Medvedev warns NATO against supplying Ukraine with missiles
MOSCOW. – The former Russian President and current deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev warned NATO on Tuesday against providing Ukraine with Patriot missile defence systems, denouncing the alliance as a “criminal entity” for delivering arms to what he called “extremist regimes.”
“If, as ( NATO secretary- general Jens) Stoltenberg hinted, NATO were to supply the Ukrainian fanatics with Patriot systems along with NATO personnel, they would immediately become a legitimate target of our armed forces,” Medvedev wrote on Telegram.
“The civilized world does not need this organization. It must repent to humanity and be dissolved as a criminal entity,” he wrote in an earlier post.
Ukraine has asked its Western partners for air defences, including US-made Patriot systems, to protect it from Russian attacks on its energy infrastructure.
“We need air defence, IRIS, Hawks, Patriots, and we need transformers (for our energy needs),” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told reporters on the sidelines of the NATO meeting, enumerating various Western air defence systems.
“In a nutshell: Patriots and transformers are what Ukraine needs the most.”
Stoltenberg said Russia was trying to use winter as a weapon of the conflict.
US and European officials said ministers would focus in their talks on non-lethal aid such as fuel, medical supplies and winter equipment, as well as on military assistance.
Washington said it would provide $53 million to buy power grid equipment.
US President Joe Biden said providing more military assistance for Ukraine was a priority, but Republicans have talked about pausing the funding, which has surpassed US$18 billion.
Russia has repeatedly warned the West not to pump Ukraine with various weapons, suggesting such an act could eventually lead to a direct conflict between the US-led NATO alliance and Russia.
Russia has also insisted that it only targets military-linked infrastructure facilities and blamed the blackouts and their civilian impact on Kyiv’s refusal to negotiate with Moscow.
“Damage to residential buildings and civilian casualties are really happening because of the Ukrainian air defences, which are deployed not in cities’ suburbs, but rather in [city] centres,” Russia’s permanent representative to the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, was quoted as saying by Russia Today on Monday.
Nebenzia noted last Wednesday that the buildings had been hit with “American air defence missiles supplied to Kyiv.”
Meanwhile, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said yesterday Russia will pay special attention to building infrastructure for its nuclear forces in 2023,
Shoigu said in televised comments that the Russia would also work to improve the combat capabilities of its missile forces and that facilities were being built to accommodate new missile systems. – CGTN.com