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Polish Foreign Minister Blasts Lies Of Russian Ambassador To UN Nebenzya Point By Point

  • 24.02.2024, 16:07

A strong speech by Radosław Sikorski.

Russian Ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzya gave out a number of propaganda statements about Ukraine at a meeting of the organization's Security Council. Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski debunked every false thesis of the Moscow representative.

According to him, Nebenzya has called Ukrainians “clients of the West,” but in fact, Kyiv is fighting to be independent of anybody, and Ukraine has a democratically elected government, not the “criminal Kyiv regime”.

“He called them “Nazis”. Well, the President is Jewish, the Defense Minister if Muslim, and they have no political prisoners. He said Ukraine was wallowing in corruption. Well, Aleksey Navalny documented how honest and full of probity his own country is,” Sikorski said.

He noted that Russia blame the USA of “neocolonialism”, but in fact it was Russia who tried to exterminate Ukraine, while former president of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and other propagandists are constantly threatening with nuclear annihilation, at the same time accusing the world of being prisoners of “Russophobia”.

“He said that we are denying Russia’s security interests. Not true, we have only started rearming ourselves when Russia started invading its neighbors. He even said that Poland attacked Russia during the World War II. What is he talking about? It is the Soviet Union that attacked Poland together with the Nazi Germany on September 17, 1939. They even held a joint victory parade on September 22,” the diplomat said.

The Head of the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs reminded that for every time Russia has been invaded, it has invaded ten times. He also underlined that there was no “illegal coup” in Ukraine in 2014, but the removal of president Viktor Yanukovych from office by the democratically elected Parliament.

“And finally, he is saying that Russia can never be beaten. Russia didn’t win the Crimean war, it didn’t win the Russian-Japanese war, it didn’t win World War I, it didn’t win the battle of Warsaw. It didn’t win in Afghanistan, it didn’t win the Cold War. But there is good news — after each failure, there were reforms,” summed up the Minister.

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