Russia's Medvedev says standoff with West to last decades, Ukraine
conflict 'permanent'
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[July 03, 2023]
By Andrew Osborn
LONDON (Reuters) - Dmitry Medvedev, Russia's former president, has
warned that Moscow's confrontation with the West will last decades and
that its conflict with Ukraine could become permanent.
Medvedev, once seen in the West as a liberal moderniser, has emerged as
one of Russia's most outspoken hawks since Moscow launched what it
called a "special military operation" in Ukraine last year.
Now deputy head of the Security Council, his views reflect some of the
thinking at the Kremlin's top level, according to Russian officials.
In an article for the government's Rossiiskaya Gazeta newspaper, he said
tensions between Russia and the West were "much worse" than during the
1962 Cuban missile crisis when the world teetered on the edge of a
nuclear conflagration.
A nuclear war was "quite probable" but was unlikely to have any winners,
said Medvedev, who has repeatedly said Western support for Ukraine
increases the chances of nuclear conflict.
He cited sharp differences over Ukraine, the direction of humankind, and
the way the world order was structured.
"One thing that politicians of all stripes do not like to admit: such an
Apocalypse is not only possible, but also quite probable," wrote
Medvedev.
Western analysts cast what they say is Medvedev's "nuclear sabre-rattling"
as a tactic aimed at frightening the West to reduce military support for
Ukraine and to instead lean on Kyiv to start peace talks with Moscow.
Many countries in the West, which say they are helping Ukraine defend
itself from a brutal colonial war of conquest, have promised to stand by
Kyiv for as long as it takes.
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Russia's Deputy head of the Security
Council Dmitry Medvedev inspects arms production as he visits the
Aleksinsky Experimental Mechanical Plant in the town of Aleksin in
the Tula region, Russia, June 15, 2023. Sputnik/Yekaterina Shtukina/Pool
via REUTERS/File Photo
The United States, Ukraine's biggest financial and military backer,
has said it does not want to engage in a direct conflict with Russia
to avoid the risk of a nuclear war.
Ukraine says it won't negotiate until it has driven every Russian
soldier from its territory.
Medvedev said Moscow was still committed to stopping Ukraine join
NATO.
"Our goal is simple - to eliminate the threat of Ukraine's
membership in NATO. And we will achieve it. One way or another," he
said.
Given NATO's rule about not admitting countries entangled in
territorial conflicts, he said the conflict with Ukraine could
become "permanent" given its existential nature for Moscow.
The only way to de-escalate tensions between Russia and the West was
to enter into tough negotiations, he said.
"The confrontation will be very long and it is too late to tame the
recalcitrants (i.e. us)," said Medvedev. "The confrontation will
last for decades."
(Reporting by Andrew Osborn; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Frank
Jack Daniel)
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