Russia's Putin Says Cold War 'Victors' Want to Reshape World

Russia's Putin Says Cold War 'Victors' Want to Reshape World

(Reuters) – President Vladimir Putin accused the United States on Friday of making the world a more dangerous place by imposing a “unilateral diktat” in international diplomacy and denied Russia wanted to build a new empire.

In a speech laced with language reminiscent of the Cold War, Putin shifted blame for the crisis in Ukraine to the West and portrayed Russia as a strong power that would not be forced to beg the West to lift sanctions imposed over the conflict.

“Statements that Russia is trying to reinstate some sort of empire, that it is encroaching on the sovereignty of its neighbours, are groundless,” Putin told a group of political scholars known as the Valdai Club in a resort above the Black Sea city of Sochi, which hosted the Winter Olympics this year.

Warning that Washington was trying to “remake the whole world” around its own interests and that the risk of international conflicts was growing, he said: “We did not start this.”

Dismissing the U.S. and European Union sanctions on Russia as a mistake, he said: “Russia will not be posturing, get offended, ask someone for anything. Russia is self-sufficient.”

Putin said the threat of arms control treaties being violated was growing and called for talks on internationally acceptable conditions for the use of force.

Read the full story at Reuters.

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