The Manila Times

Kremlin: Leak shows West’s ‘involvemen­t’ in Ukraine

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MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Monday said the content of leaked conversati­ons between German officials discussing potential strikes on the Crimea Peninsula proved that Western countries were participat­ing in the war in Ukraine.

The leaks came as an embarrassm­ent for Berlin, which is under pressure to supply Taurus missiles to Kyiv, which has been struggling with ammunition shortages.

The conversati­ons “once again highlight the direct involvemen­t of the collective West in the conflict in Ukraine,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

A 38-minute recording of talks between German officers was posted on Friday night on Russian social media.

The officers were discussing the possible use in Ukraine of German-made Taurus missiles and their potential impact.

Topics included aiming the missiles at targets such as a key bridge over the Kerch strait linking the Russian mainland to Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014.

Germany said it believed the recording featured an “intercepte­d” conversati­on in the air force division but could not tell whether it had been edited.

Peskov said the recording “in itself suggests that the Bundeswehr is discussing substantiv­ely and specifical­ly plans to strike Russian territory.”

The spokesman was speaking as German Ambassador to Russia Graf Lambsdorff was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Moscow.

He left the ministry building without giving any comment, Russian news agencies reported.

The day before, Germany had accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of trying to sow disunity with the leak.

“It is about using this recording to destabiliz­e and unsettle us,” said German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, adding that he “hoped that Putin will not succeed.”

Pistorius said he was not aware of any further leaks at the army, adding that he would await the result of a military probe into the case before drawing any conclusion­s.

Kyiv has long been clamoring for Berlin to provide it with Taurus missiles, which can reach targets up to 500 kilometers (about 300 miles) away.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz has so far refused to send the missiles, fearing it would lead to an escalation of the conflict with a nuclear-armed Russia.

With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in its third year, Kyiv has ramped up its pleas for more military support from allies.

On the frontlines, its soldiers are outgunned and outnumbere­d and ammunition shortages are being felt.

France and the United Kingdom have supplied Ukraine with Scalp or Storm Shadow missiles, both of which have a range of about 250 km.

But Scholz said on Monday that Germany could not justify matching British and French moves in sending long-range missiles to Ukraine and supporting the weapon system’s deployment.

Part of the conversati­on in the leaked recording, however, appeared to call into question Scholz’s explanatio­n on why he could not provide Kyiv with the missiles.

The acquisitio­n of Taurus missiles would provide a massive boost for Ukraine as it struggles to fend off Russia’s invigorate­d push on the frontlines.

With politician­s in Germany urging answers over the wiretap, Pistorius warned that the leak was “part of an informatio­n war that Putin is carrying out.”

“We should not fall for Putin’s line,” he said.

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