{"id":17,"date":"2022-02-24T19:06:36","date_gmt":"2022-02-24T19:06:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/?p=17"},"modified":"2022-02-24T19:15:48","modified_gmt":"2022-02-24T19:15:48","slug":"address-by-the-president-of-the-russian-federation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/2022\/02\/24\/address-by-the-president-of-the-russian-federation\/","title":{"rendered":"Address by\u00a0the\u00a0President of\u00a0the\u00a0Russian Federation on February 21, 2022"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>22:35     The\u00a0Kremlin, Moscow<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>President of&nbsp;Russia Vladimir Putin:<\/strong>&nbsp;Citizens of&nbsp;Russia, friends,<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>My&nbsp;address concerns the&nbsp;events in&nbsp;Ukraine and&nbsp;why this is so important for&nbsp;us, for&nbsp;Russia. Of&nbsp;course, my&nbsp;message is also addressed to&nbsp;our compatriots in&nbsp;Ukraine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;matter is very serious and&nbsp;needs to&nbsp;be discussed in&nbsp;depth.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;situation in&nbsp;Donbass has reached a&nbsp;critical, acute stage. I&nbsp;am speaking to&nbsp;you directly today not only to&nbsp;explain what is happening but also to&nbsp;inform you of&nbsp;the&nbsp;decisions being made as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;potential further steps.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;emphasise again that Ukraine is not just a&nbsp;neighbouring country for&nbsp;us. It is an&nbsp;inalienable part of&nbsp;our own history, culture and&nbsp;spiritual space. These are our comrades, those dearest to&nbsp;us&nbsp;\u2013 not only colleagues, friends and&nbsp;people who once served together, but also relatives, people bound by&nbsp;blood, by&nbsp;family ties.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Since time immemorial, the&nbsp;people living in&nbsp;the&nbsp;south-west of&nbsp;what has historically been Russian land have called themselves Russians and&nbsp;Orthodox Christians. This was the&nbsp;case before the&nbsp;17<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;century, when a&nbsp;portion of&nbsp;this territory rejoined the&nbsp;Russian state, and&nbsp;after.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It seems to&nbsp;us that, generally speaking, we all know these facts, that this is common knowledge. Still, it is necessary to&nbsp;say at&nbsp;least a&nbsp;few words about the&nbsp;history of&nbsp;this issue in&nbsp;order to&nbsp;understand what is happening today, to&nbsp;explain the&nbsp;motives behind Russia\u2019s actions and&nbsp;what we aim to&nbsp;achieve.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So, I&nbsp;will start with the&nbsp;fact that modern Ukraine was entirely created by&nbsp;Russia or, to&nbsp;be more precise, by&nbsp;Bolshevik, Communist Russia. This process started practically right after the&nbsp;1917 revolution, and&nbsp;Lenin and&nbsp;his associates did it in&nbsp;a&nbsp;way that was extremely harsh on&nbsp;Russia&nbsp;\u2013 by&nbsp;separating, severing what is historically Russian land. Nobody asked the&nbsp;millions of&nbsp;people living there what they thought.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Then, both before and&nbsp;after the&nbsp;Great Patriotic War, Stalin incorporated in&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR and&nbsp;transferred to&nbsp;Ukraine some lands that previously belonged to&nbsp;Poland, Romania and&nbsp;Hungary. In&nbsp;the&nbsp;process, he gave Poland part of&nbsp;what was traditionally German land as&nbsp;compensation, and&nbsp;in&nbsp;1954, Khrushchev took Crimea away from Russia for&nbsp;some reason and&nbsp;also gave it to&nbsp;Ukraine. In&nbsp;effect, this is how the&nbsp;territory of&nbsp;modern Ukraine was formed.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But now I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;focus attention on&nbsp;the&nbsp;initial period of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR\u2019s formation. I&nbsp;believe this is extremely important for&nbsp;us. I&nbsp;will have to&nbsp;approach it from a&nbsp;distance, so to&nbsp;speak.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;will remind you that after the&nbsp;1917 October Revolution and&nbsp;the&nbsp;subsequent Civil War, the&nbsp;Bolsheviks set about creating a&nbsp;new statehood. They had rather serious disagreements among themselves on&nbsp;this point. In&nbsp;1922, Stalin occupied the&nbsp;positions of&nbsp;both the&nbsp;General Secretary of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) and&nbsp;the&nbsp;People\u2019s Commissar for&nbsp;Ethnic Affairs. He suggested building the&nbsp;country on&nbsp;the&nbsp;principles of&nbsp;autonomisation that is, giving the&nbsp;republics&nbsp;\u2013 the&nbsp;future administrative and&nbsp;territorial entities&nbsp;\u2013 broad powers upon joining a&nbsp;unified state.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lenin criticised this plan and&nbsp;suggested making concessions to&nbsp;the&nbsp;nationalists, whom he called \u201cindependents\u201d at&nbsp;that time. Lenin\u2019s ideas of&nbsp;what amounted in&nbsp;essence to&nbsp;a&nbsp;confederative state arrangement and&nbsp;a&nbsp;slogan about the&nbsp;right of&nbsp;nations to&nbsp;self-determination, up to&nbsp;secession, were laid in&nbsp;the&nbsp;foundation of&nbsp;Soviet statehood. Initially they were confirmed in&nbsp;the&nbsp;Declaration on&nbsp;the&nbsp;Formation of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR in&nbsp;1922, and&nbsp;later on, after Lenin\u2019s death, were enshrined in&nbsp;the&nbsp;1924 Soviet Constitution.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This immediately raises many questions. The&nbsp;first is really the&nbsp;main one: why was it necessary to&nbsp;appease the&nbsp;nationalists, to&nbsp;satisfy the&nbsp;ceaselessly growing nationalist ambitions on&nbsp;the&nbsp;outskirts of&nbsp;the&nbsp;former empire? What was the&nbsp;point of&nbsp;transferring to&nbsp;the&nbsp;newly, often arbitrarily formed administrative units&nbsp;\u2013 the&nbsp;union republics&nbsp;\u2013 vast territories that had nothing to&nbsp;do with them? Let me repeat that these territories were transferred along with the&nbsp;population of&nbsp;what was historically Russia.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moreover, these administrative units were de facto given the&nbsp;status and&nbsp;form of&nbsp;national state entities. That raises another question: why was it necessary to&nbsp;make such generous gifts, beyond the&nbsp;wildest dreams of&nbsp;the&nbsp;most zealous nationalists and, on&nbsp;top of&nbsp;all that, give the&nbsp;republics the&nbsp;right to&nbsp;secede from the&nbsp;unified state without any conditions?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At&nbsp;first glance, this looks absolutely incomprehensible, even crazy. But only at&nbsp;first glance. There is an&nbsp;explanation. After the&nbsp;revolution, the&nbsp;Bolsheviks\u2019 main goal was to&nbsp;stay in&nbsp;power at&nbsp;all costs, absolutely at&nbsp;all costs. They did everything for&nbsp;this purpose: accepted the&nbsp;humiliating Treaty of&nbsp;Brest-Litovsk, although the&nbsp;military and&nbsp;economic situation in&nbsp;Kaiser Germany and&nbsp;its allies was dramatic and&nbsp;the&nbsp;outcome of&nbsp;the&nbsp;First World War was a&nbsp;foregone conclusion, and&nbsp;satisfied any demands and&nbsp;wishes of&nbsp;the&nbsp;nationalists within the&nbsp;country.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When it comes to&nbsp;the&nbsp;historical destiny of&nbsp;Russia and&nbsp;its peoples, Lenin\u2019s principles of&nbsp;state development were not just a&nbsp;mistake; they were worse than a&nbsp;mistake, as&nbsp;the&nbsp;saying goes. This became patently clear after the&nbsp;dissolution of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Soviet Union in&nbsp;1991.