UJ.com

Top 2 

                        FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 2024
Make Homepage /  Add Bookmark
Front Page
Nation
Business
Search
Subscription
Advertising
About us
Copyright
Contact
 

   Username:
   Password:


Registration

 
GISMETEO.RU
UJ Week
Top 1   

    
Nation    

Book: Putin lied about troops in Ukraine
Journal Staff Report

KYIV, Sept. 3 – Russian President Vladimir Putin conspicuously blundered during the 2015 Minsk Agreement talks to admit that Russian troops have been fighting in Ukraine, according to a book by former French President Francois Hollande.

Putin, in a shouting match with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, became enraged and revealed he was lying about Russia's role in a military uprising in eastern Ukraine, according to the recently released book.

"Poroshenko and Putin constantly raised their voices with each other. The Russian president was so worked up, that he started threatening to decisively crush his counterpart's forces," an excerpt from Hollande's 2018 book, "The Lessons of Power," according to Business Insider report.

"This showed that there are Russian troops in eastern Ukraine. Putin suddenly realized, and got a grip on himself," Hollande wrote.

Business Insider used a translation of the book by UAWire.org, which writes about Russia and Ukraine.

But even after Putin got ahold of himself, his narrative continued to unravel, Hollande wrote.

Hollande, along with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, was directly involved in the meeting that had later led to the Minsk peace accord.

In 2014, Russia illegally annexed Crimea from Ukraine and began to support separatists in the eastern part of the country through information warfare, direct shipments of weapons, and the deployment of Russian fighters posing as Ukrainian separatists.

Experts branded the campaign, for which Russia denied responsibility, as a new form of conflict called hybrid warfare. The strategy involves multidomain fighting, economic pressure, and a distortion of facts on the ground.

In Minsk, Poroshenko asserted Ukraine's sovereignty as its leader. Putin would not acknowledge directing any of the separatist forces and constantly had to frame his contributions to the conversation as speculation on what the separatists might say, if they were there.

Hollande wrote that Putin tried to delay the cease-fire between the fighting sides for weeks. When Hollande and Poroshenko brought up that Russia had been sanctioned as result of the fighting, and not a nebulous group of unnamed fighters, Putin "pretended not to understand or not to hear what we were saying," Hollande wrote.

"At seven in the morning after a sleepless night," both sides finally struck a deal that Putin could agree to, Hollande wrote. But Putin, maintaining he wasn't in control of the separatists, had to run off, Hollande wrote.

"Suddenly Putin said that he needed to consult with the separatist leaders. Their emissaries were in Minsk too. Where exactly? In some hotel or in an office neighboring ours? At least we didn't see them," Hollande wrote.

Fighting continues in eastern Ukraine, with more than 10,000 dead. Russia still denies any official involvement in the fighting and remains under the sanctions imposed in 2014. (bi/ez)




Log in

Print article E-mail article


Currencies (in hryvnias)
  19.04.2024 prev
USD 39.60 39.55
RUR 0.421 0.420
EUR 42.28 42.06

Stock Market
  18.04.2024 prev
PFTS 507.0 507.0
source: PFTS

OTHER NEWS

Ukrainian Journal   
Front PageNationBusinessEditorialFeatureAdvertisingSubscriptionAdvertisingSearchAbout usCopyrightContact
Copyright 2005 Ukrainian Journal. All rights reserved
Programmed by TAC webstudio