Monday, 18 February 2019

Putin: No Independent Countries Left

Europe can’t oppose the US deployment of missiles, even if it is contrary to their interests, because no country can be truly independent these days, Vladimir Putin believes.

The Russian president thinks “the modern world is the world of interdependency” and there are no truly independent countries these days.

“Do you think European countries want missiles in Europe? Nobody wants it. But they keep silent. Where is their sovereignty?” Putin asked during his recent visit in Sochi.

The EU Parliament, he said, makes more decisions on behalf of the member countries than “the Supreme Soviet of USSR on behalf of constituent republics” back in the days.

This is especially echoed in the recent Venezuela troubles, in which most of the EU caved to the US interests in regime change; only Italy vetoed the EU recognition of the Venezuelan puppet opposition leader Guaido with Russia, China, Turkey and Iran saying they see Maduro as the only legitimate leader, warning against meddling in Venezuela’s domestic affairs.
There are no fully independent states in the world.

On Thursday leaders from Russia, Turkey and Iran gathered in the Black Sea city of Sochi to discuss ways of ending Syria’s crisis. The talks were held amid hostile talk emerging from a meeting of the US and its allies in Warsaw, where they talked about their take on the Middle East.

During the meeting in Sochi, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani expressed doubts over Washington’s plan to remove troops stationed with Kurdish forces in northern Syria. But Putin seemed to be the most optimistic that the move would actually happen soon.

After the summit on Syria ended, Putin stayed on in Sochi to hold talks with Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko concerning the supranational union of the two nations among other topics following the looming threat of the US-EU's creeping soft and hard powers - including its brooding missile emplacements that are, according to the US, "aimed at Iran".

 

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