Pavel Mahto, the former head of the KGB, has made numerous comments calling for the mass killing of all Russians.
Mahto even said that his organization could work with Putin, in order to get Putin to “cure” Russian society so that more and more Russians will follow him.
In a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal, Mahto said that he would prefer it if Russian voters were put in concentration camps instead of being murdered. His call for mass killing is so extreme that it has led to more than one person fleeing the country because he is scared of them.
It is interesting that he is the leader of a KGB-backed political party in Russia (the Liberal Democratic Union of Russia), so is Mahto calling for mass murder.
Mahto believes that Putin wants to eliminate opposition in the country and that this is what his government plans to do.
Mahto, whose organization is also called Kommunist, also said that Putin was going to destroy Russia if he becomes president. When questioned as to why he says this, he said with no ambiguity: “Because the regime is collapsing, it is falling.” When it comes to the death of the Russian people, Mahto doesn’t care:
“The majority of people think that they love their country. I think that Russians love their country, but they want to be liberated from it.”
Mahto also doesn’t care if he ends up as a martyr or not. He would choose to be killed, rather than be a martyr himself by helping to undermine the U.S.-led NATO and other Western leaders.
Mahto continued:
“If I am to be a martyr, I want to be killed defending the Russian people. Of course, Russia is the homeland. Any death helps.” “You can choose to die defending your people, but I hope that I myself would end up being a martyr against you because I am very patriotic and very patriotic.” I do hope that those people who are interested in making themselves martyrs, they would be motivated to work for what is good for Russia, and that their own children do the same.”
Mahto’s position might have been well founded with the Russian public’s mood after Putin’s decision to go ahead with a U.S. diplomatic coup in Ukraine following a peaceful referendum. He now faces a much more open threat from a Russian opposition party that is openly calling for a coup