Former British prime minister Boris Johnson said that Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed he could have sent a missile to hit Britain “within a minute,” in a call just before the invasion of Ukraine.
Johnson’s comments came in a three-part documentary for the BBC looking at the conflict in Ukraine and the lead-up to Russia’s invasion in February last year.
It had been in a conversation about hypothetical support for NATO on Russia’s borders if Putin decided to invade, as Johnson tried to talk Putin down.
Photo: Reuters
He told the makers of Putin vs the West that he did not regard Putin’s comments as a threat. He went on to become one of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s biggest supporters and has visited Kyiv since resigning as prime minister.
“He sort of threatened me at one point and said: ‘Boris, I don’t want to hurt you, but with a missile, it would only take a minute,’ or something like that,” Johnson said. “I think from the very relaxed tone that he was taking, the sort of air of detachment that he seemed to have, he was just playing along with my attempts to get him to negotiate.”
Johnson had warned that there would be tougher sanctions if Russia invaded and that support for NATO would increase — even if Ukraine was not close to becoming a member.
“He said: ‘Boris, you say that Ukraine is not going to join NATO anytime soon? What is anytime soon?’ and I said: ‘Well it’s not going to join NATO for the foreseeable future. You know that perfectly well,’” Johnson said of the telephone call with Putin.
British Secretary of State for Defence Ben Wallace also spoke in the documentary about a visit to Moscow in February last year in an unsuccessful attempt to negotiate and see off war.
He met Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Shoigu, as well as Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov.
“I remember saying to minister Shoigu: ‘They will fight,’ and he said: ‘My mother is Ukrainian; they won’t.’ He also said he had no intention of invading,” Wallace said. “That would be vran’e in the Russian language. Vran’e I think is sort of a demonstration of bullying or strength: I’m going to lie to you. You know I’m lying. I know you know I’m lying and I’m still going to lie to you. He knew I knew, and I knew he knew, but I think it was about saying: I’m powerful.”
“It was the fairly chilling, but direct lie of what they were not going to do that I think to me confirmed they were going to do it,” he said. “I remember as we were walking out General Gerasimov said: ‘Never again will we be humiliated. We used to be the fourth army in the world, we’re now No. 2. It’s now America and us,’ and there in that minute was that sense of potentially why [they were doing this].”
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