The channel's program, called \"60 Minutes\", was specifically addressing NATO escalation in not only handing over to Kiev more and more long-range weapons, including soon to be delivered F-16 fighter jets, but also in reaction to Western capitals appearing to now positively encourage increased attacks on Russian soil.
The show hosts also questioned the authenticity of the White House having imposed 'limits' on how deep into Russian territory US-supplied weapons can go. President Biden while in France last week told ABC that it doesn't mean Ukraine can attack Moscow:
In a monologue, host Evgeny Popov referred to comments by President Joe Biden that U.S. permission for Kyiv to use weapons to hit Russia did not mean that they could be used to hit Moscow or any government buildings.
Popov concluded that by merely mentioning this, Biden showed that \"these thoughts do exist somewhere at the back of his mind.\"
In the same segment, co-anchor Olga Skabeeva speculated that one \"asymmetric\" response from Moscow would be to position missiles \"to those nations that are willing to strike our enemies.\"
She then listed off allies like Venezuela, Cuba and North Korea, describing further that a \"more traditional\" option would \"obviously be a nuclear strike as soon as we see an existential threat to our country.\"