Incidents

"Putin, take away the Bulgarian territories": Zelensky put Bulgaria President (video)

The Ukrainian leader evaded the proposal of diplomatic settlement, stressed that the Kremlin is leading a war to the destruction of Ukrainians. He also noted that the Bulgaria government did the right thing, that he had started supplying weapons, contrary to his presidential position. During the trip of Vladimir Zelensky to the capital of Bulgaria Sophia on Thursday, July 6, a lively dialogue with the Bulgarian leader Rumen Radev on providing military assistance to Ukraine was held.

Zelensky spoke criticized against a colleague for a pro -Russian position. About it reports Politico. The Ukrainian delegation in Khaki's clothing sat with stone faces at a long wooden table opposite the team of the Bulgarian President, while he taught his position about "no military solution" and "even more weapons will not help," the American newspaper writes. The exchange of thoughts was broadcast live.

Oppositioning the Bulgarian colleague, Zelensky rested with a question about how official Sofia would act as a victim of large -scale aggression. Zelensky raised the rhetorical question of whether he would give Putin part of the Bulgarian territory, and he himself replied that he would probably not consider compromise decisions on his own sovereignty as a true president.

"Don't God forbid, the tragedy will unfold, and you will find yourself on mine, and people who share common values ​​with you will refuse to help you then say," Putin, please take the Bulgarian territories? " What is Radev's right: not to support Ukraine's assistance. Zelensky evaded the proposed idea of ​​diplomatic settlement and stressed that the Kremlin began "a war for the destruction of Ukrainians and not other countries. " In contrast to the position of his president.

The Ukrainian leader also reproached Radev for using the term "conflict", not war. "I want to tell you that whatever your army may be in the sense of weapons, this will not be enough to confront the Russian Federation. You do not have a bad army or you have good people, but it will still not be enough to fight against 160 million. So it is better to give [weapons] that [we] can protect [ourselves] and thus not allow the war to come to you, "Zelensky said.