Russia scolds Macron for pushing Europe towards the abyss of world war
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Russian officials and lawmakers on March 6 poured scorn on French President Emmanuel Macron for saying that Russia threatened Europe.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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MOSCOW - Russian officials and lawmakers on March 6 poured scorn on French President Emmanuel Macron for saying that Russia threatened Europe, and cautioned that such talk could lead the West towards the abyss of a new world war.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered the biggest confrontation
The advance of Russian forces in Ukraine in 2022 and US President Donald Trump’s upending of US policy towards Ukraine and Russia, and demand for a peace deal to end the war have led to fears among European leaders that Washington is turning its back on Europe.
Mr Macron said in an address to the nation on March 5
“Such an erroneous analysis leads to fatal errors,” said Mr Konstantin Kosachev, a senior Russian senator, who said Mr Macron had mistaken Russia’s reaction to the enlargement and aggression of the US-led military alliance towards Russia.
“Macron maniacally imposes on his citizens, allies and the entire world a completely false concept of what is happening – ‘the Russians are coming!’ Such false conclusions and false suggestions lead to the abyss.”
Ms Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for Russia’s foreign ministry, compared Mr Macron to a mythical Sandman named “Ole Lukoje” from Hans Christian Andersen who spins dreams to sleeping children.
“Every day, he makes some kind of completely out-of-touch statements that contradict previous ones. He’s a storyteller,” state news agency RIA quoted Ms Zakharova as saying.
Russia and the US are by far the world’s biggest nuclear powers, with more than 5,000 nuclear warheads each, followed by China with about 500, then France with 290 and Britain with 225, according to the Federation of American Scientists.
Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, who once presented himself as a moderniser and now tries to outhawk the Kremlin’s most ardent hawks, said “Micron” posed no threat at all and predicted he would lose power by 2027.
War
Russian officials say the tough rhetoric from Mr Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and other European powers over recent days is simply not backed up by hard military power and point to Russia’s advance on the battlefield in Ukraine.
President Vladimir Putin in 2024 ordered the regular size of the Russian army to be increased by 180,000 troops to 1.5 million active servicemen, in a move that would make it the second-largest in the world after China’s.
Mr Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, said Mr Macron had slandered Russia with lies and military propaganda.
Mr Putin has repeatedly dismissed as nonsense Western claims that Russia could one day attack a Nato member, which, under the Nato charter, would be considered an attack on all 32 members of the alliance.
Ukraine and the West say Mr Putin is engaged in an imperial-style land grab in Ukraine, and have repeatedly vowed to defeat Russia, which currently controls just under 20 per cent of Ukraine, including Crimea, and a chunk of eastern and southern Ukraine.
Mr Putin casts the war as part of a historic struggle with the West, which he says humiliated Russia after the Soviet Union fell in 1991 by enlarging Nato and encroaching on what he considers Moscow’s sphere of influence, including Ukraine.
Mr Kosachev said Mr Macron was moving away from the legacy of former president Charles de Gaulle, and that Mr Macron was clearly seeking to shift the blame for all France and Europe’s problems solely on Russia’s shoulders. REUTERS

