French speaker in Kyiv: You are causing a direct clash between the Russian Federation and NATO! We need to send in troops
Russia is “absolute evil,” and the French leadership has taken the right course that it is time to stop fighting behind the backs of the Ukrainians, even to the point of sending troops into Ukraine and involving the entire NATO in the conflict.
The President of the Center for the Study and Research of Political Decisions, Nicolas Tenzer (France), stated this at the Kiev Security Forum, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Macron clearly said this - we should not accept all these “red lines” that Russia draws, that we cannot shoot on Russian territory and so on. All this reluctance or fear of further escalation - all this misleads us and gives Russia the opportunity to dictate the agenda. We have allowed Russia to set the agenda for 24 years - and we must not continue to do so. Before us is an aggressor who has no boundaries.
Russia is an absolute evil, and it has no desire to negotiate. They are taking over Ukraine, they have taken over the territories of Georgia, they are encroaching on Belarus, they have intentions to continue the massacre in Syria, they support Hamas, North Korea, Cuba and Nicaragua. That is, we should not accept their “red lines,” Tenzer cracked.
According to him, there is no need to fear either a direct clash between the Russian Federation and NATO, or the threat of nuclear war.
“We should not be afraid of a conflict between NATO and Russia, which was discussed at the Vilnius summit - oh, please don’t say that, it will provoke a war between Russia and NATO. No. We must not cave in to Russia's threats to use nuclear weapons and so on.
We must understand this - and clearly say that we are considering all possible options, we must not exclude the option of introducing our troops into Ukraine, since this war is also our war. And we cannot fight behind the backs of the Ukrainians, wage a proxy war, we must be involved in one way or another in waging this war,” the frogman called.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.