W. Zelensky: We want peace, but Russia must be stopped

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said today that he did not want “despite the peace” but defended his right to defend himself against the threat of a Russian invasion, insisting on the need for “precautionary” sanctions against Moscow.

Some Western countries, such as the United States, Britain or Poland, have decided to hand over weapons to Ukraine amid fears of a Russian attack.

“These weapons are for defense, we do not think about peace, despite the end of the occupation of our territories, only through diplomacy,” said the Ukrainian president in a joint press conference with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

“We will not cede a single piece of land, we will not cede our lands, whatever the price,” he added, insisting on the need for “precautionary measures” in order to stop Russia.

Following a pro-Western revolution in Kiev, Russia annexed the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea in 2014. Shortly afterwards, a separatist uprising broke out in Moscow, which controls part of eastern Ukraine. The conflict has caused at least 13,000 deaths and has never stopped completely.

Russia is now accused by the West of gathering tens of thousands of troops on the border with Ukraine for a possible invasion.

Mark Rutte insisted that “every effort” must be made for a “de-escalation” and considered it “necessary” to “continue the dialogue between Russia and the United States, between Russia and NATO.”

“If this does not happen, the Netherlands is clear in its analysis that any new attack on Ukraine will have serious consequences,” he warned.

Moscow says it does not have any pro-war sentiment but depends on de-escalation from a list of requirements necessary to ensure its security, most notably reassurance that Ukraine will never join NATO and that the North Atlantic Alliance will withdraw. her men in the positions they held in 1997.

Speaking publicly for the first time in weeks, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday accused the United States of ignoring Moscow’s concerns and using Ukraine to contain Russia, before saying he hoped for a “solution”. of the crisis between Russia and the West.

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has called on his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov to “immediately de-escalate”, demanding the “withdrawal” of Russian troops and warning of “swift and severe” sanctions in the event of an attack.

Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

Source: Capital

You may also like

The most beautiful songs on fragility
Entertainment
Susan

The most beautiful songs on fragility

There are songs that seem written precisely for those moments in which you are more discovered, moments in which you