Former Russian President Medvedev has again warned of the risk of World War III

In a message on Telegram, the former Russian leader, US President Joe Biden, “shamefully fled Afghanistan” and then “destroyed the European economy”, provided hundreds of tons of weapons to Ukraine and “triggered a very dangerous protracted war”.

“As a result, the Kiev regime is destroying what remains of its country. Now, all resources are exhausted, [Biden] “The promise of cluster bombs is again provoking the neo-Nazis in Kiev with the prospect of NATO, whose implementation means World War III,” he said.

Medvedev, resorting to his usual extreme threats and insults, argued that Biden’s actions helped him “dominate and control other countries”, describing the US president as “a sick old man with severe dementia” who “doesn’t know what’s going on”.

“Maybe everything is different? Maybe […] “He decided to go gracefully, create a nuclear Armageddon and take half of humanity with him to the next world”, he concluded in his attack on the US President.

Joe Biden said the decision to send cluster bombs to Ukraine as part of a new military aid package was “difficult but necessary” as “the Ukrainians ran out of ammunition” amid a counteroffensive against invading Russian forces. .

The US president, in an interview with CNN, emphasized that this is not a definitive decision, but that it will remain in place until the country guarantees an adequate supply of 155 millimeter caliber cannons (mm) widely used by NATO systems.

In a similar vein, the US Deputy Secretary of Defense, Colin Kall, promised at a press conference that the shipment of ammunition would be a bridge while the US and European allies expand production of 155mm projectiles.

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“This war is about ammunition, and we’re running out of ammunition,” the US president said in an interview that will be broadcast in its entirety today.

These weapons are banned in many countries, mainly in Europe, by signatories to the 2008 Oslo Convention, to which neither the US, Ukraine nor Russia are parties, and their deployment to Kiev has already drawn widespread criticism, including from NATO members. .

The use of cluster bombs is highly controversial because their dropped charges do not explode immediately and can cause many collateral civilian casualties over a long period of time.

On February 24 last year, exactly 500 days ago, the Russian military offensive on Ukrainian territory plunged Europe into what is considered the most serious security crisis since World War II (1939-1945).

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