Tucker Carlson suggests US officials wanted Russia to invade Ukraine after Covid forces ended

Tucker Carlson suggests US government officials WANTED Russia to invade Ukraine because Covid emergency powers expired and war would distract from domestic issues

  • Tucker Carlson suggested that the US government wanted Russia to invade Ukraine as a distraction from internal problems.
  • During Friday night’s monologue, he suggested that special laws to stop the coronavirus would force the government to look for a way to seize power elsewhere.
  • He suggests that freezing assets owned by Russian oligarchs was exactly the kind of game the government needed.

Tucker Carlson suggested on Friday night that U.S. government officials wanted war between Russia and Ukraine after the emergency powers imposed during the pandemic came to an end.

Speaking during a monologue on his Fox News show, Carlson said that the war allowed the US government to shift its focus and “grab more power” even more.

Carlson suggested that the Americans after the war in Ukraine were actually manipulated by power-hungry bureaucrats.

“You wonder if historians, looking back many years ago, will notice an amazing coincidence in time. You noticed?’ Carlson began.

Tucker Carlson suggested that the US government wanted Russia to invade Ukraine as a distraction from internal problems.

Tucker Carlson suggested that the US government wanted Russia to invade Ukraine as a distraction from internal problems.

‘Here. Just as the emergency powers they had given themselves to fight Covid began to wane, our leaders began pushing for a conflict with Russia.”

Carlson suggested that the war in Europe gave legislators an excuse to assume “historic military powers”.

Carlson explained that he believes the US government is violating the rights of Russia’s wealthy elite by imposing harsh economic sanctions.

While he did not name the wealthy Russian oligarchs whose assets were frozen, he accused the US government of “confiscating people’s property” by “not bothering to explain exactly what crime they committed.”

During Friday night's monologue, he suggested that special laws to stop the coronavirus would force the government to look for a way to force a power grab in some other way.

During Friday night’s monologue, he suggested that special laws to stop the coronavirus would force the government to look for a way to force a power grab in some other way.

“How long will it be before they accuse you of conspiracy or infidelity or some other hard-to-define crime, declare you an enemy of the state, and then confiscate your bank account?” Carlson asked.

“Something very similar happened in Canada. We don’t imagine that this can happen here. Basically, we just don’t think about it, we think about Ukraine.”

Carlson then said that Americans were consumed by “groupthink” when it comes to the Russian invasion, but that US government officials are ecstatic because it means all domestic issues are now ignored.

“On the morning when Russia invaded Ukraine, you may have been talking about all sorts of things,” he added. “Covid, or crime, or the southern border. Not anymore. Much to the relief of the White House, all these topics were forgotten, perhaps forever.

Carlson, freezing assets owned by Russian oligarchs was exactly the move the government needed.  Pictured: The superyacht Valeri, linked to Sergey Chemezov, head of the Russian state aerospace and defense conglomerate Rostec, is spotted in the port of Barcelona, ​​Spain.

Carlson, freezing assets owned by Russian oligarchs was exactly the move the government needed. Pictured: The superyacht Valeri, linked to Sergey Chemezov, head of the Russian state aerospace and defense conglomerate Rostec, is spotted in the port of Barcelona, ​​Spain.

Carlson then said that Americans were consumed by

Carlson then said that Americans were consumed by “groupthink” when it comes to the Russian invasion, but that US government officials are ecstatic because it means all domestic issues are now ignored. Pictured is a column of pro-Russian troops during the Ukrainian-Russian conflict outside the separatist-controlled city of Volnovakha, Ukraine.