Tag: Kremlin

  • Putin won’t attend Prigozhin’s funeral – Kremlin

    Putin won’t attend Prigozhin’s funeral – Kremlin

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has no plans to attend the funeral of Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who was killed when his plane crashed last week, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.

    The crash came two months to the day after Prigozhin and his mercenaries staged a mutiny against Putin’s top military commanders in which they took control of the southern city of Rostov and advanced towards Moscow before turning back 200 km (125 miles) from the capital.

    “The presence of the president is not envisaged,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked if Putin would attend.

    Peskov said the Kremlin did not have any specific information about the funeral, and the arrangements were up to the family.

    Investigators said on Sunday that genetic tests had confirmed that Prigozhin was among the 10 people killed in the crash.

    The Kremlin has rejected as an “absolute lie” the suggestion by some Western politicians and commentators that Putin ordered Prigozhin to be killed in revenge.

  • “US support package would not help Ukraine”- Russia brags

    “US support package would not help Ukraine”- Russia brags

    Russia has accused the United States of fighting a proxy war in Ukraine, saying “the latest US support package- which comes on top of some $50bn already sent to Ukraine this year as Europe’s biggest land conflict since World War II drags on- would not help end the more than 300-day-long conflict.”

    “This is not conducive to a speedy settlement, quite the contrary. And this cannot prevent the Russian Federation from achieving its goals during the special military operation,” Kremlin (Russia) spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters on Thursday.

    Recall that Washington hosted Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, on a historic visit and boosted military support for his country.

    Zelenskyy enjoyed a hero’s welcome on his lightning trip to Washington on Wednesday, with his US counterpart Joe Biden committing to providing Kyiv with $1.8bn-worth of military equipment, including the highly sought after Patriot missile defence system.

    Peskov added that there had been no calls for peace or signs of willingness to “listen to Russia’s concerns” during Zelenskyy’s visit, proving that the US was intent on fighting a proxy war with Russia “to the last Ukrainian”.

    His remarks came as Russian news agencies reported that defence minister Sergei Shoigu had visited army units fighting in Ukraine. The reports did not specify where the visit took place.

    Advanced air defence system
    Zelenskyy’s visit marked his first overseas trip since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24.

    Before addressing a joint meeting of Congress, the Ukrainian leader held a meeting with Biden at the White House, during which the US president pledged to deliver the Patriot system to Kyiv.

    Ukraine had previously appealed for the equipment, arguing that it would help bolster its air defences amid continued Russian missile attacks on critical infrastructure and cities across the country which have left millions of people without electricity or running water during a freezing winter.

    The Patriot is one of the most advanced US air defence systems, capable of intercepting threats, such as aircraft and ballistic missiles.

    It was gathered that Ukrainian troops will learn how to use it in Germany, and it will be several months before they can deploy it on the battlefield.

    Russia has said that once deployed, the Patriot system will be a legitimate target for Russian bombardment.

  • Don’t close American embassy, U.S. ambassador tells Russia

    Don’t close American embassy, U.S. ambassador tells Russia

    Russia should not close the U.S. embassy despite the crisis triggered by the war in Ukraine because the world’s two biggest nuclear powers must continue to talk, the U.S. ambassador to Moscow was quoted as saying on Monday.

    President Vladimir Putin has cast the invasion of Ukraine as a turning point in Russian history: a revolt against the hegemony of the United States, which the Kremlin chief says has humiliated Russia since the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union.

    Ukraine – and its Western backers – says it is fighting for its survival against a reckless imperial-style land grab that has killed thousands, displaced more than 10 million people, and reduced swathes of the country to wasteland.

    In a clear attempt to send a message to the Kremlin, John J. Sullivan, the U.S. ambassador appointed by President Donald Trump, told Russia’s state TASS news agency that Washington and Moscow should not simply break off diplomatic relations.

    “We must preserve the ability to speak to each other,” Sullivan told TASS in an interview. He cautioned against the removal of the works of Leo Tolstoy from Western bookshelves or refusing to play the music of Pyotr Tchaikovsky.

