'Russian president Putin wants all of my country, he wants a less secure world' - Ukraine's President alledges
On a day when Ukraine celebrated it's 25th anniversary of independence from the Soviet union, Ukraine's president Petro Poroshenko has alleged that Russia's president Vladmir Putin wants to take over 'all of his country'
According to Petro Poroshenko, 50, Putin, the world's most powerful man according to Forbes wants "the
whole Ukraine" to be part of the "Russian Empire."
Russia recently conducted military drills in Crimea, the peninsula it
annexed from Ukraine in 2014 -- but this military move is regarded by a
lot of Nations as illegal and unwarranted.
"It
is absolutely the same situation like Russian bombardment in Aleppo,"
he told CNN's Christiane Amanpour in an exclusive interview on Wednesday night.
"They have only one purpose -- [the] world should be less stable, less secured."
Had
you asked him in 2013, Poroshenko said, if it would have been possible
for Russia to "occupy the Crimea," he would have said "no, this is not
possible -- there is some red line, and Putin [will] not cross this
line."
"If you asked me in January, year 2014," he went on, if
it was possible that "thousands of Russian regular troops will
penetrate on Ukrainian territory in the east of my country in July and
August," I would have said, "no, this is not possible."
With those moves, he said, the world "is completely changed."
"Russian aggression completely destroyed the post-war global security system,"
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