Russian military says Kiev staged ‘a horrible provocation’

ed note–as we have pointed out in several ed note sections since the invasion began, keep in mind the following historical facts–

On the morning of June 8, 1967, after what was a 2 hour long premeditated attack on the USS LIBERTY by Israel, done with the intention of blaming Egypt–the Soviet Union’s largest client state in the Middle East–American F4 Phantom jets were on their way to Cairo loaded with nukes and were only 180 seconds away from delivering their payloads, and Israel knew about it ahead of time.

Likewise, the notion that a nuclear incident such as the planned Mossad/CIA operation aimed at sabotaging Chernobyl or any of the other nuclear facilities in Ukraine that would doubtlessly lead to the deaths of–millions?–has no effect whatsoever on the decision making process of either entity, both of which seek Russia’s ouster from the Middle East, exactly as was the case in 1967.

Russia Today

The spokesman for the Russian Ministry of Defense, Major General Igor Konashenkov, issued an official statement on Friday morning concerning the shootout and fire that had occurred at Ukraine’s Zaporozhskaya nuclear power plant earlier the same day.

‘Last night, an attempt to carry out a horrible provocation was made by Kiev’s nationalist regime on the area surrounding the station,’ he announced, claiming the Russian troops patrolling the territory had been attacked by a Ukrainian sabotage group.

According to the spokesman, the Ukrainian forces had attacked Russian soldiers at about 2am local time, opening heavy fire from the training facility next to the power station in order to ‘provoke a retaliatory strike on the building.’

The Russian patrol had neutralized the group’s firing points, but the saboteurs had then set fire to the training facility as they retreated, Konashenkov said. The blaze was put out by the Ukrainian State Emergency Service’s firefighters. ‘At the moment of provocation, no staff members were at the facility,’ he noted.

In response to the Russian Ministry of Defense’s statement, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky denied the provocation claims and accused Russian forces of having staged the attack.

The mayor of the nearby town of Energodar had originally reported that the fire had been caused by Russian shelling, and that the blaze had engulfed the power plant itself, but the emergency services dismissed the latter claim.

It was reported on Monday that the facility had been captured by Russian forces, and that staff were keeping operations going and monitoring radiation levels. The International Atomic Energy Agency has offered assurances that there has been no change in those levels in the wake of the incident.

Russia began its military offensive in Ukraine last week, claiming its invasion was aimed at ‘demilitarizing’ and ‘denazifying’ the government in Kiev and stopping what it called the ‘genocide’ in the two breakaway regions of Donetsk and Lugansk. Ukraine has accused Moscow of an unprovoked offensive, with the US and its NATO allies following suit and imposing severe economic sanctions.

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