Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday said that his soldiers in Ukraine were fighting an “aggressive force” backed by all of NATO and described his war goals as “just,” as he addressed a scaled back Victory Day parade on Red Square in Moscow.
Putin has made the memory of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II a central narrative of his 25-year rule. Russian authorities typically mark the parade with pomp and grandeur.
However, a spate of Ukrainian long-range attacks in the past few weeks prompted the Kremlin to ramp up security measures and downsize this year’s celebrations.
Photo: AFP
The parade was vastly smaller compared with previous years, with no military hardware on display for the first time in nearly two decades and only a handful of foreign dignitaries in attendance — most of them leaders of Russia’s close allies.
Moscow and Kyiv agreed to observe a three-day ceasefire over the event, announced by US President Donald Trump. Moscow had threatened a “massive” strike on central Kyiv if Ukraine disrupted the proceedings.
In an address to the parade, attended by Russian military units as well as soldiers from North Korea, Putin invoked the Soviet victory to rally support for his army in Ukraine.
“The great feat of the generation of victors inspires the soldiers carrying out the goals of the special military operation today,” Putin said.
“They are confronting an aggressive force armed and supported by the entire NATO bloc, and despite this, our heroes move forward,” he said.
“I firmly believe that our cause is just,” he added later.
The speech drew a cool reception from some in Moscow, with Internet outages and fatigue over the four-year Ukraine war casting a shadow over the events.
When asked how she felt on Victory Day, which marks the Soviet Union’s defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II, 36-year-old economist Elena replied: “Nothing.”
“I need the Internet, and I don’t have it,” she said from central Moscow, adding that she would not watch the parade.
After two failed attempts at truces this week by Russia and Ukraine, US President Donald Trump announced on Friday a three-day ceasefire between both sides would come into effect from yesterday.
“Hopefully, it is the beginning of the end of a very long, deadly, and hard fought War,” Trump posted on his Truth Social network, adding that the ceasefire would be accompanied by a prisoner exchange.
The Kremlin said that there were no plans to prolong the truce.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy issued a decree on Friday ordering the Ukrainian military not to attack the parade and in a separate statement confirmed his government would adhere to the ceasefire to enable the swap of 1,000 detainees from each warring side.
“Red Square is less important to us than the lives of Ukrainian prisoners who can be returned home,” Zelenskiy said.
The Ukrainian Air Force and the Russian Ministry of Defense reported fewer drone attacks overnight.
Now in its fifth year, the war has killed hundreds of thousands of people and spiraled into Europe’s deadliest since World War II.
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