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World at 'turning point', 'war' unleashed on Russia — Putin

Putin rails against 'Western globalist elites'

By AFP - May 10,2023 - Last updated at May 10,2023

Russian military hardware move past the monument of Vladimir the Great after the Victory Day military parade in central Moscow on Tuesday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday at Moscow's Red Square Victory Day parade that the world was at a "turning point" and claimed a "war" had been unleashed against Russia.

He vowed victory and said Russia's future "rests on" its soldiers fighting in Ukraine.

The traditional Soviet-style event celebrating Moscow's victory over the Nazis took place amid security fears, 15 months into Russia's Ukraine offensive.

"Today civilisation is again at a decisive turning point," Putin said at the parade, which included elderly veterans and soldiers from Russia's Ukraine campaign.

"A war has been unleashed against our motherland," he claimed.

He called for Russia to be victorious: "For Russia, for our armed forces, for victory! Hurrah!"

The Russian leader has increasingly portrayed the campaign in Ukraine as an existential conflict, which he says the West has escalated by supporting the Ukrainian government.

Putin told soldiers taking part in Moscow's Ukraine campaign, several hundreds of whom were present at the Red Square parade, that "the whole country is with you".

"There is nothing more important now than your combat effort," he said.

"The security of the country rests on you today, the future of our statehood and our people depend on you."

Putin also railed against "Western globalist elites", accusing them of sowing conflicts and "coups" around the world.

"Their goal, and there is nothing new here, is to achieve the collapse and destruction of our country," he said.

The longtime Russian leader vowed that Moscow would overcome this.

"But we have rebuffed international terrorism, we will protect the people of (eastern Ukraine's) Donbas, we will ensure our security," he said.

This appeared to be a reference to an unprecedented series of attacks on Russian soil in the run-up to the Victory Day parade, a central event under Putin's rule.

 

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