    His remarks were reported by TASS in Russian and translated into English by Reuters.

    In spite of the crises, spy scandals, and brinkmanship of the Cold War, relations between Moscow and Washington have not been broken off since the United States established ties with the Soviet Union in 1933.

    Now, though, Russia says its post-Soviet dalliance with the West is over and that it will turn eastwards.

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken last month quipped that he would like to dedicate Taylor Swift’s “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” to Putin.

    Asked about that remark, Sullivan said: “We also will never break up entirely.”

    When asked by TASS if the analogy meant that the embassies could be closed, Sullivan said: “They can – there is that possibility, although I think it would be a big mistake.

    “As I understand it, the Russian government has mentioned the variant of severing diplomatic relations,” he said.

    “We can’t just break off diplomatic relations and stop talking to each other.”

    Russia’s foreign ministry has called in the Moscow bureau chiefs of U.S. media outlets to discuss on Monday what it says are the repercussions of the United States’ unfriendly actions.

    Tsarina Catherine the Great’s refusal to support the British empire when America declared independence laid the ground for the first diplomatic contact between the United States and St Petersburg, then Russia’s imperial capital.

    Following the Bolshevik Revolution in October 1917, President Woodrow Wilson refused to recognise Vladimir Lenin’s revolutionary government and the U.S. embassy closed in 1919. Relations were not re-established until 1933.

    “The only reason I can think of that the United State might be forced to close its embassy would be if it became unsafe to continue its work,” Sullivan said.

    Asked how relations would develop, Sullivan, a 62-year-old lawyer, said he didn’t know but added that he hoped there might one day be a rapprochement.

  • UKRAINE INVASION: Russia will pay a severe price for the use of chemical weapons-  Biden

    UKRAINE INVASION: Russia will pay a severe price for the use of chemical weapons- Biden

    US President, Joe Biden, on Friday, said Russia will pay a severe price for the use of chemical weapons in its invasion against Ukraine.

     

    In his words: “I am not going to speak about intelligence [matters]. But Russia will pay a severe price for use of chemical weapons.”

     

    He stressed that Washington will not fight Moscow in Ukraine as a direct confrontation between NATO and Kremlin would trigger World War III.

     

    According to him, Russia would never be able to gain victory in Ukraine.

     

    On February 24, Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine’s breakaway regions – Donetsk and Luhansk – as independent entities.

     

    “We’re going to continue to stand together with our allies in Europe and send an unmistakable message. We’ll defend every single inch of NATO territory with the full might of the United States and galvanize NATO.

     

    “We will not fight a war against Russia in Ukraine. Direct confrontation between NATO and Russia is World War III. Something we must strive to prevent,” Biden told reporters at the White House.

    The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) is a group of 30 North American and European nations. According to NATO, its purpose “is to guarantee the freedom and security of its members through political and military means.”

     

    “He [Russian President Vladimir Putin] hoped to dominate Ukraine without a fight, he failed,” Biden said, adding that Putin also failed in his alleged attempt to fracture and weaken the transatlantic alliance.

    “The American people and the world are united on the issue of Ukraine, he said.“We stand with the people of Ukraine. We will not let autocrats and would-be emperors dictate the direction of the world. Democracies are rising to meet this moment, rallying the world to the side of peace.

    “We’re showing our strength and we will not falter,” he said.

    Biden said he will ask Congress to strip Russia of its “most-favoured-nation” status.

    “As Putin continues this merciless assault, the United States and our allies and partners continue to work in lockstep to ramp up their economic pressure on Putin and to further isolate Russia on the global stage,” he asserted.

    “Revoking [this status] for Russia is going to make it harder for Russia to do business with the United States. And doing it in unison with other nations that make up half of the global economy will be another crushing blow to the Russian economy. It’s already suffering very badly,” Biden stated.

     

  • Russia ready for negotiations with Ukraine – Kremlin

    Russia ready for negotiations with Ukraine – Kremlin

    Russia is ready to send a delegation to the Belarusian capital Minsk for peace talks with Ukrainian officials, the Kremlin said on Friday.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had twice made the offer to conduct talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Zelensky had made an initial proposal of talks in a speech addressed to Putin late on Wednesday, shortly before the Russian invasion.

