Putin Has First Sit Down With Western Press Since Ukraine War

Above: Russian President Vladimir Putin looks on while visiting the Lakhta Center on June 5, 2024, in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Image copyright: Contributor/Getty Images News via Getty Images

The Facts

  • For the first time since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine more than two years ago, Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin sat down with journalists from the Western press on Wednesday (including representatives of the Associated Press and Reuters).

  • Fielding questions on a range of subjects, on the prospects of using Russia's nuclear arsenal, "For some reason, the West believes that Russia will never use it," Putin said.


The Spin

Pro-establishment narrative

Taking his usual tone, Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin threatened the West with nuclear weapons and Russian-backed strikes on Western territory for its support of Ukraine. He did say he was willing to work with any elected US leader who was willing to change tack on Russia — though he admitted the prospects of that were unlikely.

Establishment-critical narrative

Sitting down with the international media, Putin seems far more cogent than the majority of Western leaders the world is blessed with today. He fielded the usual questions on nuclear weapons and American escalation, but he said it himself — the thought of Russia attacking NATO is preposterous. However, that wasn't what was reported in the Western media.


Metaculus Prediction


Public figures in this story


Establishment split

CRITICAL

PRO

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