Russia may launch all-out war with Ukraine, says President Zelensky
Seven years into a simmering conflict that has cost thousands of lives, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has starkly warned that Russia has not given up on the idea of all-out war.
Speaking at the Yalta security forum in Kiev on Friday, Volodymyr Zelensky said a major military operation remained a “palpable possibility” and that tensions between Kiev and Moscow were growing to such an extent that a “precipice” was now emerging between the two neighbours.
“All-out war would be the biggest blunder on Russia’s part,” he said. “It’s a spooky scenario but unfortunately it isn’t unlikely. The danger is reaching a point of no return.”
An undeclared war has undermined relations between the two countries since 2014 – focused first on the annexation of Crimea in March of that year, a move declared illegal by the United Nations, before turning towards the eastern Ukrainian Donbas region, where Ukrainian troops continue to fight with Russian-backed separatists.
Last year, Russia brought an estimated 100,000 troops to Ukraine’s eastern and southern borders in an operation that showed Moscow’s teeth – even if there appeared to be little danger of it developing into something more substantial. Mr Zelensky said intelligence showed that there were Russian boots on the ground in Belarus, which also borders Ukraine.
“The world has changed,” he said.
Despite early movement on prisoner exchange in 2019, the personal chemistry between the Ukrainian showman-turned-president and Russia’s autocratic leader of the past 21 years remains testy. Mr Zelensky confessed that he wished he had “more time” to understand his opponent.
In the meantime, the Ukrainian president insisted he remained committed to developing a “constructive discussion, [with] more substantive conversation” between the two leaders. He said that a meeting between the two, the possibility of which has been under discussion for several weeks, would have “tangible results” in prisoner exchange and demining.
Mr Putin, on his part, remains committed to the notion that Ukraine is not a fully sovereign state – at least, that appears to be the main premise of an extended essay on “Russian-Ukrainian unity” that was published in July.
The Ukrainian leader took a swipe at that claim, arguing that respect for national sovereignty worked in a reciprocal manner. “If you respect people, they respect you back,” he said. Intelligent Russians understood that Ukraine was an independent nation, he said, adding that state propaganda had left its calling card on “more average citizens”.
Comments