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Medvedev assures that Russia is increasing "the production of the most powerful means of destruction"

MADRID, 11 Dic.

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Medvedev assures that Russia is increasing "the production of the most powerful means of destruction"

MADRID, 11 Dic. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The former Russian president and current vice president of the Russian Security Council, Dimitri Medvedev, has announced that Moscow is increasing "the production of the most powerful means of destruction", in the midst of the invasion of Ukraine, unleashed on February 24 by order of the Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"It is much more difficult for us. Our enemy has entrenched not only in the Kiev province and in our native Little Russia. They are in Europe, in North America, in Japan, in Australia, in New Zealand in other contemporary Nazi places ", has said.

"For this reason, we are increasing the production of the most powerful means of destruction, including those based on new principles," Medvedev said in a message on his Telegram account in which he charged against those whom he described as "mongrel dogs rabid pseudo-Ukrainians with Russian surnames".

Thus, he has stated that these people "drown in their toxic saliva and declare that the enemy is on the borders of Russia, from the West to Vladivostok." "Rage has no cure", he has settled.

Medvedev has thus made reference to the statements of the secretary of the Ukrainian National Security Council, Oleksi Danilov, who said on Saturday that the Ukrainian "enemy" is between the territory of Donbas and Vladivostok and stressed that Kiev "is not going to ask anyone". before attacking targets on Russian territory.

Medvedev himself said in September that Russia "can use" all kinds of weapons in the event of a threat, including nuclear weapons, adding that the country "has chosen its own path and there is no going back."

Days later, the former Russian president stressed that "NATO would not intervene directly" in the event that Moscow uses nuclear weapons against "the Ukrainian regime", while defending that Moscow "has the right" to use this weapon "if it is necessary".