Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov gives press conferences almost daily, offering up the Kremlin’s stance on key issues facing Russia today. But what does he really think about Russia’s politics? And what’s it like working for Putin? In an exclusive interview with talk show host Vladimir Solovyov, Peskov looked back on his years of experience working in the Kremlin. Here’s what he said, in a nutshell.
Before the salaries for civil servants were small, they had to hustle. I brought in cars from Turkey. In the 1990s, the Russian Federation’s republics almost began a parade of sovereignties. If Putin hadn’t come along then, there would be no country. He made Russia come to its senses and buck up. The U.S. has broken all the rules of international politics. War is impossible so long as there is nuclear parity. Sanctions are a mark of quality. I watch television compulsively. But I don’t watch your programs: I don’t like the format. The Kremlin “tower wars” are an exaggeration. Telegram channels are cheap waste tanks. Belarus is a red line that we can’t afford to cross. Ukraine crossed the red line. I have a high salary. My wife isn’t poor, but she works hard. In terms of business, I get in her way. The pandemic has forced a sated world out of its comfort zone. I didn’t get sick while I was wearing the “virus blocker.” I have faced serious criticism from the president. Putin is merciless when it comes to betrayal and theft. Putin couldn’t have committed “all of those horrific crimes that are attributed to him.” Putin lives at work and has a tiny, five-minute window for a human life. Putin is a good man. Of course I like Putin.
You can watch Dmitry Peskov’s full interview on “Solovyov LIVE” in Russian here.
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Translation by Eilish Hart
Cover photo: Valery Sharifulin / TASS
Why Turkey?
From 1990–1994 and from 1996–2000, Dmitry Peskov held various posts at the Russian Embassy in Ankara, Turkey.
What crimes?
Vladimir Solovyov used the formulation “all of those horrific crimes that are attributed to him” when posing Peskov the question. He didn’t specify what crimes he was referring to, but it’s possible that he was alluding to the August 2020 poisoning of opposition figure Alexey Navalny. According to Navalny himself, the attempt on his life was committed on Putin’s orders.