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of&nbsp;course, we cannot change past events, but we must at&nbsp;least admit them openly and&nbsp;honestly, without any reservations or&nbsp;politicking. Personally, I&nbsp;can add that no political factors, however impressive or&nbsp;profitable they may seem at&nbsp;any given moment, can or&nbsp;may be used as&nbsp;the&nbsp;fundamental principles of&nbsp;statehood.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;am not trying to&nbsp;put the&nbsp;blame on&nbsp;anyone. The&nbsp;situation in&nbsp;the&nbsp;country at&nbsp;that time, both before and&nbsp;after the&nbsp;Civil War, was extremely complicated; it was critical. The&nbsp;only thing I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;say today is that this is exactly how it was. It is a&nbsp;historical fact. Actually, as&nbsp;I&nbsp;have already said, Soviet Ukraine is the&nbsp;result of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Bolsheviks\u2019 policy and&nbsp;can be rightfully called \u201cVladimir Lenin\u2019s Ukraine.\u201d He was its creator and&nbsp;architect. This is fully and&nbsp;comprehensively corroborated by&nbsp;archival documents, including Lenin\u2019s harsh instructions regarding Donbass, which was actually shoved into Ukraine. And&nbsp;today the&nbsp;\u201cgrateful progeny\u201d has overturned monuments to&nbsp;Lenin in&nbsp;Ukraine. They call it decommunization.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>You want decommunization? Very well, this suits us just fine. But why stop halfway? We are ready to&nbsp;show what real decommunizations would mean for&nbsp;Ukraine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Going back to&nbsp;history, I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;repeat that the&nbsp;Soviet Union was established in&nbsp;the&nbsp;place of&nbsp;the&nbsp;former Russian Empire in&nbsp;1922. But practice showed immediately that it was impossible to&nbsp;preserve or&nbsp;govern such a&nbsp;vast and&nbsp;complex territory on&nbsp;the&nbsp;amorphous principles that amounted to&nbsp;confederation. They were far removed from reality and&nbsp;the&nbsp;historical tradition.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is logical that the&nbsp;Red Terror and&nbsp;a&nbsp;rapid slide into Stalin\u2019s dictatorship, the&nbsp;domination of&nbsp;the&nbsp;communist ideology and&nbsp;the&nbsp;Communist Party\u2019s monopoly on&nbsp;power, nationalisation and&nbsp;the&nbsp;planned economy&nbsp;\u2013 all this transformed the&nbsp;formally declared but ineffective principles of&nbsp;government into a&nbsp;mere declaration. In&nbsp;reality, the&nbsp;union republics did not have any sovereign rights, none at&nbsp;all. The&nbsp;practical result was the&nbsp;creation of&nbsp;a&nbsp;tightly centralised and&nbsp;absolutely unitary state.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;fact, what Stalin fully implemented was not Lenin\u2019s but his own principles of&nbsp;government. But he did not make the&nbsp;relevant amendments to&nbsp;the&nbsp;cornerstone documents, to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Constitution, and&nbsp;he did not formally revise Lenin\u2019s principles underlying the&nbsp;Soviet Union. From the&nbsp;look of&nbsp;it, there seemed to&nbsp;be no need for&nbsp;that, because everything seemed to&nbsp;be working well in&nbsp;conditions of&nbsp;the&nbsp;totalitarian regime, and&nbsp;outwardly it looked wonderful, attractive and&nbsp;even super-democratic.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And&nbsp;yet, it is a&nbsp;great pity that the&nbsp;fundamental and&nbsp;formally legal foundations of&nbsp;our state were not promptly cleansed of&nbsp;the&nbsp;odious and&nbsp;utopian fantasies inspired by&nbsp;the&nbsp;revolution, which are absolutely destructive for&nbsp;any normal state. As&nbsp;it often happened in&nbsp;our country before, nobody gave any thought to&nbsp;the&nbsp;future.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It seems that the&nbsp;Communist Party leaders were convinced that they had created a&nbsp;solid system of&nbsp;government and&nbsp;that their policies had settled the&nbsp;ethnic issue for&nbsp;good. But falsification, misconception, and&nbsp;tampering with public opinion have a&nbsp;high cost. The&nbsp;virus of&nbsp;nationalist ambitions is still with us, and&nbsp;the&nbsp;mine laid at&nbsp;the&nbsp;initial stage to&nbsp;destroy state immunity to&nbsp;the&nbsp;disease of&nbsp;nationalism was ticking. As&nbsp;I&nbsp;have already said, the&nbsp;mine was the&nbsp;right of&nbsp;secession from the&nbsp;Soviet Union.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;the&nbsp;mid-1980s, the&nbsp;increasing socioeconomic problems and&nbsp;the&nbsp;apparent crisis of&nbsp;the&nbsp;planned economy aggravated the&nbsp;ethnic issue, which essentially was not based on&nbsp;any expectations or&nbsp;unfulfilled dreams of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Soviet peoples but primarily the&nbsp;growing appetites of&nbsp;the&nbsp;local elites.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, instead of&nbsp;analysing the&nbsp;situation, taking appropriate measures, first of&nbsp;all in&nbsp;the&nbsp;economy, and&nbsp;gradually transforming the&nbsp;political system and&nbsp;government in&nbsp;a&nbsp;well-considered and&nbsp;balanced manner, the&nbsp;Communist Party leadership only engaged in&nbsp;open doubletalk about the&nbsp;revival of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Leninist principle of&nbsp;national self-determination.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moreover, in&nbsp;the&nbsp;course of&nbsp;power struggle within the&nbsp;Communist Party itself, each of&nbsp;the&nbsp;opposing sides, in&nbsp;a&nbsp;bid to&nbsp;expand its support base, started to&nbsp;thoughtlessly incite and&nbsp;encourage nationalist sentiments, manipulating them and&nbsp;promising their potential supporters whatever they wished. Against the&nbsp;backdrop of&nbsp;the&nbsp;superficial and&nbsp;populist rhetoric about democracy and&nbsp;a&nbsp;bright future based either on&nbsp;a&nbsp;market or&nbsp;a&nbsp;planned economy, but amid a&nbsp;true impoverishment of&nbsp;people and&nbsp;widespread shortages, no one among the&nbsp;powers that be was thinking about the&nbsp;inevitable tragic consequences for&nbsp;the&nbsp;country.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Next, they entirely embarked on&nbsp;the&nbsp;track beaten at&nbsp;the&nbsp;inception of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR and&nbsp;pandering to&nbsp;the&nbsp;ambitions of&nbsp;the&nbsp;nationalist elites nurtured within their own party ranks. But in&nbsp;so doing, they forgot that the&nbsp;CPSU no longer had&nbsp;\u2013 thank God&nbsp;\u2013 the&nbsp;tools for&nbsp;retaining power and&nbsp;the&nbsp;country itself, tools such as&nbsp;state terror and&nbsp;a&nbsp;Stalinist-type dictatorship, and&nbsp;that the&nbsp;notorious guiding role of&nbsp;the&nbsp;party was disappearing without a&nbsp;trace, like a&nbsp;morning mist, right before their eyes.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And&nbsp;then, the&nbsp;September 1989 plenary session of&nbsp;the&nbsp;CPSU Central Committee approved a&nbsp;truly fatal document, the&nbsp;so-called ethnic policy of&nbsp;the&nbsp;party in&nbsp;modern conditions, the&nbsp;CPSU platform. It included the&nbsp;following provisions, I&nbsp;quote: \u201cThe&nbsp;republics of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR shall possess all the&nbsp;rights appropriate to&nbsp;their status as&nbsp;sovereign socialist states.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;next point: \u201cThe&nbsp;supreme representative bodies of&nbsp;power of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR republics can challenge and&nbsp;suspend the&nbsp;operation of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR Government\u2019s resolutions and&nbsp;directives in&nbsp;their territory.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And&nbsp;finally: \u201cEach republic of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR shall have citizenship of&nbsp;its own, which shall apply to&nbsp;all of&nbsp;its residents.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wasn\u2019t it clear what these formulas and&nbsp;decisions would lead to?