Medvedev warning; Russia’s trial in The Hague will end in nuclear war.
The deputy of the Russian National Security Council and the former president of this country warned that there is a possibility of nuclear war if Moscow is condemned at the Hague Court.
Dmitry Medvedev, the former president, former prime minister and current deputy of the National Security Council of Russia, warned the West about the trial of this country in The Hague on charges of war crimes.
According to a report published by the special and up-to-the-moment page of Ukraine’s developments in the Telegraph newspaper, Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy of the Russian National Security Council, warned that any condemnation of Moscow at the Hague Court may lead to nuclear war.
The former president and former prime minister of Russia wrote on his personal Telegram page on Wednesday (yesterday): “The idea of punishing the country that has the largest nuclear arsenal is strange and potentially poses a threat to the existence of humanity.”
He, who was the president of Russia from 2008 to 2012, also announced that America wants to bring Russia to international courts, while this country has never been punished for its wars.
According to this senior Russian official, the various wars of the United States of America have resulted in the death of 20 million people in all parts of the world.
The harsh warning of the deputy of the Russian National Security Council about the trial and punishment of this country for the war in Ukraine has been raised in the context of the tensions between Moscow and the West and its allies.
From February 24, 2022 after recognizing the independence of Luhansk and Donetsk republics from Ukraine, Russia sent troops to this region and announced the beginning of “special military operations in Ukraine”.
Russia has announced its goal of this action to de-Nazify Ukraine, disarm this country, resolve its security concerns and respond to Luhansk and Donetsk’s request for help, and has said that it has no intention of seizing Ukrainian lands.
However, the Ukrainian government has not recognized the independence of Donetsk and Luhansk and has called Russia’s military presence an “aggression and attack on its territorial integrity”.