Putin is 'isolating' Russia and threatening its future says expert
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The Russian President made the sneering comments in Moscow after visiting an exhibition dedicated to the 350th anniversary of the birth of Russian monarch Peter the Great. Putin said Russian oil and gas companies will not be “concreting over their oil-wells”.
The EU currently imports around 40 percent of its gas from Russia.
The Brussels bloc has pledged to reduce its dependency on Moscow’s oil by 90 percent by the end of this year, making no commitments yet on gas.
Boasting about the success of oil companies in his country, Putin added: “The volume of oil is decreasing on the world market, prices are rising.
“Company profits are rising.”
The Russian leader drew a parallel between what he portrayed as their historic quests to win back what he called Russian lands.
He said: “Peter the Great waged the Great Northern War for 21 years.
“It would seem that he was at war with Sweden, he took something from them. He did not take anything from them, he returned (what was Russia’s).”
In televised comments on day 106 of his war in Ukraine, he compared Peter’s campaign with the task facing Russia today.
He said: “Apparently, it also fell to us to return (what is Russia’s) and strengthen (the country).
“And if we proceed from the fact that these basic values form the basis of our existence, we will certainly succeed in solving the tasks that we face.”
In response, a senior advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky dismissed what he called any attempt to legalise the theft of land.
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“The West must draw a clear red line so the Kremlin understands the price of each next bloody step … we will brutally liberate our territories,” Mykhailo Podolyak said in an online post.
Putin has repeatedly sought to justify Russia’s actions in Ukraine, where his forces have devastated cities, killed thousands and put millions of people to flight, by propounding a view of history that asserts Ukraine has no real national identity or tradition of statehood.
Peter the Great, an autocratic moderniser admired by liberal and conservative Russians alike, gave his name to a new capital, St Petersburg – Putin’s hometown – that he ordered built on land he conquered from Sweden.
Prior to Putin’s visit to the exhibition, state television aired a documentary praising Peter the Great as a tough military leader, greatly expanding territory at the expense of Sweden and the Ottoman Empire.
In recent years, Putin’s interest in Russian history has loomed ever larger in his public appearances.
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In April 2020, as Russia entered its first coronavirus lockdown, he compared the pandemic to 9th-century Turkic nomadic invasions of medieval Russia.
In July 2021, the Kremlin published a long essay by Putin in which he argued that Russia and Ukraine were one nation, artificially divided. It laid the groundwork for his deployment of troops to Ukraine.
Moscow says it acted to disarm and “denazify” its neighbour.
Ukraine and its allies say Putin has launched an unprovoked war of aggression.
In the run-up to what Russia calls its “special military operation”, Putin blamed Vladimir Lenin, the founder of the Soviet Union, for creating Ukraine on what Putin said was historically Russian territory.
By contrast, he offered cautious praise for Josef Stalin for creating “a tightly centralised and absolutely unitary state”, even as he acknowledged the Soviet dictator’s record of “totalitarian” repression.
Putin has a history of praising leaders sharing his own conservative views.
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