Germany says Russia threatens Europe after Putin predicts 'dangerous'
decade
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[October 28, 2022]
(Reuters) -Russia's invasion
of Ukraine has plunged Europe into an era of insecurity, Germany said on
Friday, a day after Russian President Vladimir Putin predicted a
"dangerous" decade ahead.
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who is from a wing of
Germany's Social Democrats that long argued for closer economic ties to
Moscow, said the Feb.24 invasion had ruptured those hopes.
"When we look at the Russia of today, there is no room for old dreams,"
Steinmeier said, referring to former Soviet president Mikhail
Gorbachev's dream of a "common European home".
"It has also plunged us in Germany into another time, into an insecurity
we thought we had overcome: a time marked by war, violence and flight,
by concerns about the expansion of war into a wildfire in Europe," he
said.
"Harder years, rough years are coming."
Germany, which has joined European sanctions against Russia and weapons
deliveries to Ukraine, has recorded the arrival of more than a million
Ukrainian refugees and warned of possible energy shortages this winter
after cuts in Russian gas supplies.
Putin, addressing a conference in Moscow on Thursday, played down the
prospect of a nuclear stand off with the West but accused Western
leaders of inciting the war in Ukraine, which he says was justified by
Kyiv's expressed wish to join NATO.
Western dominance over world affairs was coming to an end and "ahead is
probably the most dangerous, unpredictable and, at the same time,
important decade since the end of World War Two", Putin said.
The Russian leader insisted Moscow's war in Ukraine, which he calls a
"special military operation" was going to plan as both sides prepare for
a key battle in Kherson in Ukraine's south.
One of four partially occupied provinces that Russia declared annexed
last month, the region controls both the only land route to the Crimea
peninsula - seized by Russia in 2014, and the mouth of the Dnipro river
that bisects Ukraine.
Sergey Aksyonov, the Russian-appointed leader of Crimea, said work had
been completed on moving residents seeking to flee Kherson to regions of
Russia ahead of an expected Ukrainian counter-offensive.
Ukraine has accused Moscow of forcibly removing some people and
recruiting others to fight against their will. Its general staff said
what it called Russia's so-called evacuation was continuing, with
hospital and business equipment removed and extra Russian forces
deployed in empty homes.
Reuters was not able to verify the battlefield reports.
HIGH-LEVEL VISIT
Putin's first deputy chief of staff, Sergei Kiriyenko, visited Kherson
and the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station, Aksyonov
said on Telegram.
The United Nations is seeking to establish a safety zone around the
plant, which lies near the frontline, due to fears of a disaster.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks
during the 19th Annual Meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club in
Moscow, Russia October 27, 2022. Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool via
REUTERS
In recent weeks, Russia has unleashed a wave of missile and drone
strikes, hitting Ukraine's energy infrastructure and forcing power
cuts in Kyiv and other places, officials said.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Thursday the attacks
"will not break us".
"To hear the enemy's anthem on our land is scarier than the enemy's
rockets in our sky. We are not afraid of the dark," he said in a
nighttime video address.
Ukraine has shot down more than 300 Iranian Shahed-136 'kamikaze'
drones so far, air force spokesman Yuriy Ihnat told a briefing on
Friday, referring to a weapon that has often been used in the past
month to target crucial energy infrastructure.
It was not possible to verify the report. Iran has denied Ukrainian
and Western assertions it is sending drones to Russia.
Ukrainian officials have said tough terrain and bad weather have
made Ukraine's advances in Kherson and the east slower than its
swift pushback of Russian forces in the northeast last month and
Russia's hasty retreat from Kyiv early in the war.
NO CHANGE IN RUSSIAN AIMS
Putin made no mention of Russia's battlefield setbacks at the Moscow
conference. When asked if there had been any disappointments in the
past year, he answered simply: "No".
Putin said Russian aims had not changed.
Russia is fighting to protect the people of Donbas, Putin said,
referring to an industrial region that comprises Donetsk and Luhansk
- provinces in Ukraine's east he proclaimed annexed.
In Luhansk, Russian forces have tried to break through defences in
Bilohorivka but were beaten back, regional governor Serhiy Gaidai
told Ukrainian television on Thursday.
Fighting has been going on in the Donbas since 2014 between the
Ukrainian military and Russian-backed separatists.
Putin and other officials have repeatedly said Russia could use "all
available means" to protect its territorial integrity, remarks
interpreted in the West as implicit threats to use nuclear arms in
fighting over parts of Ukraine that Russia says it has annexed.
Putin played down a nuclear standoff with the West, insisting Russia
had not threatened to use nuclear weapons but had only responded to
nuclear "blackmail" from Western leaders.
U.S. President Joe Biden expressed scepticism, asking in an
interview with NewsNation: "If he has no intention, why does he keep
talking about it?"
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Himani Sarkar and Philippa
Fletcher, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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