Sergei Chemezov, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, says the United States and its Western allies risk triggering a global war if Washington continues to “provoke” the conflict in Ukraine and allow Kyiv to attack Russian territory.
His remarks to Reuters offer a rare insight into thinking in Putin’s inner circle following a surprise Ukrainian incursion into Russia’s Kursk region, to which the president has promised a “worthy” response but has not yet said what that will entail.
Chemezov, CEO of the Rostec corporation which supplies many of Russia’s arms for the war, said Russia felt confident and had enough weapons more than two years into what the Kremlin calls its special military operation (SVO) in Ukraine.
He reiterated the Kremlin’s position that the conflict is a battle between the West and Russia.
“In a situation where the West, led by the United States, provokes war, we must be ready,” Chemezov said in written responses to an interview request. “The third year of the
special operation is under way – Russia feels confident.”
He said no one would provide a time frame for when the war might end, and accused the U.S. of stoking the conflict by supplying weapons to Kyiv and allowing strikes deep into Russia.
“The further it goes, the greater the risk that the world will be drawn into a global conflict. It looks strange, but Western countries do not seem to understand just how fraught
this is for them.”
The comments by Chemezov, a former KGB general who served with Putin in East Germany before the Soviet Union collapsed, were sent to Reuters after the incursion began.
President Putin said last week Russian forces would eject Ukrainian troops from Russian sovereign territory but they remain inside Russia.
He said in June he could deploy conventional missiles within striking distance of the U.S. and its European allies if they let Ukraine strike deeper into Russia with long-range Western weapons.
President Putin casts the conflict in Ukraine as part of an existential battle with a declining and decadent West which he says humiliated Russia after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 by
encroaching on what he considers Moscow’s sphere of influence, including Ukraine.
The West, which has supplied Kyiv with large amounts of weapons, rejects Moscow’s interpretation of the war and regards it as unprovoked land grab by Russia.
Moscow says the West was involved in planning for Ukraine’s attack on the Kursk region. Western powers, which want to avoid direct military confrontation with Russia, have denied this and say Russia has stoked the war.
With Reuters inputs