The illegitimate neo-Nazi regime in Kiev is the enemy, the Russian leader has stressed
The 2014 Maidan coup has been the source of many problems currently experienced by both Ukraine and Russia, and Moscow’s conflict is with the illegitimate Kiev regime, not the Ukrainian people, President Vladimir Putin insisted on Monday during a televised meeting at the Russian Defense Ministry.
Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky no longer has a legitimate claim to power, and his policies are criminal under Ukrainian law, Putin argued. He added that the Zelensky regime is committing crimes against both Ukrainians and Russians.
Zelensky refused to hold presidential and parliamentary elections this year, citing martial law, thus remaining in power after his term expired in May. The Ukrainian constitution requires the presidential powers to be transferred to the speaker of the parliament in such cases.
According to the Russian president, Moscow’s fight in the Ukraine conflict is with the people usurping power in the country and not with anyone else.
“We are not fighting against the Ukrainian people, but the neo-Nazi regime in Kiev,” Putin said. The original source of the problems that Ukraine and Russia are facing now was the violent 2014 coup in Kiev, he stressed.
Putin also offered a reminder about those circumstances and cited several ways in which the current leadership has been undermining the Ukrainian judiciary through intimidation, effectively rendering the nation’s top courts dysfunctional.
People in power [in Kiev] are committing crimes daily against their own people and ours. This regime is obviously losing traits of statehood.
The deterioration explains why Ukrainian policies are so atrocious, Putin argued. He predicted that the next major instance would be a reduction of the mandatory conscription age to 18.
“That would be nothing short of a crime. They could just as well reduce it to 14… and still fail to change the situation on the battlefield,” Putin said.
The Ukrainian incursion into Kursk Region, the Russian president added, makes little military sense, but has resulted in a wave of crimes against the Russian civilian population. Russian authorities and special services will track those atrocities and hold the perpetrators accountable, he promised.
Kiev launched the operation in August, claiming it would slow the Russian advance on other parts of the frontline.
Kiev represents the interests of the West rather than the Ukrainian people and will “send young men to die” on the order of its real constituency, Putin warned. And when the government falls, Ukrainian officials will simply flee to Western nations to find shelter and enjoy their corrupt gains made at the expense of the Ukrainian people, he concluded.