Russia’s foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said his country would be “ready to use any means” so that Moscow does not suffer “strategic defeat” in its war against Ukraine.
He made the comment during an interview with American journalist Tucker Carlson which was released as he arrived in Malta for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe on his first visit to an EU state since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
In his 80-minute interview, Mr Lavrov said the West should abandon any notion that Russia had no “red lines” and laid out conditions for peace in Ukraine.
In Malta, Mr Lavrov clashed with Western leaders before storming out of the EU security meeting, as the Kremlin faced mounting criticism over its prolonged war in Ukraine.
Meanwhile, thousands of North Korean soldiers stationed at checkpoints in Russia’s embattled Kursk Oblast are being kept away from direct combat, Ukraine’s military-run National Resistance Center reported.
Between 10,000 and 12,000 dispatched troops are being used as a “second echelon” as ties deepen between Russia and North Korea, the Center said.
Putin appoints new governor for partly occupied Kursk region
Russian president Vladimir Putin appointed Alexander Khinshtein acting governor of the Kursk region on Thursday, saying “crisis management” was needed in the area, which has been partly occupied by Ukrainian forces since August.
Mr Putin was shown in a clip posted on the Kremlin website offering the post to Mr Khinshtein, a journalist and veteran member of the State Duma, Russia’s lower house of parliament.
“I would like to offer you the position of acting governor of Kursk region, as at this time crisis management is needed there, in view of the situation occurring there,” Mr Putin told Mr Khinstein.
“And as the territory is being liberated from the enemy, of course much will have to be done to restore housing and communal services and to restore the economy of the territory as a whole as well as that area now being liberated by our troops.”
Mr Putin said Mr Khinshtein, in addition to his experience in the legislature, had acted for two years as an adviser to Russia’s National Guard and that experience in the security forces “will have to be used to achieve the tasks that lie before you”.
Canada expands list of firearms outlawed and proposes to donate guns to Ukraine
Canada said it is outlawing another 324 firearm varieties — guns the public safety minister said belong on the battlefield, not in the hands of hunters or sport shooters.
Ottawa also said it is working with the government of Ukraine to see how the guns can be donated to support the fight against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The move follows the May 2020 ban of 1,500 makes and models of firearms, a number that grew to more than 2,000 by November of this year as new variants were identified.
The latest restriction, announced Thursday by public safety minister Dominic LeBlanc, follows expressions of concern from gun-control advocates that many assault-style firearms were not included in the 2020 ban.
“This means these firearms can no longer be used,” Mr LeBlanc said.
Defence minister Bill Blair said Canada approached Ukrainian authorities, who expressed interest in some of the guns.
“Every bit of assistance we can offer to the Ukrainians is one step toward their victory,” Mr Blair said.
Senior UK military commander warns of a ‘third nuclear age’
The head of Britain’s armed forces has warned that the world stands at the cusp of a “third nuclear age,” defined by multiple simultaneous challenges and weakened safeguards that kept previous threats in check.
Admiral Tony Radakin, chief of the defence staff, said Britain needs to recognise the seriousness of the threats it faces, even if there is only a remote chance of Russia launching a direct nuclear attack on the UK or its Nato allies.
While the Cold War saw two superpowers held at bay by nuclear deterrence and the past three decades were characterised by international efforts to restrict the spread of nuclear weapons, the current era is “altogether more complex,” Mr Radakin said Wednesday in a speech to the Royal United Services Institute.
“We are at the dawn of a third nuclear age—” he said. “It is defined by multiple and concurrent dilemmas, proliferating nuclear and disruptive technologies and the almost total absence of the security architectures that went before.”
Challenges faced by the West include Russia’s threat to use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine,
China’s drive to build up its nuclear stockpiles, Iran’s failure to cooperate with international efforts to limit its nuclear program, and “erratic behavior” by North Korea, Mr Radakin said.
All of this comes against a backdrop of increasing cyberattacks, sabotage and disinformation campaigns aimed at destabilizing Western countries.
Senior Biden officials pledge heavy military assistance to Ukraine in final plan before exit
The White House is mulling providing a huge tranche of military assistance to Ukraine in its last-minute strategy to boost Ukraine’s position in the war before the transition to Trump’s administration.
National security adviser Jake Sullivan held a meeting with Andriy Yermak, a top aide to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, for more than an hour yesterday.
