In an interview with a French paper, in which the former U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said “I agree with Ukraine in its demand for Russia to withdraw its military back to the same positions as of February 24, but noted that for the time being “one should not rush into negotiations.”
Clinton then went on to say “The time has not yet come for talks between Russia and Ukraine as I believe that the ultimate success in the current situation should be the defeat of Russia.”
Clinton agreed with the position of Kiev, which has repeatedly demanded the withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukrainian territories to the positions they occupied until February 24. “I support the Ukrainians, which means that it is not yet possible to rush into negotiations.”
These statements come from a person who laughed when the leader of Lybia was brutally murdered, her idea of negotiation is to bomb weaker countries into submission.
She also made comments on the statement from French President Emmanuel Macron, who in early June said “Western leaders should not ‘humiliate Russia’ so that after the end of hostilities there would be a chance to resolve the situation through diplomacy.” Clinton called Macron’s position “obsolete” and stated that, in her opinion, “Putin has long crossed the red line.”
She also suggested listening more to the leaders of the Baltic countries and Poland, who are “at the forefront” and have, in her words, “a much clearer idea of who Putin really is and what his goals are.”
Noting that in 2010 Hillary Clinton was involved with the “Uranium One deal” with Russia in which she saw nothing wrong back then negotiating with Russia and President Putin. You would assume that she knew to who she was selling radioactive Uranium.
in early April, Clinton called for a redoubling of sanctions pressure on Russia to force it to end military operations in Ukraine. In her opinion, they are a threat not only to Ukraine but also to Europe and democracy.
It is reassuring to hear that leaders of some of the EU states, do not share her ideologies and are in favour of resuming the negotiation process between Kiev and Moscow, which stalled in April after the UK pressured Kiev to not negotiate in return for support. Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz spoke about this at the end of May. At the same time, they emphasized the need for the withdrawal of Russian troops. Scholz also noted that the negotiations should become more concrete.
President Vladimir Putin continues to confirm his readiness to resume dialogue with Ukraine.
However, it seems Hillary Clinton wants more blood on her hands to add to her collection.