"Co-anchor Ivan Trushkin compared the killing to the 1934 assassination of Sergei Kirov that preceded the purge of the political opponents of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Trushkin said that Trump could leverage Kirk's assassination to repress political opponents."
This, days after I mentioned Sergey Kirov s killing and also suggested Trump, Netanyahu Epstein circle controlling the White House would seek to exploit it to lanuch Stalin like purges and show trials based on denunciations and confessions under drugs and torture.
The facts, timing, contenct, motive all point in that direction.
The assassination occurred just after Charlie Kirk suggested Epstein and Mossad controlled the US gov through a blackmail paedo ring and called for the release of the Epstein files.
Timing and motive is vital when it comes to solving a crime.
Russia has been accused of being the ally of Trump so when even Russian state TV suggests from the facts that he may have had a killing in Charlie Kirk to exploit the death to launch Stalin style purges, it is significant.
Like Stalin, Trump is now trying to take media licences away to monopolize the message.
Russia and China now know they just have to wait for the USA to collapse from within under the power grab of a criminal network linked to Epstein and Mossad which has backfired spectacularly.
Investors who have begun pulling funds out of US assets will be moving them out even faster as they watch Trump and his Epstein circle push the USA into chaos.
The Soviet Union under Stalin had an autark economy.
The USA in 2025 relies totally on foreign imports and creditors to avoid collapse.
From media
Guests and anchors on Russian state TV have discussed the political fallout of last week's killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk in Utah, with anchor even insinuating on air that President Donald Trump may have had something to do with the assassination.
A discussion on the political talk program Meeting Place centered on whether Trump was exploiting the killing "for his interests" amid strife in the U.S. following the shooting of Kirk at Utah Valley University.
A guest suggested that "maybe Trump did him in," with the anchor replying, "I will keep thinking it."
The idea was eventually dismissed by the guests in a discussion full of the conspiracy theories, speculation and provocative statements that Russian state TV regularly broadcasts.
Trump has condemned the "radical left" following Kirk's killing and the assassination has highlighted partisan divides nationwide. Tyler Robinson, 22, from Washington, Utah, has been charged with capital murder in Kirk's killing.
However, the views expressed show that the division Kirk's assassination has caused in the U.S. is something that the talk show guests see as benefiting Russia.
What To Know
Russian state TV frequently makes provocative claims without providing evidence as it looks to push an anti-Western and increasingly, anti-Trump narrative.
These include on the same show in February 2024, anchor Andrey Norkin and his guests mocking Trump's supporters as "not very smart" "rednecks," and "primitive people."
On the same program in February this year, Skabeyeva's co-host—and husband— Evgeny Popov said the Trump administration was doing Moscow's job—by undermining Western alliances and dividing Europe.
The segment of Meeting Place shown on the channel NTV was posted on X by Russia watcher and journalist Julia Davis.
In it, Alexey Naumov, from Russia's International Affairs Council, said that as the political fallout from Kirk's killing continues in the U.S., the left and the right will apply pressure and "the temperature in the pot will rise."
Co-anchor Ivan Trushkin compared the killing to the 1934 assassination of Sergei Kirov that preceded the purge of the political opponents of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Trushkin said that Trump could leverage Kirk's assassination to repress political opponents.
After Gevorg Mirzayan, research fellow of the U.S. and Canadian Studies Institute, a Russian think tank, said that Trump "would use" the killing, co-anchor Andrey Norkin interrupted to clarify whether or not they meant that Kirk was "purposefully killed for this."
The guests rejected the idea as Mirzayan added that the assassination was a blow for Trump, although the U.S. president could still use it to benefit his own interests and in campaigning.
Then commentator Vitaly Serukhanov returned to the theme, saying with a smirk, "Maybe Trump did him in," with Norkin adding, "that's what I said, I will keep thinking it."
But the guests disagreed, and Mirzayan said it was natural for Trump to exploit a political situation created by others.
The theory had the backing of First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Defense Committee Alexey Zhuravlyov, who is known for his anti-Western rhetoric.
Amid concerns that it could precede further political violence, Kirk's assassination has been compared to historic political killings like Martin Luther King Jr., and Trump's response has galvanized his base.
However, critics, including late-night host Jimmy Kimmel, have accused Trump of weaponizing grief and failing to condemn violence across the spectrum. Meanwhile, Utah's Republican Governor Spencer Cox, urged Americans to respect ideological differences.
"The worse for them, the better for us," said Zhuravlyov, as he referred to the political divisions being sown after Kirk's death.
What People Are Saying
Commentator Vitaly Serukhanov on Meeting Place: "Maybe Trump did him in?"
Another pudnit, Gevorg Mirzayan, in response: "No way....He [Trump] has used the situation, this is one of the political arts."
Russia watcher Julia Davis on X. next to a clip of the exchange: "Meanwhile in Russia: experts relished recent events in the United States, hoping that divisions will keep deepening and things will get even worse."
https://www.newsweek.com/russian-state-tv-floats-theory-trump-planned-charlie-kirks-killing-2131280
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