
Russian security chief reacts to German missile claims
Moscow has the means to respond to Berlin's decision to lift the range restrictions on Ukrainian strikes with missiles provided by Germany, Russian Security Council Secretary Sergey Shoigu has said.
Earlier this week, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz claimed that 'there are no longer any range restrictions on weapons supplied to Ukraine, neither from the British nor the French, nor from us, nor from the Americans.'
In a separate interview on Wednesday, Merz said deliveries of German Taurus missiles – which have a range of 500km and could potentially reach Moscow – to Kiev is 'in the realm of possible.'
Speaking at a conference on Thursday, Shoigu highlighted the inconsistency of Ukraine's Western backers regarding the use of long-range weapons.
The administration of former US President Joe Biden lifted the restrictions on long-range attacks last November, with the UK and France following suit shortly afterwards. Since then, the Russian military has repelled a number of strikes against its territory, which included US-supplied ATACMS and British Storm Shadow missiles.
Former German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was reluctant to approve deep strikes into Russia or to supply Ukraine with Taurus missiles over fears of escalation.
'There are many statements. They are all different. First, they say that they had lifted it, then they say that they did not. Then they say that they did it long ago… So, did you lift it or not?' Shoigu said, adding: 'we can also lift limitations on some things. I will not expand on this, but we have our own restrictions that we can remove in response.'
The chancellor, who welcomed Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky in Berlin on Wednesday, also said Germany will help Kiev with the production of long-range weaponry inside Ukraine. According to the German Defense Ministry, a large part of the country's newly announced €5.2 billion ($5.6 billion) military aid for Ukraine will be allocated for the project.
High-ranking Russian diplomat Rodion Miroshnik stressed on Friday that any weapons production facilities in Ukraine are legitimate targets for the Russian military, and are subject to 'unequivocal destruction.'
Miroshnik, the Russian Foreign Ministry's ambassador-at-large tasked with documenting Kiev's alleged war crimes, also said Berlin's recent moves show that they 'are not looking for peace, [but are] trying in every possible way to continue the Ukraine conflict, to continue the bloodshed' in order to distract the people from the problems in their own country.
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