US ‘pleased’ by deaths in Ukraine conflict – Moscow
US politicians are “extremely pleased” by the deaths of Slavs on both sides of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Moscow’s ambassador to Washington, Anatoly Antonov, has claimed.
Reports that Ukraine may soon be allowed to strike deep into Russia using American-made weapons are a sign that the US is increasingly involved in the conflict, he added, claiming that Western nations had instructed Ukraine to step up attacks on civilian targets.
Citing House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, Axios reporter Juliegrace Brufke tweeted on Tuesday that the US could lift restrictions on Kiev’s use of long-range ATACMS missiles to strike internationally recognized Russian territory when Secretary of State Blinken visits Kiev.
In a statement on Thursday, Antonov said that the US “is steadily driving itself deeper into the quagmire” of the Ukraine conflict, while being willing “to sacrifice the well-being of US citizens by transferring multibillion-dollar volumes of weapons and ammunition to the Kiev regime.”
“It seems that… Washington perfectly understands the situation on the battlefield when every day Russian troops liberate more and more settlements in Donbass. However, politicians are extremely pleased with the death of Slavs on both sides of the line of contact. They openly proclaim a simple task – to preserve the old system of international relations where America used to dominate.”
According to the envoy, Washington’s sole requirement of Kiev is “to increase military clashes with Russian troops.” In doing so, Antonov warned, the US is testing the “limit of our tolerance… to hostile steps,” but that its plans to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia are not feasible.
The ambassador claimed that Kiev’s Western backers had tasked it “to intensify attacks against ordinary Russians, our cities and villages… No one is even trying to hide – even at the highest level in the White House – that intelligence data has been and continues to flow from the United States to Kiev.”
Antonov was apparently referring to comments by Vice Admiral Frank Whitworth, director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), who acknowledged last month that Ukraine had access to a trove of commercial satellite images for its incursion into Kursk Region. While the Ukrainian large-scale cross-border attack initially made some gains, it had since been contained, according to Moscow, which estimated Kiev’s losses at more than 12,000 troops.
”It is impossible to negotiate with terrorists. They must be wiped out,” Antonov stressed, adding that Russia intends to do its best to prevent such attacks from ever happening again.