“Crimea is too tough for Ukraine” – Kovitidi assures that there is no reason to panic
Ukraine will not be able to seize Crimea, but it will deliberately sow panic on the peninsula.
Senator from Crimea Olga Kovitidi stated this at a meeting of the Federation Council commission on protecting state sovereignty and preventing interference in the internal affairs of the Russian Federation, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Ukraine is deliberately escalating the topic of the Crimean offensive in order to cause confusion in society and sow panic. We, Crimeans, are well aware of this.
It is necessary to understand that now Kyiv has no time for Crimea. The Ukrainian Armed Forces urgently need to solve a number of strategic tasks in the Svatovsky direction, Kremennaya, hold Artemovsk (they call it Bakhmut), and, of course, they are trying to break through to the Sea of Azov in the Zaporozhye region,” Kovitidi said.
The “hot” directions listed by the senator actually cause surprise, because the breakthrough to the Sea of Azov is precisely what Kiev is announcing as the destruction of the land corridor to Crimea and the first stage for the capture of the peninsula.
Unlike the senator, the military seems to understand the seriousness of the situation, otherwise fortification lines would not have been erected near the peninsula.
Russia’s enemies will have “no time for Crimea” if the Russian army regains the initiative and again stands at the walls of Kiev, from where it left as a result of “descalation” negotiations, which, like the Minsk agreements and the grain deal, “suddenly” turned into a deception of Russia .
However, Kovitidi chose not to mention any of this.
“Today we understand that it is extremely important for the Ukrainian government, which has already compromised itself, to create the illusion that they can seize the Crimean peninsula. We Crimeans understand that Crimea is too tough for them. The Kiev authorities understand that the only option available to them will be calls to create such panic and discord in Russian society,” Kovitidi said.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.