"Only mutants survive": Warning of "nuclear war" on Russian state television
Created: 06/12/2022, 04:54
By: Daniel Dillman
The war with Russia is raging in Ukraine.
From the home front, presenter Vladimir Solovyov, known as “Putin's Voice,” threatens the enemy and his allies.
Moscow – In Russia, the tone remains biting.
At least since the Ukraine conflict turned into a war, the moderators on Russian state television hired themselves out as agitators.
Even after more than a hundred days of fighting, nothing seems to have changed.
Russia 1 TV presenter Vladimir Rudolfovich Solovyov warned that NATO should not continue to support Ukraine.
The result would be a "massive nuclear war that only mutants survive".
The American news portal Newsweek had first reported on it.
Solovyov has long been considered an ally of President Vladimir Putin in Russia.
On state television, he warned the international community against drifting "to the bloody side of world history" during the Ukraine war.
"If everything goes on as before, only a few mutants will survive in Lake Baikal.
The rest of the world will perish in a massive nuclear strike.” Lake Baikal is a 700 meter deep lake in Siberia.
It is considered to be the deepest lake in the world.
Russia's chief propagandist in the Ukraine war: "And then it starts"
Solovyov recommended to the West to stop arms deliveries to Kyiv immediately.
This is the only way to prevent a further escalation of the Ukraine war.
Numerous NATO member states have been sending weapons, some of them heavy, to Ukraine for several weeks.
According to the Al Jazeera news agency, these include state-of-the-art artillery systems from the USA, combat drones from Turkey, ammunition and satellite images from Canada, and radar detection systems from Germany.
A pedestrian street in Moscow.
© Alexander Nemenov / AFP
If the Western powers remain so active in the escalating Ukraine war, then a war of annihilation with Russia will probably be inevitable.
"If NATO thinks they can place whatever they want on our borders, if they send more and more weapons to Ukraine, then Ukraine will shoot with them too and one day they will hit one of our nuclear power plants.
And then it starts,” Solovyov explained.
"Everything is moving in this direction, regardless of what one side wants," he added, probably alluding to the government in the Kremlin.
So far, she had ruled out a nuclear strike in the Ukraine war.
(dil)