On Dec. 11, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a strongly-worded statement on the Biden administration’s decision to lend the bankrupt Kiev regime $20 billion, to be repaid with proceeds earned from “immobilized” Russian sovereign assets. This, the Ministry charged, is “nothing less than common robbery … in plain English, the G7 has stolen Russian money as part of preparations to take over all Russian sovereign assets stored in the West.” The statement warns that “this will not save the Nazi Bandera regime or help any G7 country, for example Canada, patch holes in their budget.” The U.S.-controlled global financial system, based on the dollar as a global reserve currency, has also taken a hit.
The statement accurately identifies this as the strategy of the “fiercely Russophobic Biden administration,” which is trying to impose as many anti-Russia sanctions as possible before Donald Trump takes office on Jan. 20, 2025, “completely disregarding the precarious state of the U.S. economy, its growing state debt, the huge financial bubbles, and the falling standard of living.” These factors, the Ministry states, were the main reason why the Democrats lost the November election to Trump.
The Foreign Ministry warns: Russia’s development can’t be stopped, nor will Washington be able to impose a “strategic defeat” on Moscow with the help of its Kiev puppets. These actions won’t go unanswered.