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now is not the&nbsp;time or&nbsp;place to&nbsp;go into matters pertaining to&nbsp;state or&nbsp;constitutional law, or&nbsp;define the&nbsp;concept of&nbsp;citizenship. But one may wonder: why was it necessary to&nbsp;rock the&nbsp;country even more in&nbsp;that already complicated situation? The&nbsp;facts remain.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even two years before the&nbsp;collapse of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR, its fate was actually predetermined. It is now that radicals and&nbsp;nationalists, including and&nbsp;primarily those in&nbsp;Ukraine, are taking credit for&nbsp;having gained independence. As&nbsp;we can see, this is absolutely wrong. The&nbsp;disintegration of&nbsp;our united country was brought about by&nbsp;the&nbsp;historic, strategic mistakes on&nbsp;the&nbsp;part of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Bolshevik leaders and&nbsp;the&nbsp;CPSU leadership, mistakes committed at&nbsp;different times in&nbsp;state-building and&nbsp;in&nbsp;economic and&nbsp;ethnic policies. The&nbsp;collapse of&nbsp;the&nbsp;historical Russia known as&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR is on&nbsp;their conscience.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite all these injustices, lies and&nbsp;outright pillage of&nbsp;Russia, it was our people who accepted the&nbsp;new geopolitical reality that took shape after the&nbsp;dissolution of&nbsp;the&nbsp;USSR, and&nbsp;recognised the&nbsp;new independent states. Not only did Russia recognise these countries, but helped its CIS partners, even though it faced a&nbsp;very dire situation itself. This included our Ukrainian colleagues, who turned to&nbsp;us for&nbsp;financial support many times from the&nbsp;very moment they declared independence. Our country provided this assistance while respecting Ukraine\u2019s dignity and&nbsp;sovereignty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to&nbsp;expert assessments, confirmed by&nbsp;a&nbsp;simple calculation of&nbsp;our energy prices, the&nbsp;subsidised loans Russia provided to&nbsp;Ukraine along with economic and&nbsp;trade preferences, the&nbsp;overall benefit for&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian budget in&nbsp;the&nbsp;period from 1991 to&nbsp;2013 amounted to&nbsp;$250 billion.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, there was more to&nbsp;it than that. By&nbsp;the&nbsp;end of&nbsp;1991, the&nbsp;USSR owed some $100 billion to&nbsp;other countries and&nbsp;international funds. Initially, there was this idea that all former Soviet republics will pay back these loans together, in&nbsp;the&nbsp;spirit of&nbsp;solidarity and&nbsp;proportionally to&nbsp;their economic potential. However, Russia undertook to&nbsp;pay back all Soviet debts and&nbsp;delivered on&nbsp;this promise by&nbsp;completing this process in&nbsp;2017.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;exchange for&nbsp;that, the&nbsp;newly independent states had to&nbsp;hand over to&nbsp;Russia part of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Soviet foreign assets. An&nbsp;agreement to&nbsp;this effect was reached with Ukraine in&nbsp;December 1994. However, Kiev failed to&nbsp;ratify these agreements and&nbsp;later simply refused to&nbsp;honour them by&nbsp;making demands for&nbsp;a&nbsp;share of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Diamond Treasury, gold reserves, as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;former USSR property and&nbsp;other assets abroad.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Nevertheless, despite all these challenges, Russia always worked with Ukraine in&nbsp;an&nbsp;open and&nbsp;honest manner and, as&nbsp;I&nbsp;have already said, with respect for&nbsp;its interests. We developed our ties in&nbsp;multiple fields. Thus, in&nbsp;2011, bilateral trade exceeded $50 billion. Let me note that in&nbsp;2019, that is before the&nbsp;pandemic, Ukraine\u2019s trade with all EU countries combined was below this indicator.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At&nbsp;the&nbsp;same time, it was striking how the&nbsp;Ukrainian authorities always preferred dealing with Russia in&nbsp;a&nbsp;way that ensured that they enjoy all the&nbsp;rights and&nbsp;privileges while remaining free from any obligations.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;officials in&nbsp;Kiev replaced partnership with a&nbsp;parasitic attitude acting at&nbsp;times in&nbsp;an&nbsp;extremely brash manner. Suffice it to&nbsp;recall the&nbsp;continuous blackmail on&nbsp;energy transits and&nbsp;the&nbsp;fact that they literally stole gas.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;can add that Kiev tried to&nbsp;use dialogue with Russia as&nbsp;a&nbsp;bargaining chip in&nbsp;its relations with the&nbsp;West, using the&nbsp;threat of&nbsp;closer ties with Russia for&nbsp;blackmailing the&nbsp;West to&nbsp;secure preferences by&nbsp;claiming that otherwise Russia would have a&nbsp;bigger influence in&nbsp;Ukraine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At&nbsp;the&nbsp;same time, the&nbsp;Ukrainian authorities&nbsp;\u2013 I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;emphasise this&nbsp;\u2013 began by&nbsp;building their statehood on&nbsp;the&nbsp;negation of&nbsp;everything that united us, trying to&nbsp;distort the&nbsp;mentality and&nbsp;historical memory of&nbsp;millions of&nbsp;people, of&nbsp;entire generations living in&nbsp;Ukraine. It is not surprising that Ukrainian society was faced with the&nbsp;rise of&nbsp;far-right nationalism, which rapidly developed into aggressive Russophobia and&nbsp;neo-Nazism. This resulted in&nbsp;the&nbsp;participation of&nbsp;Ukrainian nationalists and&nbsp;neo-Nazis in&nbsp;the&nbsp;terrorist groups in&nbsp;the&nbsp;North Caucasus and&nbsp;the&nbsp;increasingly loud territorial claims to&nbsp;Russia.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;role in&nbsp;this was played by&nbsp;external forces, which used a&nbsp;ramified network of&nbsp;NGOs and&nbsp;special services to&nbsp;nurture their clients in&nbsp;Ukraine and&nbsp;to&nbsp;bring their representatives to&nbsp;the&nbsp;seats of&nbsp;authority.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It should be noted that Ukraine actually never had stable traditions of&nbsp;real statehood. And, therefore, in&nbsp;1991 it opted for&nbsp;mindlessly emulating foreign models, which have no relation to&nbsp;history or&nbsp;Ukrainian realities. Political government institutions were readjusted many times to&nbsp;the&nbsp;rapidly growing clans and&nbsp;their self-serving interests, which had nothing to&nbsp;do with the&nbsp;interests of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian people.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Essentially, the&nbsp;so-called pro-Western civilisational choice made by&nbsp;the&nbsp;oligarchic Ukrainian authorities was not and&nbsp;is not aimed at&nbsp;creating better conditions in&nbsp;the&nbsp;interests of&nbsp;people\u2019s well-being but at&nbsp;keeping the&nbsp;billions of&nbsp;dollars that the&nbsp;oligarchs have stolen from the&nbsp;Ukrainians and&nbsp;are holding in&nbsp;their accounts in&nbsp;Western banks, while reverently accommodating the&nbsp;geopolitical rivals of&nbsp;Russia.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Some industrial and&nbsp;financial groups and&nbsp;the&nbsp;parties and&nbsp;politicians on&nbsp;their payroll relied on&nbsp;the&nbsp;nationalists and&nbsp;radicals from the&nbsp;very beginning. Others claimed to&nbsp;be in&nbsp;favour of&nbsp;good relations with Russia and&nbsp;cultural and&nbsp;language diversity, coming to&nbsp;power with the&nbsp;help of&nbsp;their citizens who sincerely supported their declared aspirations, including the&nbsp;millions of&nbsp;people in&nbsp;the&nbsp;south-eastern regions. But after getting the&nbsp;positions they coveted, these people immediately betrayed their voters, going back on&nbsp;their election promises and&nbsp;instead steering a&nbsp;policy prompted by&nbsp;the&nbsp;radicals and&nbsp;sometimes even persecuting their former allies&nbsp;\u2013 the&nbsp;public organisations that supported bilingualism and&nbsp;cooperation with Russia. These people took advantage of&nbsp;the&nbsp;fact that their voters were mostly law-abiding citizens with moderate views who trusted the&nbsp;authorities, and&nbsp;that, unlike the&nbsp;radicals, they would not act aggressively or&nbsp;make use of&nbsp;illegal instruments.