    He said at the time: “Ukraine’s security is linked to the security of its neighbours.

    “That is why today we have to talk about security in the whole of Europe.

    “That is our main goal – peace in Ukraine and the security of our citizens.

    “For this, we are ready to talk to everyone, including you. In different formats and in any place.”

    Kiev has floated the idea that Ukraine could promise to take a neutral status on NATO membership in order to end the violence.

    “In response to Zelensky’s proposal, Vladimir Putin is ready to send a delegation at the level of representatives of Defence Ministry, Foreign Ministry, and presidential administration to Minsk for negotiations with the Ukrainian delegation,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

    According to the Kremlin, Belarusian ruler Alexander Lukashenko is ready to create the conditions for a meeting between Russian and Ukrainian delegations.

  • Washington’s paranoid fear of Russia’s interference in election only harming U.S. itself – Kremlin

    Washington’s paranoid fears of alleged Moscow’s interference in the U.S. elections harm not only bilateral relations, but also the U.S. itself, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Thursday.

    On Tuesday, the Democratic staff on the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations produced a report, according to which Washington could be unable to address “complex and growing threat” posed by Russia, including against U.S. election in 2018 and 2020, if urgent measures are not taken.

    “Such paranoid fears do not only damage bilateral relations between Russia and the U.S.

    “They harm the United States itself, because, of course, when it becomes an obsession, it does not create comfortable conditions for normal social development and life,” Peskov told reporters, commenting on the statement.

    The spokesman added that Moscow regretted that the U.S. officials were making such ungrounded statements.

    “We can only express our regrets about the ongoing [anti-Russian] campaign. And remind once again that so far all these fears, all these accusations of our country in the interference have had no grounds and have been absolutely unfounded,” Peskov said.

     

  • TRUMP: No computer is safe, write it out, deliver by courier

    TRUMP: No computer is safe, write it out, deliver by courier

    ImageFile: TRUMP: No computer is safe, write it out, deliver by courier
    Donald Trump, US President-elect.

    US President-elect Donald Trump believes the only way to guarantee that a message is safe from prying eyes in the computer age is to write on paper and deliver by courier, stressing that no computer is safe.

    “It’s very important. If you have something really important, write it out and have it delivered by courier, the old-fashioned way. Because I’ll tell you what, no computer is safe. I don’t care what they say – no computer is safe,” the Twitter-loving president-elect told reporters over the holiday weekend.

    The comments came after the president-elect whose inauguration is later this month was asked about charges by President Barrack Obama administration and the US intelligence community that Russia was behind the cyberattacks on the Democratic National Committee (DNC).

    Trump dismissed the notion that the Kremlin meddled in the presidential election to help him win.

    Trump also touted the computer skills of his son Barron.

    “I have a boy who’s 10 years old. He can do anything with a computer,” Trump said, accentuating that “You want something to really go without detection, write it out and have it sent by courier”.

    Meanwhile, incoming White House spokesman, Sean Spicer, has said Trump will continue to tweet directly to the public as president, bypassing much of the media.

    “I think it freaks the mainstream media out that he has this following of over 45-plus million people that follow him on social media, that he can have a direct conversation. He doesn’t have to have it funnelled through the media,” Spicer said.

    “Business as usual is over, as I’ve said before. There’s a new sheriff in town, and he’s going to do things first and foremost for the American people,” he added.

    But he also promised that the media would have access to President Trump.

    “Absolutely, we understand the importance” of press briefings, he said, adding that “We’ll use every tool possible. And absolutely, we’ll sit down and make sure that on a daily basis the press is informed”.

    Spicer also said the Obama administration may have gone too far in sanctions on Russia.

    “One of the questions that we have is why the magnitude of this? I mean, you look at 35 people being expelled, two sites being closed down, the question is: Is that response in proportion to the actions taken? Maybe it was, maybe it wasn’t, but you have to think about that,” Spicer said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week”.