Mr Sullivan committed to issuing hundreds of thousands of additional artillery rounds, thousands of rockets and hundreds of armored vehicles to Ukraine in the first month of next year, Guardian reported, citing the briefing from the meeting.
The US will also impose a slew of new sanctions on Russian entities in the coming weeks and also support its troops in war by offering to train soldiers.
According to a Reuters report, the president-elect’s team is discreetly crafting a peace plan for Ukraine that would exclude Nato membership and could involve conceding substantial territory to Russia, marking a significant departure from current US policy.
Mr Trump, meanwhile, has frequently claimed he could end the war between Ukraine and Russia within 24 hours.
Ukraine’s air force says it shot down 32 drones launched by Russia overnight
The Ukrainian air force said that Russia launched 53 drones to attack the country overnight in its latest update today.
Of 53 drones, it shot down 32 and “lost track” of 16, likely due to electronic warfare. Two drones left Ukraine-controlled airspace and headed to Belarus, according to the statement
‘Impossible to treat’ superbugs on rise in Ukraine, scientists warn
Scientists have sounded a warning about the alarming rise of “extremely pathogenic” multi-drug resistant bacteria in war-torn Ukraine.
They narrowed in on samples of the bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae to assess if it had the ability to cause disease in a wider context.
Russian disinformation targets US support for Ukraine
The Kremlin is using state media, fake news sites and social media accounts to push divisive narratives about the war and US president-elect Donald Trump before he returns to the White House next month.
Analysts said the content is aimed at turning sentiment against Ukraine at a crucial time, to reduce US military aid and ensure a Russian victory.
Clips from fake videos purporting to show Ukrainian soldiers burning effigies of Trump and his supporters have circulated among Trump supporters and believers in QAnon, a conspiracy theory that claims Trump is waging war against a satanic cabal of powerful world leaders.
Russia’s Lavrov accused of rebuilding Russian empire during first EU visit
Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov faced heavy criticism as he arrived at an annual meeting of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in Malta.
The Russian diplomat walked out of the hall before US secretary of state Antony Blinken arrived as the two traded accusations in a heated annual gathering.
The Polish foreign minister, Radoslaw Sikorski, said: “My message to the Russian delegation is the following: We are not taken in by your lies. We know what you’re doing. You’re trying to rebuild the Russian empire and we will not let you. We will resist you every inch of the way.”
Mr Lavrov hit back by accusing Nato and the EU of politicising the OSCE.
He accused the West of the “reincarnation of the cold war, only now with a much greater risk of a transition to a hot one”.
Western states criticise Russia’s FM over Ukraine at OSCE meeting
Western countries including the United States assailed Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov over the war in Ukraine at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in Malta.
“My message to the Russian delegation is the following: We are not taken in by your lies. We know what you’re doing. You’re trying to rebuild the Russian empire and we will not let you. We will resist you every inch of the way,” Polish foreign minister Radoslaw Sikorski said.
Poland and Ukraine’s foreign ministers were amongst those who left the room for Mr Lavrov’s speech, which is common for international meetings. Mr Lavrov was also absent when US secretary of state Antony Blinken spoke.
Russia’s Lavrov suggests using any means in war to avoid ‘strategic defeat’
Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said the use of a hypersonic missile in the Ukraine war was to make the West understand that Moscow was ready to use any means to ensure no “strategic defeat” would be inflicted on Moscow.
Russia deployed the Oreshnik hypersonic missile against the Ukrainian city of Dnipro last month in what Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin described as a test of a missile he said could not be brought down.
He said Russia could bring other such missiles into action in “combat conditions” if required.
“The message is that you, I mean the US and the allies of the US, who also provide these long-range weapons to the Kyiv regime – they must understand that we would be ready to use any means not to allow them to succeed in what they call a strategic defeat of Russia,” Mr Lavrov told US journalist Tucker Carlson.
“They fight for keeping their hegemony over the world, on any country, any region, any continent. We fight for our legitimate security interests.”
In his 80-minute interview, Mr Lavrov also said that the West should abandon any notion that Russia had no “red lines” that it would bar anyone from crossing in defending its interests.
“If they are following the logic which some Westerners have been pronouncing lately, that they don’t believe that Russia has red lines, they announced their red lines, these red lines are being moved again and again, this is a very serious mistake,” he said.
Source: independent.co.uk