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Meanwhile, the&nbsp;radicals became increasingly brazen in&nbsp;their actions and&nbsp;made more demands every year. They found it easy to&nbsp;force their will on&nbsp;the&nbsp;weak authorities, which were infected with the&nbsp;virus of&nbsp;nationalism and&nbsp;corruption as&nbsp;well and&nbsp;which artfully replaced the&nbsp;real cultural, economic and&nbsp;social interests of&nbsp;the&nbsp;people and&nbsp;Ukraine\u2019s true sovereignty with various ethnic speculations and&nbsp;formal ethnic attributes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;stable statehood has never developed in&nbsp;Ukraine; its electoral and&nbsp;other political procedures just serve as&nbsp;a&nbsp;cover, a&nbsp;screen for&nbsp;the&nbsp;redistribution of&nbsp;power and&nbsp;property between various oligarchic clans.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Corruption, which is certainly a&nbsp;challenge and&nbsp;a&nbsp;problem for&nbsp;many countries, including Russia, has gone beyond the&nbsp;usual scope in&nbsp;Ukraine. It has literally permeated and&nbsp;corroded Ukrainian statehood, the&nbsp;entire system, and&nbsp;all branches of&nbsp;power.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Radical nationalists took advantage of&nbsp;the&nbsp;justified public discontent and&nbsp;saddled the&nbsp;Maidan protest, escalating it to&nbsp;a&nbsp;coup d&#8217;\u00e9tat in&nbsp;2014. They also had direct assistance from foreign states. According to&nbsp;reports, the&nbsp;US Embassy provided $1 million a&nbsp;day to&nbsp;support the&nbsp;so-called protest camp on&nbsp;Independence Square in&nbsp;Kiev. In&nbsp;addition, large amounts were impudently transferred directly to&nbsp;the&nbsp;opposition leaders\u2019 bank accounts, tens of&nbsp;millions of&nbsp;dollars. But the&nbsp;people who actually suffered, the&nbsp;families of&nbsp;those who died in&nbsp;the&nbsp;clashes provoked in&nbsp;the&nbsp;streets and&nbsp;squares of&nbsp;Kiev and&nbsp;other cities, how much did they get in&nbsp;the&nbsp;end? Better not ask.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;nationalists who have seized power have unleashed a&nbsp;persecution, a&nbsp;real terror campaign against those who opposed their anti-constitutional actions. Politicians, journalists, and&nbsp;public activists were harassed and&nbsp;publicly humiliated. A&nbsp;wave of&nbsp;violence swept Ukrainian cities, including a&nbsp;series of&nbsp;high-profile and&nbsp;unpunished murders. One shudders at&nbsp;the&nbsp;memories of&nbsp;the&nbsp;terrible tragedy in&nbsp;Odessa, where peaceful protesters were brutally murdered, burned alive in&nbsp;the&nbsp;House of&nbsp;Trade Unions. The&nbsp;criminals who committed that atrocity have never been punished, and&nbsp;no one is even looking for&nbsp;them. But we know their names and&nbsp;we will do everything to&nbsp;punish them, find them and&nbsp;bring them to&nbsp;justice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Maidan did not bring Ukraine any closer to&nbsp;democracy and&nbsp;progress. Having accomplished a&nbsp;coup d&#8217;\u00e9tat, the&nbsp;nationalists and&nbsp;those political forces that supported them eventually led Ukraine into an&nbsp;impasse, pushed the&nbsp;country into the&nbsp;abyss of&nbsp;civil war. Eight years later, the&nbsp;country is split. Ukraine is struggling with an&nbsp;acute socioeconomic crisis.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to&nbsp;international organisations, in&nbsp;2019, almost 6 million Ukrainians&nbsp;\u2013 I&nbsp;emphasise&nbsp;\u2013 about 15 percent, not of&nbsp;the&nbsp;wokrforce, but of&nbsp;the&nbsp;entire population of&nbsp;that country, had to&nbsp;go abroad to&nbsp;find work. Most of&nbsp;them do odd jobs. The&nbsp;following fact is also revealing: since 2020, over 60,000 doctors and&nbsp;other health workers have left the&nbsp;country amid the&nbsp;pandemic.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Since 2014, water bills increased by&nbsp;almost a&nbsp;third, and&nbsp;energy bills grew several times, while the&nbsp;price of&nbsp;gas for&nbsp;households surged several dozen times. Many people simply do not have the&nbsp;money to&nbsp;pay for&nbsp;utilities. They literally struggle to&nbsp;survive.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What happened? Why is this all happening? The&nbsp;answer is obvious. They spent and&nbsp;embezzled the&nbsp;legacy inherited not only from the&nbsp;Soviet era, but also from the&nbsp;Russian Empire. They lost tens, hundreds of&nbsp;thousands of&nbsp;jobs which enabled people to&nbsp;earn a&nbsp;reliable income and&nbsp;generate tax revenue, among other things thanks to&nbsp;close cooperation with Russia. Sectors including machine building, instrument engineering, electronics, ship and&nbsp;aircraft building have been undermined or&nbsp;destroyed altogether. There was a&nbsp;time, however, when not only Ukraine, but the&nbsp;entire Soviet Union took pride in&nbsp;these companies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;2021, the&nbsp;Black Sea Shipyard in&nbsp;Nikolayev went out of&nbsp;business. Its first docks date back to&nbsp;Catherine the&nbsp;Great.&nbsp;<em>Antonov<\/em>, the&nbsp;famous manufacturer, has not made a&nbsp;single commercial aircraft since 2016, while&nbsp;<em>Yuzhmash<\/em>, a&nbsp;factory specialising in&nbsp;missile and&nbsp;space equipment, is nearly bankrupt. The&nbsp;Kremenchug Steel Plant is in&nbsp;a&nbsp;similar situation. This sad list goes on&nbsp;and&nbsp;on.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As&nbsp;for&nbsp;the&nbsp;gas transportation system, it was built in&nbsp;its entirety by&nbsp;the&nbsp;Soviet Union, and&nbsp;it has now deteriorated to&nbsp;an&nbsp;extent that using it creates major risks and&nbsp;comes at&nbsp;a&nbsp;high cost for&nbsp;the&nbsp;environment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This situation begs the&nbsp;question: poverty, lack of&nbsp;opportunity, and&nbsp;lost industrial and&nbsp;technological potential&nbsp;\u2013 is this the&nbsp;pro-Western civilisational choice they have been using for&nbsp;many years to&nbsp;fool millions of&nbsp;people with promises of&nbsp;heavenly pastures?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It all came down to&nbsp;a&nbsp;Ukrainian economy in&nbsp;tatters and&nbsp;an&nbsp;outright pillage of&nbsp;the&nbsp;country\u2019s citizens, while Ukraine itself was placed under external control, directed not only from the&nbsp;Western capitals, but also on&nbsp;the&nbsp;ground, as&nbsp;the&nbsp;saying goes, through an&nbsp;entire network of&nbsp;foreign advisors, NGOs and&nbsp;other institutions present in&nbsp;Ukraine. They have a&nbsp;direct bearing on&nbsp;all the&nbsp;key appointments and&nbsp;dismissals and&nbsp;on&nbsp;all branches of&nbsp;power at&nbsp;all levels, from the&nbsp;central government down to&nbsp;municipalities, as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;on&nbsp;state-owned companies and&nbsp;corporations, including Naftogaz, Ukrenergo, Ukrainian Railways, Ukroboronprom, Ukrposhta, and&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian Sea Ports Authority.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is no independent judiciary in&nbsp;Ukraine. The&nbsp;Kiev authorities, at&nbsp;the&nbsp;West\u2019s demand, delegated the&nbsp;priority right to&nbsp;select members of&nbsp;the&nbsp;supreme judicial bodies, the&nbsp;Council of&nbsp;Justice and&nbsp;the&nbsp;High Qualifications Commission of&nbsp;Judges, to&nbsp;international organisations.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;addition, the&nbsp;United States directly controls the&nbsp;National Agency on&nbsp;Corruption Prevention, the&nbsp;National Anti-Corruption Bureau, the&nbsp;Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor&#8217;s Office and&nbsp;the&nbsp;High Anti-Corruption Court. All this is done under the&nbsp;noble pretext of&nbsp;invigorating efforts against corruption. All right, but where are the&nbsp;results? Corruption is flourishing like never before.