Skip to content

Medvedev Responds to British, German Escalations

Dmitry Medvedev, in his characteristically blunt manner, said that the number of leading idiots in NATO countries is growing. “One newly minted moron, the British Secretary of State for Defence, decided to move the UK military training of Ukrainian soldiers into Ukraine. That is, to turn the British military instructors into our Armed Forces’ legal targets; while being fully aware that they will be ruthlessly eliminated, and this time not as mercenaries but as British NATO specialists,” the former Russian President tweeted in English on his X account.

“Another fool from Bundestag, the chairwoman of German Defence Committee with an unpronounceable surname, is clamouring to immediately provide the ukrobanderovtsy with Taurus missiles to enable the Kiev regime to hit deep into Russia’s territory to weaken the supply of our army. That is, it is in accordance with international law. Well, in that case the strikes against the German plants which produce these missiles, will also fully correspond to international law.” (The ukrobanderovtsy refers to the Ukrainian followers of Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera.)

Medvedev was referring to Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, who reportedly said in an interview that it was time to recognize that Kiev has the right to launch missiles to strike targets on the territory of Russia. She is quoted as telling Merkur.de on Sept. 30: “International law also allows Ukraine to attack military targets on the territory of the Russian aggressor—regardless of where these weapons were produced and who supplied them.”

On Sept. 26, Medvedev tweeted that between Canada praising Ukrainian Nazis in the Parliament and Ukraine receiving Abrams tanks and ATACMS missiles, “Russia, it seems, is being left with less and less choice except direct ground conflict with NATO, which has turned into an openly fascist block like Hitler’s Axis, just bigger. We are ready, even though the end-result will be achieved at a far greater cost for mankind, than in 1945.”