
angry. Two is when the Panama Papers were leaked showing a massive money trail
that led to you and some of your associates that that was the last drop for
you. Do either of those things make you angry?
Vladimir
Putin: This is complete nonsense. Speaking about Hillary, I know her
personally, and we generally always maintained a good dialogue every time we
met. I cannot understand why at some stage… Her advisers probably suggested
that she focus part of her election campaign on criticising developments in
Russia. Well, it was their choice. I never took it personally. It was just
their policy.
As
for all those files, this is complete nonsense. They mention some of my
friends. So what? As you know, this has had no effect whatsoever. This is
nothing but nonsense and media chatter. I have forgotten all about it. I do not
remember what it was all about. Actually, nothing of this kind can make me
angry. I am guided by pragmatic considerations, not emotions.
Megyn
Kelly: Since you mention it, a friend of yours was mentioned in those Panama
Papers. Let me ask you about him. Sergei Roldugin. Legend has it that this guy
introduced you to your ex-wife, that he is the godfather to one of your
daughters. He is a cellist by trade, right?
Vladimir
Putin: Yes, I know him very well. He is a friend and a wonderful musician. He
has devoted his life to art and music. By the way, many artists here are also
involved in business one way or another. Apart from me, Sergey also has other
ties in the country, including business people who have involved him in this
work. He has made his money legally. He has not made hundreds of billions [of
dollars]. Everything he earned he has spent on the purchase of musical
instruments abroad, which he has brought to Russia. He uses some of these
instruments personally, for example the cello. He plays the cello.
Megyn
Kelly: A $12 million Stradivarius.
Vladimir
Putin: Yes, something like that. But it is a unique instrument.
Megyn
Kelly: That is a lot of money.
Vladimir
Putin: Yes, it is. He must be eccentric, but then, all artists are eccentric.
To spend all this money on musical instruments. I think he bought two cellos
and two violins. He plays one himself and has given the others to other
musicians, who are playing them. He has brought all these instruments to
Russia.
Megyn
Kelly: According to the Panama Papers, this mass of series of leaked documents
about offshore bank accounts, he has got assets, this cellist, of at least a
$100 million, including a one-eighth stake in Russia’s biggest TV ad agency, a
$6 million yacht, a stake in a truck manufacturer, a 3-percent interest in a
Russian bank. He must be one heck of a musician.
Vladimir
Putin: Well, I know nothing about his business, but I do know that he has only
enough money to buy these musical instruments. All the rest is on paper. He
does not have anything else apart from what he has bought. Maybe he does have
something else, but you should ask him about it. I do not control his life.
Megyn
Kelly: But the question is how a cellist makes that much money? People ask it
because many people believe that is really your money.
Vladimir
Putin: Listen, just look at many Russian art figures, and probably there are
people like this in your country as well. After all, there are art
personalities in the US, including Hollywood celebrities who either run
restaurants or own some stock. Aren’t there many people like this in the US
entertainment industry and art world? I am sure that there are many people of
this kind, and more than in Russia. In Russia, there are also quite a few art
figures who do business apart from their creative work. In fact, there are many
such people, and he is just one of them. So what? The question is not whether
he runs a business or not or whether he made a profit or not. The question is
whether there were any violations. As far as I know, he did not commit any violations.
Megyn
Kelly: That is right. There is no issue with making money. I am an American, we
are capitalists. The question is whether that is really your money.
Vladimir
Putin: This is not my money, that is for sure. I do not even know how much Mr
Roldugin has, as I have already said. As far as I know, he has not committed
any violations in his business and creative undertakings, he did not violate
any Russian law or norm.
Megyn
Kelly: Speaking of money, back in the 1980s and 1990s, in the wake of multiple
bankruptcies, the Trump Organisation found it hard to secure loans in the
United States and looked elsewhere. Mr Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., said that
ten years ago and I quote, “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate
cross-section of a lot of our assets. We see a lot of money pouring in from
Russia.” Were you aware of the degree of Russian money flowing into properties?
Vladimir
Putin: This is all nonsense. There were no investments in Trump properties in
Russia, as far as I know. I do not even know if there were any serious plans
for making these investments.
Megyn
Kelly: Come on.
Vladimir
Putin: Look, you keep thinking that the whole world revolves around you. That
is not the way it is.
Megyn
Kelly: It is not about me. It is about what Donald Trump Jr. says.
