Russia prepares propaganda teleconference with Western countries to mark anniversary of Yalta Conference in Crimea
Russia's and Crimean occupying authorities plan to host a global video conference in February of next year, commemorating the 1945 Yalta Conference, in an effort to promote their claims of "Nazism" in Ukraine.
The Center for National Resistance reported that.
It is noted that the Kremlin plans to once again play out the theme of "fighter against Nazism".
"In February, the Russians are planning a teleconference in honor of the anniversary of the Yalta Conference… At it, the occupiers plan to spread messages about Nazism in Ukraine and that the modern world order is outdated.
Currently, the enemy is looking for partners in the West who will play this show with them," the report says.
It is noted that the teleconference is to take place between studios in Simferopol and in Great Britain, France and the USA.
"In honor of the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, the Kremlin plans to once again play up the theme of "fighter against Nazism", speculating on historical issues to justify its aggression," the Center emphasizes.
To do this, the Russians plan to involve their agents of influence in the world, who, by their presence at these events, should shape the image of Russia as "a country that is the main fighter against Nazism."
In such a narrative, the current fascist Russia itself can determine who in the world is a "Nazi" and this supposedly gives it the right to invade other sovereign states, the Center for National Resistance emphasizes.
However, , the Center for National Resistance notes that it will not be possible to play this card on the international stage, because "modern Russia is the main threat to world security."
For reference:
The Yalta (Crimean) Conference of the Allied Powers took place on February 4-11, 1945. It was the second multilateral meeting of the leaders of the three countries of the anti-Hitler coalition during World War II – the USSR, the USA and Great Britain, and was dedicated to establishing a post-war world order.
The meeting took place in the Livadia (White) Palace in the village of Livadia, three kilometers from Yalta, and became the last conference of the leaders of the anti-Hitler coalition of the "big three" in the pre-nuclear era.
The key decisions of the conference concerned two issues.
- Drawing new state borders in the territories that had recently been occupied by the Third Reich. It was necessary to establish unofficial, but generally recognized by all parties, demarcation lines between the spheres of influence of the Allies – a question that began to be considered at the Tehran Conference in 1943.
- The Allies realized that after the disappearance of the common enemy, the forced unification of the West and the USSR would lose all meaning. Therefore, it was necessary to create procedures that would guarantee the immutability of the demarcation lines drawn on the world map.
The so-called "Declaration on Liberated Europe" concluded during the Yalta Conference left the Soviet side free to interpret "assistance" to the liberated peoples. As a result, the USSR secured political control over the countries it occupied, which led to the Sovietization of Eastern and Central Europe and caused the "Cold War".
The situation in the occupied territories
Russian invaders continue anti-social and terrorist activities in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine.
- Thus, in the temporarily occupied Luhansk region, the Russian military obliged all students to join the Kremlin's "movement of the first".
- The workers of the seaport in Berdiansk have not been paid their salaries for several months.
- In the temporarily occupied Melitopol, the Russians plan to seize housing from Ukrainians for debts on utility services.
- In addition, the enemy is agitating children from boarding schools to join the ranks of the Russian army. The Russians are also deporting Ukrainian children to the Russian Federation.
- In addition, the Russian invaders are intensifying mobilization in the occupied territories of Ukraine.