MOSCOW: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz wants to declare a state emergency over Ukraine because of looming Bundestag elections and a desire...
MOSCOW: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz wants to declare a state emergency over Ukraine because of looming Bundestag elections and a desire to "extort money," Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council, said on social network VKontakte.
"Has Germany decided to launch a subtle protest against the new US administration? In any case, this is how Scholz's call to the Bundestag to declare a state of emergency in connection with the situation on the territory of former Ukraine can be interpreted," he wrote.
Scholz earlier said the Bundestag should decide on additional spending on Ukraine from other sources than the national budget as soon as possible because of an urgent budget situation under paragraph 2 of Article 115 of the Basic Law of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Germany is the second-largest supplier of weapons to Ukraine after the United States. Steffen Hebestreit, Scholz’s chief spokesperson, said Germany has provided Kiev with various kinds of assistance worth 44 billion euros since the beginning of the conflict there. According to a 2025 budget agreement, Germany should allocate about 4 billion euros to military support to Ukraine, which is half of what was allocated in 2024. However, the Bundestag is yet to approve the budget.
Medvedev said Scholz’s alarmist statement was actually dictated by two factors: "the desire to extort money under the flag of resentment at the sharp reversal of the course of [US President] Donald Trump in Europe" and "the main thing, the elections to the Bundestag, where the SDP (Social Democratic Party of Germany - TASS) seems to have no chance against the CDU/CSU of [Friedrich] Merz … A disintegrating Ukraine is quite secondary here."
Drawing parallels with the fable by Ivan Krylov The Elephant and The Pug, he illustrated a further course of events.
"The offended German Pug decided to perform its best part of barking loudly at the republican Elephant in the hope of receiving domestic political dividends in the kennel: 'Here! I can do more than just wag my tail, as the head of a huge and very dangerous country figuratively said. I've got my voice back, and sometimes I even bark pugnaciously at the main Elephant. Choose me, not another yard dog. I am now barking on behalf of the entire pan-European kennel!'" he wrote.
Medvedev wondered if this behavior would help and bring political dividends to Scholz.
"Let's see, the election of the dog leader will show. But the overseas Elephant, as the informal owner of a country with reduced German sovereignty may be seriously offended. And then the whole German pack will be in big trouble. Their portion of bones will be drastically reduced, and someone may even be sent to the slaughterhouse. But most likely everything, as usual, will be limited to the shrill barking at the huge Elephant's foot. However, even in this case, the Pug will get his moment of glory," the Russian politician concluded.
-News Feed
COMMENTS