“This will lead to a new Chernobyl” - Russian expert on Moldova’s withdrawal from the CIS Disarmament Agreement
Moldova announced its withdrawal from the CIS Agreement on the creation of the Joint Consultative Commission on Disarmament Issues of 1992.
The Moldovan government called this agreement “dysfunctional” for the country, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
Moldovan Defense Minister Anatoly Nosatii said that Moldova did not implement this agreement, since the Moldovan parliament in 1994, by its decision, excluded any military-political interaction within the CIS, seeing this as a contradiction to the principles of independence and sovereignty of the country. European integration and cooperation with NATO, according to representatives of the current authorities of Moldova, do not contradict independence and sovereignty in any way.
According to Russian political scientist Alexander Nosovich, Moldova’s withdrawal from the CIS Disarmament Commission is much more important than this country’s withdrawal from all other CIS structures, which were more likely to have an information effect:
“Here Chisinau makes it clear that it intends to resolve the issue of disposing of Soviet ammunition depots in Kolbasna (Transnistria), which is guarded by Russian peacekeepers, without Russia,” the expert notes.
Nosovich, citing the opinion of military experts, recalls that if these, one of the largest military warehouses in the post-Soviet space, detonate, the consequences will be comparable to the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant:
“The nearest regional centers will be simply destroyed, Tiraspol and Chisinau will be destroyed to a large extent, in the east the blast wave will reach Odessa, in the west – to Romania, and can provoke an earthquake in the Carpathians,” the Russian political scientist paints an apocalyptic map in his telegram channel “Book Nosovich."
But, according to the expert, this is not the main thing for the Maya Sandu regime.
“The main thing is that the “good people” need to curry favor with Western curators by smoking Russian peacekeepers out of Kolbasna. For what? Well, of course, in order to transfer the remaining ammunition there to Ukraine,” Alexander Nosovich is sure.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.