THE AMERICA ONE NEWS
Jun 1, 2025  |  
0
 | Remer,MN
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support for Fantasy Sports and Betting Enthusiasts.
back  
topic
Forbes
Forbes
8 Feb 2024


Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson on Thursday released his controversial interview with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who took the opportunity—his first interview with a western journalist since Russia invaded Ukraine nearly two years ago—to defend Russia’s war, arguing Moscow has a historic claim to the eastern European country, as Carlson faces heavy pushback for giving Putin the platform.

2022 FOX Nation Patriot Awards

Tucker Carlson released his highly anticipated and controversial interview with Russian President ... [+] Vladimir Putin on Thursday, marking Putin’s first interview with a western media figure since Russia launched its war in Ukraine.

Getty Images

In a two-hour interview released Thursday night, Putin defended Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, arguing Russia has a historic claim to areas of western Ukraine dating back to the 13th century, a claim Putin has made repeatedly in the two years since Russia launched its invasion.

In the interview, which was recorded at the Kremlin on Tuesday, Putin claimed parts of Ukraine along the Black Sea “have no historical connection to Ukraine whatsoever,” according to a translation posted on Carlson’s website.

Carlson attempted to push back against Putin’s nearly 40-minute monologue on Russian history—including Russia’s position in World War II and the creation of the Soviet Union—asking what the history has to do with “what happened two years ago.”

Putin also cited the eastern expansion of NATO as a reason for a “rift” between western countries and Russia, arguing “the promise was that NATO would not expand eastward but it happened five times,” saying that Russia tried to push against the expansion leading up to its conflict with Ukraine.

Carlson broke into a laugh on two occasions when Putin asked if the interview was a “talk show or a serious conversation.”

Following days of speculation, Carlson said on Tuesday he would interview Putin in Moscow, setting up the Russian president’s first interview with a western media figure since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. Carlson argued “it’s our job” to talk to Putin, adding Americans “are not informed” about the war and are “paying for much of it in ways they might not fully yet perceive,” alluding to U.S. foreign aid to Ukraine, a subject Carlson has roundly criticized. Carlson in recent years has used his platform as a prime-time host first on Fox and then online, to repeatedly question military spending for Ukraine in its war with Russia, while appearing to support Putin. In November 2019, Carlson said he was “rooting for Russia,” though he later said he was joking. As Moscow was launching its invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago, Carlson argued Ukraine is “not a democracy” and defended Putin, asking if the Russian president has “ever called [him]

Carlson, who spent 14 years at Fox News, including six as a prime-time host, was unexpectedly ousted from the right-wing network last April in what Fox called a mutual agreement. Carlson, who appeared to be blindsided by his firing, had come under fire from Fox management in the months leading up to his removal, namely over private comments he made in text and email conversations attacking Fox executives in vulgar terms. Those comments came to light in Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation suit against Fox, which it settled for $787.5 million last April. One month later, Carlson relaunched his show on Twitter, saying the Elon Musk-owned social media platform known for its lax content moderation allows him to cover stories he would not be able to cover on Fox News. Carlson even lamented there are “limits” to what can be covered on TV and that if hosts “bump up against those limits often enough, [they] will be fired for it.”

Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of state and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee, branded Carlson as a “useful idiot” and a “puppy dog” in an interview with MSNBC, and said she would “not be surprised if he emerges with a contract with a Russian outlet.” Through Carlson, Clinton argued, Putin can “continue to lie” on his objectives in Ukraine.

Tucker Carlson Interviews Putin: Here’s What Led Here And The Pro-Russia Comments He’s Made (Forbes)

Tucker Carlson Confirms He’s Interviewing Vladimir Putin In Moscow—Ending Days Of Speculation (Forbes)

Tucker Carlson Denies Russian TV Speculation As ‘Bulls**t’ (Forbes)