Yahoo – AFP,
Anna Smolchenko, 6 June 2015
Moscow (AFP) - Russia is not a threat to the West, President Vladimir Putin insisted in an interview published on Saturday, saying he was still committed to a Ukraine peace deal after a fresh flare-up in the country's east.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin says "there's no need to be afraid of
Russia"
(AFP Photo/Maxim Shipenkov)
|
Moscow (AFP) - Russia is not a threat to the West, President Vladimir Putin insisted in an interview published on Saturday, saying he was still committed to a Ukraine peace deal after a fresh flare-up in the country's east.
"I
would like to say - there's no need to be afraid of Russia," Putin told
Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera in an interview published Saturday,
ruling out a major conflict between Russia and NATO member countries.
Russian
soldiers march through Red Square
during the Victory Day military parade in
Moscow on May 9, 2015 (AFP Photo/
Alexander Zemlianichenko)
|
"We
have other things to do, I can assure you," the Russian president said.
"Only
a sick person -- and even then only in his sleep -- can imagine that Russia
would suddenly attack NATO."
The Russian
president spoke ahead of his visit to Italy next week that will include a
meeting with Pope Francis.
Putin's
interview was released by the Kremlin just as Group of Seven leaders are
gearing up to meet in the Bavarian Alps for a summit this weekend without
Russia.
In the
interview, Putin stressed that Russia merely sought to defend itself from
outside threats.
He pointed
out that NATO members have defence expenditures that are 10 times Russia's
military spending, adding that the US military budget was the biggest in the
world.
To ensure a
strategic balance, Russia will develop "systems to overpower anti-missile
defences", Putin said.
"We
have made significant progress in this direction," he added, without
providing further details.
Russia's
annexation of Crimea from Ukraine last year has jangled nerves in Europe, with
Baltic and Nordic countries reporting an uptick in Russian military activity
over the past year.
A
pro-Russian rebel stands guard in the
village of Spartak near Donetsk airport
on
April 10, 2015 (AFP Photo/Dimitar Dilkoff)
|
Speaking
about the Ukraine crisis, Putin accused Kiev authorities of being unwilling to
implement a European-brokered peace deal agreed in February in Minsk and enter
into dialogue with pro-Moscow rebels.
"The
problem is that representatives of the current Kiev authorities do not even
want to sit down to talks with them," Putin said. "And there is
nothing we can do about it," he added, urging the West to prod Kiev into
negotiating with the rebels.
"We
would like these agreements to be implemented," Putin said, stressing that
Kiev should ensure autonomy for rebel-held territories and implement a law on
municipal elections and on amnesty.
"The
leaders of the self-proclaimed republics have publicly said that under certain
conditions -- that is the implementation of these Minsk agreements -- they are
ready to consider the possibility of considering themselves part of
Ukraine."
"I
believe this position should be considered as a serious, good preliminary
condition to start serious negotiations," he said, urging the European
Union to provide "greater financial assistance" to Kiev.
Ties
between Russia and the West have plunged to their lowest level since the end of
the Cold War, with Moscow being accused of inciting a separatist rebellion in
eastern Ukraine.
'No
mistress'
Putin said
Moscow was ready to build an equal partnership with the EU and accused Brussels
of pursuing relations based solely "on material interests".
"We
never treated Europe like a mistress," he said, using a metaphor suggested
by an Italian journalist.
"I
speak absolutely seriously now. We always offered a serious relationship."
He accused
the EU of rupturing Russia's economic ties with fellow ex-Soviet nations,
saying if Baltic nations joined the EU power grid, Moscow would have to fork
out up to 2.5 billion euros ($2.7 billion) to build new transmission lines.
If Ukraine
chose to join the European power grid too, the costs for Russia would grow to
some 8-10 billion euros, Putin added.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.