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Are the&nbsp;Ukrainian people aware that this is how their country is managed? Do they realise that their country has turned not even into a&nbsp;political or&nbsp;economic protectorate but has been reduced to&nbsp;a&nbsp;colony with a&nbsp;puppet regime? The&nbsp;state was privatised. As&nbsp;a&nbsp;result, the&nbsp;government, which designates itself as&nbsp;the&nbsp;\u201cpower of&nbsp;patriots\u201d no longer acts in&nbsp;a&nbsp;national capacity and&nbsp;consistently pushes Ukraine towards losing its sovereignty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;policy to&nbsp;root out the&nbsp;Russian language and&nbsp;culture and&nbsp;promote assimilation carries on. The&nbsp;Verkhovna Rada has generated a&nbsp;steady flow of&nbsp;discriminatory bills, and&nbsp;the&nbsp;law on&nbsp;the&nbsp;so-called indigenous people has already come into force. People who identify as&nbsp;Russians and&nbsp;want to&nbsp;preserve their identity, language and&nbsp;culture are getting the&nbsp;signal that they are not wanted in&nbsp;Ukraine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Under the&nbsp;laws on&nbsp;education and&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian language as&nbsp;a&nbsp;state language, the&nbsp;Russian language has no place in&nbsp;schools or&nbsp;public spaces, even in&nbsp;ordinary shops. The&nbsp;law on&nbsp;the&nbsp;so-called vetting of&nbsp;officials and&nbsp;purging their ranks created a&nbsp;pathway for&nbsp;dealing with unwanted civil servants.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There are more and&nbsp;more acts enabling the&nbsp;Ukrainian military and&nbsp;law enforcement agencies to&nbsp;crack down on&nbsp;the&nbsp;freedom of&nbsp;speech, dissent, and&nbsp;going after the&nbsp;opposition. The&nbsp;world knows the&nbsp;deplorable practice of&nbsp;imposing unilateral illegitimate sanctions against other countries, foreign individuals and&nbsp;legal entities. Ukraine has outperformed its Western masters by&nbsp;inventing sanctions against its own citizens, companies, television channels, other media outlets and&nbsp;even members of&nbsp;parliament.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Kiev continues to&nbsp;prepare the&nbsp;destruction of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian Orthodox Church of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Moscow Patriarchate. This is not an&nbsp;emotional judgement; proof of&nbsp;this can be found in&nbsp;concrete decisions and&nbsp;documents. The&nbsp;Ukrainian authorities have cynically turned the&nbsp;tragedy of&nbsp;the&nbsp;schism into an&nbsp;instrument of&nbsp;state policy. The&nbsp;current authorities do not react to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian people\u2019s appeals to&nbsp;abolish the&nbsp;laws that are infringing on&nbsp;believers\u2019 rights. Moreover, new draft laws directed against the&nbsp;clergy and&nbsp;millions of&nbsp;parishioners of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian Orthodox Church of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Moscow Patriarchate have been registered in&nbsp;the&nbsp;Verkhovna Rada.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;few words about Crimea. The&nbsp;people of&nbsp;the&nbsp;peninsula freely made their choice to&nbsp;be with Russia. The&nbsp;Kiev authorities cannot challenge the&nbsp;clearly stated choice of&nbsp;the&nbsp;people, which is why they have opted for&nbsp;aggressive action, for&nbsp;activating extremist cells, including radical Islamist organisations, for&nbsp;sending subversives to&nbsp;stage terrorist attacks at&nbsp;critical infrastructure facilities, and&nbsp;for&nbsp;kidnapping Russian citizens. We have factual proof that such aggressive actions are being taken with support from Western security services.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;March 2021, a&nbsp;new Military Strategy was adopted in&nbsp;Ukraine. This document is almost entirely dedicated to&nbsp;confrontation with Russia and&nbsp;sets the&nbsp;goal of&nbsp;involving foreign states in&nbsp;a&nbsp;conflict with our country. The&nbsp;strategy stipulates the&nbsp;organisation of&nbsp;what can be described as&nbsp;a&nbsp;terrorist underground movement in&nbsp;Russia\u2019s Crimea and&nbsp;in&nbsp;Donbass. It also sets out the&nbsp;contours of&nbsp;a&nbsp;potential war, which should end, according to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Kiev strategists, \u201cwith the&nbsp;assistance of&nbsp;the&nbsp;international community on&nbsp;favourable terms for&nbsp;Ukraine,\u201d as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;\u2013 listen carefully, please&nbsp;\u2013 \u201cwith foreign military support in&nbsp;the&nbsp;geopolitical confrontation with the&nbsp;Russian Federation.\u201d In&nbsp;fact, this is nothing other than preparation for&nbsp;hostilities against our country, Russia.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As&nbsp;we know, it has already been stated today that Ukraine intends to&nbsp;create its own nuclear weapons, and&nbsp;this is not just bragging. Ukraine has the&nbsp;nuclear technologies created back in&nbsp;the&nbsp;Soviet times and&nbsp;delivery vehicles for&nbsp;such weapons, including aircraft, as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;the&nbsp;Soviet-designed Tochka-U precision tactical missiles with a&nbsp;range of&nbsp;over 100 kilometres. But they can do more; it is only a&nbsp;matter of&nbsp;time. They have had the&nbsp;groundwork for&nbsp;this since the&nbsp;Soviet era.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;other words, acquiring tactical nuclear weapons will be much easier for&nbsp;Ukraine than for&nbsp;some other states I&nbsp;am not going to&nbsp;mention here, which are conducting such research, especially if Kiev receives foreign technological support. We cannot rule this out either.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If Ukraine acquires weapons of&nbsp;mass destruction, the&nbsp;situation in&nbsp;the&nbsp;world and&nbsp;in&nbsp;Europe will drastically change, especially for&nbsp;us, for&nbsp;Russia. We cannot but react to&nbsp;this real danger, all the&nbsp;more so since, let me repeat, Ukraine\u2019s Western patrons may help it acquire these weapons to&nbsp;create yet another threat to&nbsp;our country. We are seeing how persistently the&nbsp;Kiev regime is being pumped with arms. Since 2014, the&nbsp;United States alone has spent billions of&nbsp;dollars for&nbsp;this purpose, including supplies of&nbsp;arms and&nbsp;equipment and&nbsp;training of&nbsp;specialists. In&nbsp;the&nbsp;last few months, there has been a&nbsp;constant flow of&nbsp;Western weapons to&nbsp;Ukraine, ostentatiously, with the&nbsp;entire world watching. Foreign advisors supervise the&nbsp;activities of&nbsp;Ukraine\u2019s armed forces and&nbsp;special services and&nbsp;we are well aware of&nbsp;this.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Over the&nbsp;past few years, military contingents of&nbsp;NATO countries have been almost constantly present on&nbsp;Ukrainian territory under the&nbsp;pretext of&nbsp;exercises. The&nbsp;Ukrainian troop control system has already been integrated into NATO. This means that NATO headquarters can issue direct commands to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Ukrainian armed forces, even to&nbsp;their separate units and&nbsp;squads.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;United States and&nbsp;NATO have started an&nbsp;impudent development of&nbsp;Ukrainian territory as&nbsp;a&nbsp;theatre of&nbsp;potential military operations. Their regular joint exercises are obviously anti-Russian. Last year alone, over 23,000 troops and&nbsp;more than a&nbsp;thousand units of&nbsp;hardware were involved.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;law has already been adopted that allows foreign troops to&nbsp;come to&nbsp;Ukraine in&nbsp;2022 to&nbsp;take part in&nbsp;multinational drills. Understandably, these are primarily NATO troops. This year, at&nbsp;least ten of&nbsp;these joint drills are planned.