Ukrainian deputy defense minister lashes out at ‘infantile’ West

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Aleksandr Balanutsa has chided Kiev’s backers for not letting his country use their missiles to attack targets deep inside Russia

Ukrainian Deputy Minister of Defense for European Integration Aleksandr Balanutsa has called out Kiev’s “infantile” backers over their failure to allow it to use Western-supplied missiles to attack targets deep inside Russia. He warned that unless his country succeeds, NATO member states on the bloc’s eastern flank will be in Moscow’s crosshairs.

Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has for months been asking his Western partners for permission to use US-made ATACMS, British Storm Shadows, and French SCALP missiles to target internationally recognized Russian territory. London and Paris have indicated that they are prepared to give the green light, but only if Washington does so first.

The White House apparently remains skeptical about the idea, concerned over a potential escalation of the Ukraine conflict.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned that such a decision would directly involve Western nations in the hostilities, as the Ukrainian military is not capable of operating these sophisticated missiles on its own.

Speaking during a panel discussion at the Warsaw Security Forum on Wednesday, Balanutsa lamented “sometimes I think that the collective West, to some extent, is really full of infantilization and ideas. Do we have to even ask the question ‘can Ukraine [have] the right to do this or that?’”

He went on to predict that unless Ukraine is given all the necessary means to stop Russia now, Moscow will set its sights on the Baltic states, Poland and Moldova.

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“So, what I’m asking is a nice commercial offer: ‘You give me the guns, you give me the weapons, I’ll do the job’… and you will continue having your safe life,” the deputy minister said.

“We are not infants in Ukraine, and I’m asking my partners also to wake up and grow up a little bit,” Balanutsa implored.

The official also argued that the Ukrainian military’s fighting standards now far exceed those of NATO, meaning that the US-led military bloc needs Kiev more than Kiev needs NATO.

In the wake of Zelensky’s visit to the US late last month, the Wall Street Journal reported that President Joe Biden’s administration had not acquiesced to his “victory plan,” that includes long-range strikes on internationally recognized Russian territory.

Meanwhile, in late September, President Putin proposed that the national nuclear doctrine be updated to stipulate that “aggression against Russia by any non-nuclear state, but with the participation or support of a nuclear state” shall be regarded as a “joint attack” and therefore warrant nuclear retaliation.

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