
The president of Russian told an audience of army officers and members of local patriotic and youth groups: “Unfortunately we see that the ideology of Nazism in its modern form and manifestation again directly threatens the security of our country.”
On Thursday
Vladimir Putin marked the eightieth anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi
forces in the battle of Stalingrad, and invoked the battle as justification for
the conflict in Ukraine.
Putin laid
a wreath at the eternal flame of the memorial complex to the fallen Red Army
soldiers in Volgograd, the current name of the city, and criticised Germany’s
decision to help arm Ukraine.
It comes
as the Russian president has mobilised nearly 500,000 troops to attack Ukraine
in a renewed offensive marking the one-year anniversary of the Russian
invasion, Ukrainian defence minister Oleksii Reznikov has said.
Putin had
asked for 300,000 Russian men to be enrolled in a general mobilisation in
September, but Mr Reznikov told the French BFM network last night that the
actual number of conscripts deployed to fight in Ukraine could be much more.
Volodymyr
Zelensky further asserted this claim and said that Ukraine is seeing “a certain
increase in the occupier’s offensive actions at the front – in the east of our
country”.
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