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Obviously, such undertakings are designed to&nbsp;be a&nbsp;cover-up for&nbsp;a&nbsp;rapid buildup of&nbsp;the&nbsp;NATO military group on&nbsp;Ukrainian territory. This is all the&nbsp;more so since the&nbsp;network of&nbsp;airfields upgraded with US help in&nbsp;Borispol, Ivano-Frankovsk, Chuguyev and&nbsp;Odessa, to&nbsp;name a&nbsp;few, is capable of&nbsp;transferring army units in&nbsp;a&nbsp;very short time. Ukraine\u2019s airspace is open to&nbsp;flights by&nbsp;US strategic and&nbsp;reconnaissance aircraft and&nbsp;drones that conduct surveillance over Russian territory.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;will add that the&nbsp;US-built Maritime Operations Centre in&nbsp;Ochakov makes it possible to&nbsp;support activity by&nbsp;NATO warships, including the&nbsp;use of&nbsp;precision weapons, against the&nbsp;Russian Black Sea Fleet and&nbsp;our infrastructure on&nbsp;the&nbsp;entire Black Sea Coast.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At&nbsp;one time, the&nbsp;United States intended to&nbsp;build similar facilities in&nbsp;Crimea as&nbsp;well but the&nbsp;Crimeans and&nbsp;residents of&nbsp;Sevastopol wrecked these plans. We will always remember this.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;repeat that today such a&nbsp;centre has already been deployed in&nbsp;Ochakov. In&nbsp;the&nbsp;18<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;century, soldiers of&nbsp;Alexander Suvorov fought for&nbsp;this city. Owing to&nbsp;their courage, it became part of&nbsp;Russia. Also in&nbsp;the&nbsp;18<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;century, the&nbsp;lands of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Black Sea littoral, incorporated in&nbsp;Russia as&nbsp;a&nbsp;result of&nbsp;wars with the&nbsp;Ottoman Empire, were given the&nbsp;name of&nbsp;Novorossiya (New Russia). Now attempts are being made to&nbsp;condemn these landmarks of&nbsp;history to&nbsp;oblivion, along with the&nbsp;names of&nbsp;state and&nbsp;military figures of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Russian Empire without whose efforts modern Ukraine would not have many big cities or&nbsp;even access to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Black Sea.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;monument to&nbsp;Alexander Suvorov was recently demolished in&nbsp;Poltava. What is there to&nbsp;say? Are you renouncing your own past? The&nbsp;so-called colonial heritage of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Russian Empire? Well, in&nbsp;this case, be consistent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Next, notably, Article 17 of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Constitution of&nbsp;Ukraine stipulates that deploying foreign military bases on&nbsp;its territory is illegal. However, as&nbsp;it turns out, this is just a&nbsp;conventionality that can be easily circumvented.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ukraine is home to&nbsp;NATO training missions which are, in&nbsp;fact, foreign military bases. They just called a&nbsp;base a&nbsp;mission and&nbsp;were done with it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Kiev has long proclaimed a&nbsp;strategic course on&nbsp;joining NATO. Indeed, each country is entitled to&nbsp;pick its own security system and&nbsp;enter into military alliances. There would be no problem with that, if it were not for&nbsp;one \u201cbut.\u201d International documents expressly stipulate the&nbsp;principle of&nbsp;equal and&nbsp;indivisible security, which includes obligations not to&nbsp;strengthen one&#8217;s own security at&nbsp;the&nbsp;expense of&nbsp;the&nbsp;security of&nbsp;other states. This is stated in&nbsp;the&nbsp;1999 OSCE Charter for&nbsp;European Security adopted in&nbsp;Istanbul and&nbsp;the&nbsp;2010 OSCE Astana Declaration.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;other words, the&nbsp;choice of&nbsp;pathways towards ensuring security should not pose a&nbsp;threat to&nbsp;other states, whereas Ukraine joining NATO is a&nbsp;direct threat to&nbsp;Russia&#8217;s security.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Let me remind you that at&nbsp;the&nbsp;Bucharest NATO summit held in&nbsp;April 2008, the&nbsp;United States pushed through a&nbsp;decision to&nbsp;the&nbsp;effect that Ukraine and, by&nbsp;the&nbsp;way, Georgia would become NATO members. Many European allies of&nbsp;the&nbsp;United States were well aware of&nbsp;the&nbsp;risks associated with this prospect already then, but were forced to&nbsp;put up with the&nbsp;will of&nbsp;their senior partner. The&nbsp;Americans simply used them to&nbsp;carry out a&nbsp;clearly anti-Russian policy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;number of&nbsp;NATO member states are still very sceptical about Ukraine joining NATO. We are getting signals from some European capitals telling us not to&nbsp;worry since it will not happen literally overnight. In&nbsp;fact, our US partners are saying the&nbsp;same thing as&nbsp;well. \u201cAll right, then\u201d we respond, \u201cif it does not happen tomorrow, then it will happen the&nbsp;day after tomorrow. What does it change from the&nbsp;historical perspective? Nothing at&nbsp;all.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, we are aware of&nbsp;the&nbsp;US leadership\u2019s position and&nbsp;words that active hostilities in&nbsp;eastern Ukraine do not rule out the&nbsp;possibility of&nbsp;that country joining NATO if it meets NATO criteria and&nbsp;overcomes corruption.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>All the&nbsp;while, they are trying to&nbsp;convince us over and&nbsp;over again that NATO is a&nbsp;peace-loving and&nbsp;purely defensive alliance that poses no threat to&nbsp;Russia. Again, they want us to&nbsp;take their word for&nbsp;it. But we are well aware of&nbsp;the&nbsp;real value of&nbsp;these words. In&nbsp;1990, when German unification was discussed, the&nbsp;United States promised the&nbsp;Soviet leadership that NATO jurisdiction or&nbsp;military presence will not expand one inch to&nbsp;the&nbsp;east and&nbsp;that the&nbsp;unification of&nbsp;Germany will not lead to&nbsp;the&nbsp;spread of&nbsp;NATO&#8217;s military organisation to&nbsp;the&nbsp;east. This is a&nbsp;quote.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They issued lots of&nbsp;verbal assurances, all of&nbsp;which turned out to&nbsp;be empty phrases. Later, they began to&nbsp;assure us that the&nbsp;accession to&nbsp;NATO by&nbsp;Central and&nbsp;Eastern European countries would only improve relations with Moscow, relieve these countries of&nbsp;the&nbsp;fears steeped in&nbsp;their bitter historical legacy, and&nbsp;even create a&nbsp;belt of&nbsp;countries that are friendly towards Russia.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, the&nbsp;exact opposite happened. The&nbsp;governments of&nbsp;certain Eastern European countries, speculating on&nbsp;Russophobia, brought their complexes and&nbsp;stereotypes about the&nbsp;Russian threat to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Alliance and&nbsp;insisted on&nbsp;building up the&nbsp;collective defence potentials and&nbsp;deploying them primarily against Russia. Worse still, that happened in&nbsp;the&nbsp;1990s and&nbsp;the&nbsp;early 2000s when, thanks to&nbsp;our openness and&nbsp;goodwill, relations between Russia and&nbsp;the&nbsp;West had reached a&nbsp;high level.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Russia has fulfilled all of&nbsp;its obligations, including the&nbsp;pullout from Germany, from Central and&nbsp;Eastern Europe, making an&nbsp;immense contribution to&nbsp;overcoming the&nbsp;legacy of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Cold War. We have consistently proposed various cooperation options, including in&nbsp;the&nbsp;NATO-Russia Council and&nbsp;the&nbsp;OSCE formats.