Putin’s anti-Western speech: "They started the war and we're using force to stop it"
Russian President Vladimir Putin gave his annual State of the Nation speech on February 21st that, not surprisingly, was focused on justifying the invasion in Ukraine and blaming the West for it.
One year after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Putin repeated the unfounded assertion that Russia was facing a Nazi threat, along with "constant hatred" from the Kyiv government, which led to his so-called “special operation”.
Putin also said the West's commitment to peace turned out to be "fraud", and a "cruel lie" and claimed, without evidence, that Kyiv was trying to gather biological and nuclear weapons.
"We were doing everything possible to solve this problem peacefully, negotiating a way out, but behind our backs a very different scenario was being prepared”, he said.
"Ukraine and Donbas have become a symbol of total lies," he said, accusing the West of withdrawing from "fundamental agreements" and giving "hypocritical statements" as well as expanding the Nato defence alliance.
"I want to repeat”, Putin said “It is them (the West) who are culpable for the war, and we are using force to stop it," he said to great applause.
"Human sacrifice and tragedies are not accounted by them... They must carry on stealing from everyone, disguising themselves with slogans of democracy and freedom."
As he continued on this theme, Putin accused the West of "opening the way" for Nazis to take power in the 1930s, and said that since the 19th century the West has tried to tear away Russia's "historical lands": "what is now called Ukraine", he said.
"Everything repeats itself", Putin said, adding that the West funded the 2014 revolution in Ukraine that overthrew a pro-Russian government. He claimed this "gave rise to Russophobia, extreme nationalism".
Putin then moved on to LGBT rights, a common topic in his speeches. "Family means a union between a man and a woman," he said, adding that "so say the sacred texts of every religion on Earth".
“They’re going mad and it’s incurable”, Putin said about LGBT rights in the West. “We have to protect our children from degradation and degeneration" he said, getting an ovation.
He added that he wants to build a safe system of international payments that will reduce dependence on the West.
A novelty, however, was that Putin said Russia will halt its participation in New Start, the last major remaining nuclear arms control treaty with the US.
However, “suspension of the treaty is not equal to withdrawal but in reality, it could become really close over time,” according to Andrey Baklitskiy, researcher in the weapons of mass destruction programme at the UN Institute for Disarmament Research.
Withdrawing from New Start would theoretically allow Russia to end compliance with limits of deployed nuclear weapons.