logo
The West ‘used' Ukraine – EU state's PM

The West ‘used' Ukraine – EU state's PM

Russia Today16 hours ago
The West used Ukraine in a failed attempt to weaken Russia, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has said.
A staunch advocate for peace talks rather than the EU's military backing for Kiev, Fico made the comments in a video address posted on Facebook over the weekend, saying the Ukrainian leadership also bears responsibility, having backed the Western plan to harm Moscow by supporting the war effort.
'Ukraine was used by the West in an attempt to weaken Russia, which did not succeed – and for which, it seems, Ukraine will have to pay dearly,' Fico said.
He added: 'Everyone already knows that the [Ukraine] conflict has serious roots in recent history, has no military solution, … and that Ukraine's membership in NATO is impossible.'
Moscow has framed the Ukraine conflict as a NATO proxy war and has long denounced Western military aid to Kiev, saying the US-led military bloc's eastward expansion and Ukraine's ambitions to join are key drivers of the hostilities.
Fico, who survived an assassination attempt by a pro-Ukraine activist over his opposition to arming Kiev, has repeatedly criticized the West's approach, warning that it threatens global security. His latest remarks come as the Russian and US leaders prepare to meet on August 15 to discuss a possible settlement.
The Kremlin has said securing a permanent and stable peace will be the focus of the upcoming talks in Alaska on Friday. Russian officials insist any deal must address the root causes of the conflict and reflect the realities on the ground, including the status of Crimea, as well as the Donetsk and Lugansk people's republics, and Zaporozhye and Kherson regions, which joined Russia after 2022 referendums.
Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky, who was not invited to the Putin-Trump talks, has already rejected any truce involving territorial concessions, despite the US president's insistence that swaps would be part of the proposed agreement.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK releases 26,000 inmates early due to lack of prison space
UK releases 26,000 inmates early due to lack of prison space

Russia Today

timean hour ago

  • Russia Today

UK releases 26,000 inmates early due to lack of prison space

Over 26,000 prisoners, some serving lengthy terms, have been freed in the UK as part of a soft-justice program aimed at easing the overcrowding of jails, the Daily Mail has reported, citing government data. Among those released between September 2024 and March 2025 were 248 convicts sentenced to 14 years or more for committing serious crimes, the paper said in an article on Sunday. The majority of the criminals freed by the cabinet of Prime Minister Keir Starmer were British citizens, but there were also over 2,600 foreign nationals, the figures show. An average of 3,461 prisoners have been released each month under the scheme, which allows some inmates to leave after serving 40% of their sentences. Based on this rate, the Daily Mail estimates that the total number of those freed could reach 45,000 by the end of the program's first year. According to the paper, the prisoners thanked Starmer after being let out and vowed to be 'lifelong Labour voters.' However, some of them committed new crimes just hours after being released, according to the report. When asked about the program, a Justice Ministry spokesman said the Labor cabinet 'had no choice but to take decisive action to stop prisons overflowing and leave police unable to make arrests' after the previous Conservative government left the UK's penitentiaries in a dire straits. 'We are building 14,000 prison places and reforming sentencing so jails never run out of space again,' he said. Tory justice spokesman Robert Jenrick said that the number of the freed criminals was 'shocking,' adding that it explained 'why Britain feels lawless.' The British public is 'sick of soft justice,' Jenrick told the Daily Mail. The leader of Reform UK, Nigel Farage, claimed last month that the crime rate in the UK had spiked 50% since the 1990s and that the country is 'facing societal collapse' as a result. According to Interior Ministry data, knife crime in England and Wales rose 87% over the past decade, with almost 55,000 incidents in 2024 alone. In July, a study suggested that 39% of all mobile phone thefts across Europe now occur in the UK.

Poland to turn wind farm into NATO's eyes and ears
Poland to turn wind farm into NATO's eyes and ears

Russia Today

time2 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Poland to turn wind farm into NATO's eyes and ears

Poland is converting a major offshore wind farm into a strategic surveillance asset for NATO, Euractiv reported on Monday. The Baltic Power project is reportedly installing radars and sensors on its turbine towers in response to an alleged increase in Russian hybrid threats. Located less than 200 kilometers from Russia's Kaliningrad Region, Baltic Power is set to become one of Poland's largest offshore wind farms. The 76-turbine facility is scheduled for completion in 2026 and is expected to provide electricity to 1.5 million households. According to Marcin Godek, the wind farm's operations and maintenance manager, the surveillance equipment is being installed in line with a checklist from Poland's Ministry of Defense. The move reportedly follows a series of incidents in the Baltic region, including the Nord Stream pipeline sabotage and damage to key energy links like the Balticconnector and EstLink 2. Alleged drone and ship activity, as well as signal spoofing and jamming during construction, also prompted the decision to enhance monitoring, the news outlet said. 'The threats to offshore energy infrastructure are very real,' Giles Dickson, CEO of lobby group Wind Europe said, as cited by the news outlet. 'Assets are being attacked physically, not just cyberattacks.' 'We are looking at infrastructure differently than we were one year ago,' Ignacy Niemczycki, Poland's state secretary for EU affairs, told Euractive. Western officials have accused Russia of involvement in damaging the Balticconnector gas pipeline and the Estlink 2 power cable. Moscow, which considers the Baltic Sea a strategic area for its naval operations and energy exports, has repeatedly dismissed the allegations of sabotage and accused the West of spreading a false narrative that frames routine accidents as evidence of its culpability. The Kremlin has denounced NATO's eastward expansion as a provocation that endangers regional stability, while dismissing Western concerns about Russian aggression as nonsense, and stressing that NATO is using fear to justify increasing military budgets. Western officials suggested Russia may have sabotaged the Nord Stream pipelines to destabilize Europe's energy security. Moscow, in turn, accused Washington of orchestrating the explosions – a claim echoed by investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, who cited sources alleging US involvement.

Terrorist attack thwarted in Moscow Region
Terrorist attack thwarted in Moscow Region

Russia Today

time2 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Terrorist attack thwarted in Moscow Region

A dual citizen of Russia and Ukraine has been detained for allegedly plotting a terrorist attack on a senior serviceman of the Russian Ministry of Defense in the Moscow Region, the country's security services have reported. In a press release on Tuesday, the Federal Security Service (FSB) said it had identified an agent of the Ukrainian special services operating under the pseudonym 'Raven,' who was recruited while in a third country. Acting on instructions received via Telegram, the suspect allegedly assembled a homemade explosive device and concealed it inside a car purchased with funds from Ukraine. According to the FSB, the vehicle was loaded with more than 60kg of explosives and was to be parked at a location designated by the suspect's Ukrainian handlers. It would then be detonated when the targeted military official passed nearby. The 36-year-old suspect was apprehended while traveling to the scene of the planned attack via the M-4 highway which runs from Moscow to the Black Sea coast. During interrogation, he confessed to cooperating with Ukrainian intelligence, stating he had been promised the chance to return to Ukraine and avoid mobilization into the Ukrainian armed forces in exchange for carrying out the plot. The FSB has released footage showing the suspect's arrest, his confession, and the inspection of the car, which appeared to contain bomb components hidden in the trunk and under the front panels. A criminal case has been opened under articles covering high treason, the illegal manufacture and storage of explosives, and related offenses. The suspect has been placed in pre-trial detention and could face life imprisonment if convicted. Russian security services have regularly reported foiling similar plots allegedly organized by Kiev. Last week, two teenagers in Novosibirsk were detained for attempting to poison a Russian military officer on remote orders from Ukraine and another man was arrested on suspicion of plotting to assassinate the head of a Russian defense industry enterprise.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store