Vladimir
Putin: Do you think we know everything what Donald Trump’s son has said? You
see, this is not the way things are. Donald came here to Russia when he was not
even nominated. I did not even know that he had been to Russia. I learned about
it only afterwards, when I was told that as it turned out he had been to
Russia. By the same token, I ignore what his son said on this occasion. Did
Donald Trump’s son infringe on any rules or laws? If so, charge him. If he did
not, why do you keep picking on every word?
Megyn
Kelly: Years ago, before Donald Trump ran for president, he said he knew you
and he spoke with you a lot. Is that true?
Vladimir
Putin: No, I had never met him. You mean before he became President and before
he decided to run for President, right?
Megyn
Kelly: Before he ran.
Vladimir
Putin: No, we had not met. We never talked to each other, neither by phone or
otherwise.
Megyn
Kelly: You are poised to be re-elected for your fourth term as president here
in Russia, right?
Vladimir
Putin: We will see what the Russian voters decide.
Megyn
Kelly: How does somebody like Vladimir Putin, who is as popular as you are here
in Russia, feel any threat from Navalny? I realise he has got in legal trouble,
but could you pardon this guy and let him mount a meaningful challenge to you?
Vladimir
Putin: As for the question about whom I could work together with and whom I
would not want to work together with, I can tell you in all honesty that I
would like to and am ready to work with people who want Russia to become a
stronger, more effective, competitive and self-reliant country. But to achieve
that, the people we are talking about should have a clear plan of action
designed to promote national development in today’s environment. There are
people like that, including …
Megyn
Kelly: But Navalny is such as man and has a fair amount of popularity here in
Russia.
Vladimir
Putin: Any person can be pardoned if he deserves it.
Megyn
Kelly: Why don’t you?
Vladimir
Putin: If he deserves it. There are no exceptions for anyone. No exceptions.
But we are not talking about pardon now; we are talking about certain political
forces. They do not have a development programme for the country. What do they
have that is positive and what I like? That they expose problems, and this is
actually good, this is the right thing to do, and it needs to be done. But this
is not enough for the country’s progressive development, simply not enough.
Because focusing on problems is not enough; moreover, it is even dangerous,
because it can lead to destruction, while we need creation.
Megyn
Kelly: Our political analysts tell me you are exactly right about your chances
in the upcoming election, that you have no meaningful opponents so you will
likely win. What is next after that? The Chinese President just abolished term
limits. Is that something you would ever do?
Vladimir
Putin: I do not think that I should talk about my political plans with you now
at this meeting, in this conversation, in this interview for American
television. But I think I told you yesterday, I never changed the Constitution
or adjusted it to my needs, and I do not have any such plans today.
As
for China, before criticising decisions in a country like China, you need to
think and recall that there are 1.5 billion people living there and, after
thinking about it, you need to come to the conclusion that we all are
interested in China being a stable and prosperous state. How it should be done
best, it is probably up to the Chinese people and the Chinese leadership.
Megyn
Kelly: Can you leave power? Because some of the experts that we have spoken to
have said it would be near impossible for you because someone in your position
would likely either be thrown in jail by your adversaries or worse. They say it
is actually sad that you will have to stay in power in order to stay well.
Vladimir
Putin: What your so-called experts say is their wishful thinking. I have heard
a lot of nonsense like this. Why do you think that I will necessarily be
succeeded by people ready to destroy everything I have done in recent years?
Maybe, on the contrary, a government will come to power determined to
strengthen Russia, to create a future for it, to build a platform for
development for the new generations. Why have you suddenly decided that some destroyers
would arrive and wipe out whatever they can? Maybe there are people who would
like this, including in the United States. But I do not think they are right,
because the United States, I think, should be more interested in the other
option – in Russia being a stable, prosperous and developing country, I mean if
you really can look at least 25-50 years ahead.
Megyn
Kelly: Have you groomed a successor? Is there anyone in mind?
Vladimir
Putin: I have been thinking about this since 2000. Thinking is not a crime, but
in the end, the choice will still be up to the Russian people. Whether I like
or hate someone, other candidates will run for president and eventually the
citizens of the Russian Federation will make the final decision.
Megyn
Kelly: Let me ask you a bit about Syria. Do you believe the chemical weapon
attacks in Syria are fake news?
Vladimir
Putin: Of course.
Firstly,
the Syrian Government destroyed its chemical weapons long ago.
Secondly,
we know about the militants’ plans to simulate chemical attacks by the Syrian
army.
And
thirdly, all the attempts that have been made repeatedly in the recent past,
and all the accusations were used to consolidate the efforts against Assad. We
are aware of these goings-on, and they are not interesting. One wants to say,
“Boring.”
