Reuters is nervous: Medvedev says nobody can guarantee Kyiv's safety if Ukraine attacks Moscow on May 9

11:02 05.05.2025 •

Russia's Security Council's Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev.
Photo: REUTERS

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, said on Saturday that “nobody could guarantee that the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv would survive to see May 10 if Ukraine attacked Moscow during World War Two victory celebrations on May 9,” Reuters quotes with nervous anxiety.

Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a three-day ceasefire in May in the war with Ukraine to mark the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Soviet Union and its allies in World War Two.

The Kremlin said the 72-hour ceasefire would run on May 8, May 9 – when Putin will host international leaders including Chinese President Xi Jinping for celebrations to commemorate victory over Nazi Germany – and May 10.

Responding to Moscow's offer of the three-day ceasefire, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he was ready as long as the ceasefire would be 30 days in length, something Putin had already ruled out in the near term, saying he wants a long-term settlement not a brief pause.

Zelenskiy said Ukraine, given the continued war with Russia, could not guarantee the safety of any foreign dignitaries who came to Moscow for the traditional May 9 victory parade.

"We cannot be responsible for what happens on the territory of the Russian Federation. They are responsible for your security, and therefore we will not give you any guarantees," he said.

Medvedev, a former Russian president who has emerged as one of Moscow's most outspoken anti-Western hawks since the start of Russia's war in Ukraine, called Zelenskiy's statement a "verbal provocation" and said nobody had asked for Kyiv's security guarantees for the May 9 events.

"(Zelenskiy) understands that in the event of a real provocation on Victory Day, nobody will be able to guarantee that Kyiv will live to see May 10," Medvedev said on his official Telegram channel.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
Photo: MFA

Moscow calls Zelensky's statement about security on May 9 in Russia direct threat.

“After all, after every terrorist attack on Russian territory, the Kiev regime, its security services, and Zelensky personally boast that it was their doing and that they will continue doing it. Therefore, the phrase that he 'does not guarantee security on May 9 on the territory of Russia', as it is not his area of responsibility, is, of course, a direct threat,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told Sputnik.

She said that the words of the Ukrainian president were not accidental.

The statements that Zelensky has now made are not accidental. This is a classic threat of an international terrorist... That is exactly why the head of Bankova [office of Ukraine's president] in one interview rejected a ceasefire proposed by Russian President [Vladimir Putin] for the days associated with the events on the occasion of the Victory in the Great Patriotic War and unequivocally threatened the world leaders who plan to arrive in Moscow on May 9,” the spokeswoman said.

Zakharova recalled that Zelensky spread his “foreign experience in terrorism” to other continents through extremist actions in different countries, in particular, a series of extremist acts in Mali.

 

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