RT’s Twitter account has published an edited version of a Tucker Carlson video that suggests that the United States should use force to influence Canada a change in Canada’s government, which Carlson claims is oppressing Canadians and that Canada is not a sovereign nation.
The RT post frames Carlson’s remarks under a “51st state” / regime-change banner and leans on two false or misleading hooks — that the Canadian government has killed “nearly 100,000” Canadians and that Canada is not sovereign — to push a corrosive narrative that Canada is illegitimate and in need of outside “liberation.” That is authentic-source amplification in service of a foreign propaganda line.
This appears to be an effort to exploit both the “51st” state narrative and the Alberta separatist movement issue.
THE CLAIM:
RT’s post presents Carlson as effectively “soft-launching” Canada as a U.S. 51st state, amplifying his argument that the U.S. should exert influence over Canada “by force if necessary,” that Canada oppresses its citizens via MAID, that Canadians need “liberation,” and that Canada is not truly sovereign. Carlson made those remarks in a commentary dated April 2, 2026, and RT repackaged them on X the same day.
THE FACTS:
- Carlson’s MAID number is wrong. Health Canada reports 76,475 MAID provisions in Canada since legalization in 2016, with 16,499 in 2024. Health Canada also states MAID is a health service provided under strict legal criteria and not a “cause of death” category, which undercuts the “state killing program” framing.
- Canada is sovereign. Official Canadian sources say the Statute of Westminster in 1931 granted the Dominions full legal autonomy, recognized Canada’s autonomy/virtual independence, and Canada’s Constitution is the supreme law. The Constitution was patriated in 1982, allowing constitutional amendment in Canada. Sharing a monarch with other Commonwealth realms does not erase sovereignty.
- RT is not a neutral amplifier. Canada’s CRTC says RT is a Russian state-controlled network and removed RT/RT France from authorized distribution in Canada in 2022, citing concerns about content that undermines sovereignty and democratic institutions. Global Affairs Canada later said RT uses covert third-party platforms to disseminate content and has likely coordinated with Russian intelligence services; the U.S. Treasury said RT executives covertly recruited American influencers in 2024 as part of Russia’s malign influence efforts. Reuters likewise described RT as Russian state-owned/state-controlled when Canada removed it from Canadian TV.
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This matches a familiar Kremlin line: depict a democratic ally as broken, abusive, and not fully legitimate; then normalize outside coercion as “rescue.” In Canada’s case, the pressure points are MAID, immigration, sovereignty, and regional alienation. The strategic objective is to corrode trust in Canadian institutions, intensify internal divisions, and make talk of external intervention or annexation feel less fringe. That is the same democratic-undermining pattern Canadian authorities and DisinfoWatch have warned about in RT and aligned Canada-targeting narratives.
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In a related report, Secession for you, prison in Russia: Moscow’s selective love for self-determination, the European disinformation network EUvsDisinfo provides a deeper analysis, stating that "the Kremlin amplifies separatist causes abroad while jailing those who voice similar ideas inside Russia".
Reports of the Kremlin’s fondness for Western separatist movements go way back. In 2015, a year after Russia’s annexation of Crimea, Texan separatists were spotted at a far-right conference in St. Petersburg, prompting an investigation(opens in a new tab) into their ties to Russian officials. Back then, a Russian newspaper interviewed(opens in a new tab) one such activist, and FIMI bots(opens in a new tab) amplified the interview with calls for a ‘Free Texas’. The campaign(opens in a new tab) never quite ended: in early 2024, the conflict between the state of Texas and the Biden administration once again prompted comments from Russian officials – the deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council Dmitry Medvedev wrote(opens in a new tab) that he would be “rooting for Texas” if it decided to secede, while MP Sergei Mironov supported the calls for “Texit”(opens in a new tab), tweeting that Russia was “ready to help with the independence referendum”. At the same time, an army of bots exploited the crisis by boosting calls for civil war in the U.S. in coordinated campaigns both on Telegram(opens in a new tab) and Twitter/X(opens in a new tab).
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