A nuclear war is now inevitable – and Vladimir Putin will kill 250 million people in Europe.
That is the terrifying claim from a professor – speaking on a state-run television channel – sent to the Russian people. In the alarming outburst on Rossiya 1, Russian political scientist Dmitry Evstafiev insisted that it’s now a foregone conclusion that Putin will unleash nuclear weapons upon Europe.
Anton Gerashchenko, an advisor to Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, relayed the dire warning via X/Twitter, amplifying the professor’s grim forecast.
Directly addressing European citizens, Evstafiev accused them of botching their future by electing incompetent leaders, stating they had “f***ed up the present” and “chosen these morons to lead you”.
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Evstafiev claimed that Russia intends to “to change the future of Europe”, which he chillingly quantified as “200 million to 250 million dead or maimed Europeans”, reports the Daily Star.
And he ominously pinpointed Paris as a prime target for Putin’s nuclear arsenal.
Evstafiev suggested explicit threats should be made about the destruction of specific European cities and the catastrophic human toll.
“We should explicitly name the European cities that will be destroyed. And how many casualties there will be after five or six nuclear missiles hit Paris, and so on,” said Evstafiev.
However, according to Evstafiev, the United States may escape direct harm. He said: “By the way, Americans are fine, they are OK… well, maybe some cloud will reach.”
“But unfortunately, all of our attempts to turn the Europeans’ brains on are unsuccessful. I think we should put aside our false sensitivity that there will be no European nuclear war. No, there will be. And we have to state it directly.”
Evstafiev’s terrifying rant concluded with the suggestion that Russia should threaten all Europeans personally with postcards. “Every European should receive a postcard from us in their mailbox – a postcard with his house, NATO military facility, the place where there will be a strike and what will be left of their house,” he said.
This would “make every European citizen understand that they can die too”, Evstafiev reckons, “because for the last 60 years the European citizen has lived in a complete sense of immortality”.