Megyn
Kelly: The bodies of dead children thanks to sarin gas attacks? That is boring?
Vladimir
Putin: Are you sure that these deaths are the result of chemical attacks by the
Syrian Government? I, on the contrary, blame this on the criminals and
radicals, on the terrorists who are staging these crimes in order to lay the
blame on President Assad.
Megyn
Kelly: That is not what the United Nations has concluded. They autopsied the
bodies of the dead children. Your Foreign Minister suggested it was all made
up. Do you believe that?
Vladimir
Putin: Of course. I am absolutely sure that it was. Because there was no
serious investigation.
Megyn
Kelly: There were no dead bodies?
Vladimir
Putin: Maybe there were dead bodies, which is to be expected in a war. Look how
they liberated Mosul: it was razed to the ground. Look how they liberated
Raqqa: the dead have not yet been removed from the ruins or buried. Do you want
to talk about this?
Megyn
Kelly: That is what we call whataboutism. That is you pointing to somebody
else’s bad behaviour to justify your wrong or that of your ally. We are talking
about Assad and dead children thanks to sarin gas. Sarin gas. And you are
telling an international audience it never happened?
Vladimir
Putin: Look here, to be sure that this was indeed how it happened, a thorough
investigation must be conducted and evidence must be gathered at the site.
Nothing of this has been done. Let us do this.
Megyn
Kelly: Let us do it. They wanted to investigate the helicopters and the UN
wanted to go and check the helicopters that were on site. And Russia said no.
Russia said no. Why?
Vladimir
Putin: There was nothing of the kind. Russia did not say “No.” Russia is for a
full-scale investigation. If you do not know this, I am telling you this now.
It is not true that we are against an objective investigation. That is a lie.
It is a lie just as the vial with the white substance that allegedly proved
that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, which the CIA gave to the US
Secretary of State. He later apologised, but the damage had been done, the
country had been ruined. This is yet another piece of fake news, which has no
substance behind it. An investigation should be conducted to gather the
substance. We are in favour of such an investigation.
Megyn
Kelly: Since the beginning of the year, there have been at least four
chlorine-based chemical weapons attacks in Syria. Our Secretary of State
Tillerson just said that Russia bears the responsibility for this given your
earlier promises to reign in chemical weapons attacks in Syria. Your response?
Vladimir
Putin: I will tell you that a) we have nothing to do with this, and that we
demand a full-scale investigation.
As
for crimes, go back to Raqqa and at least bury the dead bodies, which are still
lying amid the ruins after the air strikes at residential neighbourhoods there.
And investigate these attacks. This will give you something to do.
Megyn
Kelly: One of the questions that our audiences have is how do we walk this
back? How do we get to the place where these two great nations are less
adversaries and something closer to allies, which we clearly are not right now.
Do you agree we are not?
Vladimir
Putin: Unfortunately, we are not. But we were not the ones who made the US our
adversary. It was the US, the US Congress, who called Russia its adversary. Why
did you do that? Did Russia impose sanctions on the United States? No, it was
the US that imposed sanctions on us.
Megyn
Kelly: You know why.
Vladimir
Putin: No, I do not. Can I ask you a different question? Why did you encourage
the government coup in Ukraine? Why did you do that? The US directly
acknowledged spending billions of dollars to this end. This was openly acknowledged
by US officials. Why do they support government coups and armed fighting in
other countries? Why has the US deployed missile systems along our borders?
Listen,
Russia and the US should sit down and talk it over in order to get things
straight. I have the impression that this is what the current President wants,
but he is prevented from doing it by some forces. But we are ready to discuss
any matter, be it missile-related issues, cyberspace or counterterrorism
efforts. We are ready to do it any moment. But the US should also be ready. The
time will come when the political elite in the US will be pushed by public
opinion to move in this direction. We will be ready the instant our partners
are ready.
Megyn
Kelly: Before I leave you, what do you hope your legacy will be?
Vladimir
Putin: I strongly believe that my legacy would be to create a powerful
development momentum for Russia, and make the country a resilient and balanced
democracy that is able to benefit from the latest advances of the technology revolution.
We will keep up our efforts to improve our political system and the judiciary.
And I am certain that all this, taken together, would strengthen the unity of
the Russian Federation and the unity of our people, and enable us to move
forward with confidence for years to come.
Megyn
Kelly: Mr President, thank you very much for having us here.
Vladimir
Putin: Thank you.
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