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moreover, I&nbsp;will say something I&nbsp;have never said publicly, I&nbsp;will say it now for&nbsp;the&nbsp;first time. When then outgoing US President Bill Clinton visited Moscow in&nbsp;2000, I&nbsp;asked him how America would feel about admitting Russia to&nbsp;NATO.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;will not reveal all the&nbsp;details of&nbsp;that conversation, but the&nbsp;reaction to&nbsp;my&nbsp;question was, let us say, quite restrained, and&nbsp;the&nbsp;Americans\u2019 true attitude to&nbsp;that possibility can actually be seen from their subsequent steps with regard to&nbsp;our country. I&nbsp;am referring to&nbsp;the&nbsp;overt support for&nbsp;terrorists in&nbsp;the&nbsp;North Caucasus, the&nbsp;disregard for&nbsp;our security demands and&nbsp;concerns, NATO\u2019s continued expansion, withdrawal from the&nbsp;ABM Treaty, and&nbsp;so on. It raises the&nbsp;question: why? What is all this about, what is the&nbsp;purpose? All right, you do not want to&nbsp;see us as&nbsp;friends or&nbsp;allies, but why make us an&nbsp;enemy?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There can be only one answer&nbsp;\u2013 this is not about our political regime or&nbsp;anything like that. They just do not need a&nbsp;big and&nbsp;independent country like Russia around. This is the&nbsp;answer to&nbsp;all questions. This is the&nbsp;source of&nbsp;America\u2019s traditional policy towards Russia. Hence the&nbsp;attitude to&nbsp;all our security proposals<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Today, one glance at&nbsp;the&nbsp;map is enough to&nbsp;see to&nbsp;what extent Western countries have kept their promise to&nbsp;refrain from NATO\u2019s eastward expansion. They just cheated. We have seen five waves of&nbsp;NATO expansion, one after another&nbsp;\u2013 Poland, the&nbsp;Czech Republic and&nbsp;Hungary were admitted in&nbsp;1999; Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and&nbsp;Slovenia in&nbsp;2004; Albania and&nbsp;Croatia in&nbsp;2009; Montenegro in&nbsp;2017; and&nbsp;North Macedonia in&nbsp;2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As&nbsp;a&nbsp;result, the&nbsp;Alliance, its military infrastructure has reached Russia\u2019s borders. This is one of&nbsp;the&nbsp;key causes of&nbsp;the&nbsp;European security crisis; it has had the&nbsp;most negative impact on&nbsp;the&nbsp;entire system of&nbsp;international relations and&nbsp;led to&nbsp;the&nbsp;loss of&nbsp;mutual trust.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;situation continues to&nbsp;deteriorate, including in&nbsp;the&nbsp;strategic area. Thus, positioning areas for&nbsp;interceptor missiles are being established in&nbsp;Romania and&nbsp;Poland as&nbsp;part of&nbsp;the&nbsp;US project to&nbsp;create a&nbsp;global missile defence system. It is common knowledge that the&nbsp;launchers deployed there can be used for&nbsp;Tomahawk cruise missiles&nbsp;\u2013 offensive strike systems.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;addition, the&nbsp;United States is developing its all-purpose Standard Missile-6, which can provide air and&nbsp;missile defence, as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;strike ground and&nbsp;surface targets. In&nbsp;other words, the&nbsp;allegedly defensive US missile defence system is developing and&nbsp;expanding its new offensive capabilities.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;information we have gives us good reason to&nbsp;believe that Ukraine\u2019s accession to&nbsp;NATO and&nbsp;the&nbsp;subsequent deployment of&nbsp;NATO facilities has already been decided and&nbsp;is only a&nbsp;matter of&nbsp;time. We clearly understand that given this scenario, the&nbsp;level of&nbsp;military threats to&nbsp;Russia will increase dramatically, several times over. And&nbsp;I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;emphasise at&nbsp;this point that the&nbsp;risk of&nbsp;a&nbsp;sudden strike at&nbsp;our country will multiply.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;will explain that American strategic planning documents confirm the&nbsp;possibility of&nbsp;a&nbsp;so-called preemptive strike at&nbsp;enemy missile systems. We also know the&nbsp;main adversary of&nbsp;the&nbsp;United States and&nbsp;NATO. It is Russia. NATO documents officially declare our country to&nbsp;be the&nbsp;main threat to&nbsp;Euro-Atlantic security. Ukraine will serve as&nbsp;an&nbsp;advanced bridgehead for&nbsp;such a&nbsp;strike. If our ancestors heard about this, they would probably simply not believe this. We do not want to&nbsp;believe this today either, but it is what it is. I&nbsp;would like people in&nbsp;Russia and&nbsp;Ukraine to&nbsp;understand this.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Many Ukrainian airfields are located not far from our borders. NATO\u2019s tactical aviation deployed there, including precision weapon carriers, will be capable of&nbsp;striking at&nbsp;our territory to&nbsp;the&nbsp;depth of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Volgograd-Kazan-Samara-Astrakhan line. The&nbsp;deployment of&nbsp;reconnaissance radars on&nbsp;Ukrainian territory will allow NATO to&nbsp;tightly control Russia\u2019s airspace up to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Urals.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, after the&nbsp;US destroyed the&nbsp;INF Treaty, the&nbsp;Pentagon has been openly developing many land-based attack weapons, including ballistic missiles that are capable of&nbsp;hitting targets at&nbsp;a&nbsp;distance of&nbsp;up to&nbsp;5,500 km. If deployed in&nbsp;Ukraine, such systems will be able to&nbsp;hit targets in&nbsp;Russia\u2019s entire European part. The&nbsp;flying time of&nbsp;Tomahawk cruise missiles to&nbsp;Moscow will be less than 35 minutes; ballistic missiles from Kharkov will take seven to&nbsp;eight minutes; and&nbsp;hypersonic assault weapons, four to&nbsp;five minutes. It is like a&nbsp;knife to&nbsp;the&nbsp;throat. I&nbsp;have no doubt that they hope to&nbsp;carry out these plans, as&nbsp;they did many times in&nbsp;the&nbsp;past, expanding NATO eastward, moving their military infrastructure to&nbsp;Russian borders and&nbsp;fully ignoring our concerns, protests and&nbsp;warnings. Excuse me, but they simply did not care at&nbsp;all about such things and&nbsp;did whatever they deemed necessary.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of&nbsp;course, they are going to&nbsp;behave in&nbsp;the&nbsp;same way in&nbsp;the&nbsp;future, following a&nbsp;well-known proverb: \u201cThe&nbsp;dogs bark but the&nbsp;caravan goes on.\u201d Let me say right away&nbsp;\u2013 we do not accept this behaviour and&nbsp;will never accept it. That said, Russia has always advocated the&nbsp;resolution of&nbsp;the&nbsp;most complicated problems by&nbsp;political and&nbsp;diplomatic means, at&nbsp;the&nbsp;negotiating table.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We are well aware of&nbsp;our enormous responsibility when it comes to&nbsp;regional and&nbsp;global stability. Back in&nbsp;2008, Russia put forth an&nbsp;initiative to&nbsp;conclude a&nbsp;European Security Treaty under which not a&nbsp;single Euro-Atlantic state or&nbsp;international organisation could strengthen their security at&nbsp;the&nbsp;expense of&nbsp;the&nbsp;security of&nbsp;others. However, our proposal was rejected right off the&nbsp;bat on&nbsp;the&nbsp;pretext that Russia should not be allowed to&nbsp;put limits on&nbsp;NATO activities.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, it was made explicitly clear to&nbsp;us that only NATO members can have legally binding security guarantees.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Last December, we handed over to&nbsp;our Western partners a&nbsp;draft treaty between the&nbsp;Russian Federation and&nbsp;the&nbsp;United States of&nbsp;America on&nbsp;security guarantees, as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;a&nbsp;draft agreement on&nbsp;measures to&nbsp;ensure the&nbsp;security of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Russian Federation and&nbsp;NATO member states.