Tucker Carlson’s claim that Ukraine is reselling up to half of U.S.-supplied weapons to Mexican drug cartels is a blatant fabrication with zero supporting evidence. He does not present a single source, document, investigation, or shred of proof to back up this absurd assertion. Instead, he delivers it as an absolute fact, knowing that his audience will blindly accept it without questioning.
This is classic Russian disinformation—take an inflammatory lie, state it with absolute certainty, and repeat it until it becomes ingrained in the minds of those who are already inclined to believe it.
Carlson has become nothing more than a mouthpiece for the Kremlin, regurgitating talking points that align perfectly with Russian propaganda objectives.
The goal here is obvious-
undermine support for Ukraine, create internal division in the U.S., and bolster the Russian narrative that Western military aid is pointless or even harmful.
No credible U.S. or international agency has reported anything remotely close to this claim. On the contrary, multiple oversight mechanisms, including NATO, the U.S. Department of Defense, and Ukrainian authorities, have strict tracking measures in place for weapons transfers. The idea that Ukraine is funneling half of its military aid to cartels is not just false—it is laughably stupid. Ukraine is in an existential fight against Russia; it cannot afford to throw away the very weapons keeping it alive.
Carlson’s willingness to spread outright Kremlin propaganda is not new. His interviews with Russian officials, his repeated defenses of Putin, and his attempts to discredit Western support for Ukraine follow a well-worn pattern of pro-Russian influence operations. His words are not journalism; they are scripted disinformation designed to serve Moscow’s strategic interests.
His lie about weapons flowing to cartels is not just false—it is dangerous. It plays into right-wing conspiracy theories, fuels distrust in U.S. foreign policy, and further destabilizes domestic politics. Meanwhile, the only actual proven arms smuggling networks linked to Mexico operate through Russian and Chinese suppliers—not Ukraine. But Carlson conveniently ignores that because it doesn’t fit the narrative his handlers want him to push.
Carlson has fully transitioned from being a disgraced American pundit to a full-fledged Kremlin propagandist. Every statement he makes should be treated as suspect, if not outright hostile to American interests. His lies need to be dismantled in real-time before they metastasize into another misinformation campaign poisoning public discourse.
