Taking aim at the West, Vladimir Putin warns the world faces its most 'dangerous decade'

The Russian president said the West was "desperately" trying to govern humanity, and that his country was "trying to defend its right to exist."

A man who is wearing a suit and tie speaking while standing at a podium.

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during the annual meeting with participants of the Valdai International Discussion Club, on 27 October, 2022 in Moscow, Russia. Source: Getty / Contributor

Key Points
  • Mr Putin argued that Western dominance in global affairs was coming to an end.
  • He said Russia was not just challenging the West but fighting for its own right to exist.
The world is probably entering the "most dangerous" decade since the end of World War Two, Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned, presenting the Ukraine conflict as part of a wider struggle against western domination.

Arguing that Western dominance in global affairs was coming to an end, Mr Putin on Thursday (local time) insisted Russia was not just challenging the West but fighting for its own right to exist.

Mr Putin was speaking as that Moscow has annexed as its own, and has mobilised more troops to defend.

"Ahead is probably the most dangerous, unpredictable, and at the same time important decade since the end of the Second World War," Mr Putin told members of the annual Valdai Discussion Club, in a lengthy question-and-answer session.
People standing outside a damaged residential building.
Locals watch as workers clean the debris of a residential building damaged in a shelling in the small city of Druzhkivka, Donetsk area, Ukraine, 26 October 2022. Source: AAP, EPA / Yevgen Honcharenko
The situation was "to a certain extent revolutionary", he said, describing the Ukraine offensive as simply part of the "tectonic shifts of the entire world order".

"The historical period of undivided dominance of the West in world affairs is coming to an end," said Mr Putin. "The unipolar world is becoming a thing of the past."

While the West was still "desperately" trying to govern humanity, it was not able to. "Most peoples of the world no longer want to put up with it," he said.

And the Russian president characterised the current crisis as a battle for survival for Russia.

"Russia is not challenging the elites of the West, Russia is just trying to defend its right to exist," he said.

'Dirty bomb' row

President Putin also returned to the row over Russian allegations that against its soldiers.

Kyiv was "doing everything to cover up traces of this preparation" for such a bomb, he said.

On Monday, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), responding to the allegations, said it regularly visited two sites that Moscow had raised questions over.

The UN agency's inspectors had found nothing untoward and were preparing to visit again in the coming days, the statement added.

"We are in favour," said Mr Putin. "And it should be done as fast as possible."
A dirty bomb is a conventional bomb laced with radioactive, biological or chemical materials which are disseminated in an explosion.

Over the past week, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has repeated the claims regarding a Ukrainian dirty bomb in conversations with his counterparts in France, the United States, the United Kingdom, China and India.

France, the US and the UK have all rejected the claim, and NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg has warned that Russia might be trying to .

Kyiv meanwhile, has said it suspects Russia might itself use a dirty bomb in a "false flag" attack.

But Mr Putin said Thursday using nuclear weapons in Ukraine would "make no sense at all to us — either in political or military terms".
A man wearing a suit and tie speaking in front of a microphone.
Mr Putin said while the West was still "desperately" trying to govern humanity, it was not able to Source: AAP, AP / Sergei Karpukhin

Stalled talks

Earlier Thursday, the Kremlin said Ukraine had pulled out of peace talks with Moscow back in March on orders from Washington.

"The text was ready... And then suddenly the Ukrainian side went off the radar, the Ukrainian side declared its unwillingness to continue negotiations," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

Talks between Kyiv and Moscow have stalled since March, each side blaming the other for the stalemate.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday dismissed any possibility of talks with Moscow, denouncing Mr Putin's "planned rhetoric". In late September, he said he would not negotiate with Russia as long as Mr Putin was president.

Russia's "special operation" in Ukraine has met with repeated setbacks.

Mr Putin has in recent weeks changed his military commander there after Kyiv's forces launched a counter-offensive, recapturing territory in the east.

Last week, Mr Putin introduced martial law in four Ukrainian regions that he has declared annexed: Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Lugansk.

The annexation announcement came in late September, despite Moscow's forces not controlling some of the regions fully. Most recently, for example, there has been fierce fighting in the eastern region of Donetsk.

Russian-installed authorities in Ukraine's occupied region of Zaporizhzhia on Thursday ordered phone checks on local residents.

Anyone subscribed to "propaganda resources of the terrorist Kyiv regime" would receive a warning, before being fined.

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4 min read
Published 28 October 2022 7:09am
Source: AFP


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