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;United States and&nbsp;NATO responded with general statements. There were kernels of&nbsp;rationality in&nbsp;them as&nbsp;well, but they concerned matters of&nbsp;secondary importance and&nbsp;it all looked like an&nbsp;attempt to&nbsp;drag the&nbsp;issue out and&nbsp;to&nbsp;lead the&nbsp;discussion astray.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We responded to&nbsp;this accordingly and&nbsp;pointed out that we were ready to&nbsp;follow the&nbsp;path of&nbsp;negotiations, provided, however, that all issues are considered as&nbsp;a&nbsp;package that includes Russia\u2019s core proposals which contain three key points. First, to&nbsp;prevent further NATO expansion. Second, to&nbsp;have the&nbsp;Alliance refrain from deploying assault weapon systems on&nbsp;Russian borders. And&nbsp;finally, rolling back the&nbsp;bloc&#8217;s military capability and&nbsp;infrastructure in&nbsp;Europe to&nbsp;where they were in&nbsp;1997, when the&nbsp;NATO-Russia Founding Act was signed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>These principled proposals of&nbsp;ours have been ignored. To&nbsp;reiterate, our Western partners have once again vocalised the&nbsp;all-too-familiar formulas that each state is entitled to&nbsp;freely choose ways to&nbsp;ensure its security or&nbsp;to&nbsp;join any military union or&nbsp;alliance. That is, nothing has changed in&nbsp;their stance, and&nbsp;we keep hearing the&nbsp;same old references to&nbsp;NATO\u2019s notorious \u201copen door\u201d policy. Moreover, they are again trying to&nbsp;blackmail us and&nbsp;are threatening us with sanctions, which, by&nbsp;the&nbsp;way, they will introduce no matter what as&nbsp;Russia continues to&nbsp;strengthen its sovereignty and&nbsp;its Armed Forces. To&nbsp;be sure, they will never think twice before coming up with or&nbsp;just fabricating a&nbsp;pretext for&nbsp;yet another sanction attack regardless of&nbsp;the&nbsp;developments in&nbsp;Ukraine. Their one and&nbsp;only goal is to&nbsp;hold back the&nbsp;development of&nbsp;Russia. And&nbsp;they will keep doing so, just as&nbsp;they did before, even without any formal pretext just because we exist and&nbsp;will never compromise our sovereignty, national interests or&nbsp;values.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;be clear and&nbsp;straightforward: in&nbsp;the&nbsp;current circumstances, when our proposals for&nbsp;an&nbsp;equal dialogue on&nbsp;fundamental issues have actually remained unanswered by&nbsp;the&nbsp;United States and&nbsp;NATO, when the&nbsp;level of&nbsp;threats to&nbsp;our country has increased significantly, Russia has every right to&nbsp;respond in&nbsp;order to&nbsp;ensure its security. That is exactly what we will do.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With regard to&nbsp;the&nbsp;state of&nbsp;affairs in&nbsp;Donbass, we see that the&nbsp;ruling Kiev elites never stop publicly making clear their unwillingness to&nbsp;comply with the&nbsp;Minsk Package of&nbsp;Measures to&nbsp;settle the&nbsp;conflict and&nbsp;are not interested in&nbsp;a&nbsp;peaceful settlement. On&nbsp;the&nbsp;contrary, they are trying to&nbsp;orchestrate a&nbsp;blitzkrieg in&nbsp;Donbass as&nbsp;was the&nbsp;case in&nbsp;2014 and&nbsp;2015. We all know how these reckless schemes ended.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Not a&nbsp;single day goes by&nbsp;without Donbass communities coming under shelling attacks. The&nbsp;recently formed large military force makes use of&nbsp;attack drones, heavy equipment, missiles, artillery and&nbsp;multiple rocket launchers. The&nbsp;killing of&nbsp;civilians, the&nbsp;blockade, the&nbsp;abuse of&nbsp;people, including children, women and&nbsp;the&nbsp;elderly, continues unabated. As&nbsp;we say, there is no end in&nbsp;sight to&nbsp;this.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Meanwhile, the&nbsp;so-called civilised world, which our Western colleagues proclaimed themselves the&nbsp;only representatives of, prefers not to&nbsp;see this, as&nbsp;if this horror and&nbsp;genocide, which almost 4 million people are facing, do not exist. But they do exist and&nbsp;only because these people did not agree with the&nbsp;West-supported coup in&nbsp;Ukraine in&nbsp;2014 and&nbsp;opposed the&nbsp;transition towards the&nbsp;Neanderthal and&nbsp;aggressive nationalism and&nbsp;neo-Nazism which have been elevated in&nbsp;Ukraine to&nbsp;the&nbsp;rank of&nbsp;national policy. They are fighting for&nbsp;their elementary right to&nbsp;live on&nbsp;their own land, to&nbsp;speak their own language, and&nbsp;to&nbsp;preserve their culture and&nbsp;traditions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>How long can this tragedy continue? How much longer can one put up with this? Russia has done everything to&nbsp;preserve Ukraine\u2019s territorial integrity. All these years, it has persistently and&nbsp;patiently pushed for&nbsp;the&nbsp;implementation of&nbsp;UN Security Council Resolution 2202 of&nbsp;February&nbsp;17, 2015, which consolidated the&nbsp;Minsk Package of&nbsp;Measures of&nbsp;February&nbsp;12, 2015, to&nbsp;settle the&nbsp;situation in&nbsp;Donbass.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Everything was in&nbsp;vain. Presidents and&nbsp;Rada deputies come and&nbsp;go, but deep down the&nbsp;aggressive and&nbsp;nationalistic regime that seized power in&nbsp;Kiev remains unchanged. It is entirely a&nbsp;product of&nbsp;the&nbsp;2014 coup, and&nbsp;those who then embarked on&nbsp;the&nbsp;path of&nbsp;violence, bloodshed and&nbsp;lawlessness did not recognise then and&nbsp;do not recognise now any solution to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Donbass issue other than a&nbsp;military one.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;this regard, I&nbsp;consider it necessary to&nbsp;take a&nbsp;long overdue decision and&nbsp;to&nbsp;immediately recognise the&nbsp;independence and&nbsp;sovereignty of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Donetsk People&#8217;s Republic and&nbsp;the&nbsp;Lugansk People&#8217;s Republic.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I&nbsp;would like to&nbsp;ask the&nbsp;Federal Assembly of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Russian Federation to&nbsp;support this decision and&nbsp;then ratify the&nbsp;Treaty of&nbsp;Friendship and&nbsp;Mutual Assistance with both republics. These two documents will be prepared and&nbsp;signed shortly.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We want those who seized and&nbsp;continue to&nbsp;hold power in&nbsp;Kiev to&nbsp;immediately stop hostilities. Otherwise, the&nbsp;responsibility for&nbsp;the&nbsp;possible continuation of&nbsp;the&nbsp;bloodshed will lie entirely on&nbsp;the&nbsp;conscience of&nbsp;Ukraine\u2019s ruling regime.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As&nbsp;I&nbsp;announce the&nbsp;decisions taken today, I&nbsp;remain confident in&nbsp;the&nbsp;support of&nbsp;Russia\u2019s citizens and&nbsp;the&nbsp;country\u2019s patriotic forces.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Thank you.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>22:35 The\u00a0Kremlin, Moscow President of&nbsp;Russia Vladimir Putin:&nbsp;Citizens of&nbsp;Russia, friends, My&nbsp;address concerns the&nbsp;events in&nbsp;Ukraine and&nbsp;why this is so important for&nbsp;us, for&nbsp;Russia. Of&nbsp;course, my&nbsp;message is also addressed to&nbsp;our compatriots in&nbsp;Ukraine. The&nbsp;matter is very serious and&nbsp;needs to&nbsp;be discussed in&nbsp;depth. The&nbsp;situation in&nbsp;Donbass has reached a&nbsp;critical, acute stage. I&nbsp;am speaking to&nbsp;you directly today not only to&nbsp;explain what is happening but [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-17","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=17"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":26,"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17\/revisions\/26"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=17"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=17"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pauleccles.co.za\/wordpress\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=17"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}