It's 'intellectually impossible' for some allies to imagine Russia losing the war: Ukrainian foreign minister - Action News
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It's 'intellectually impossible' for some allies to imagine Russia losing the war: Ukrainian foreign minister

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told CBC News Network's Power & Politics that while Canada and the U.S. don't fear Russia, other allies do. "Sometimes politicians lack this vision and this boldness in thinking and in imagining a new reality."

'They cannot imagine, in their boldest dreams and reflections, the defeat of Russia' Kuleba

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks during a joint news conference with German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock in Kyiv, Ukraine on September 10, 2022. (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)

Ukraine's foreign affairs minister says some of his country'sallies still fear Russia but he does not count Canadaor the United States among thoseafraid to imagine a world in which Russia is defeated on the battleground.

"If we have no fear, why should you have it?" DmytroKulebaasked host Vassy Kapelos inan exclusive Canadian interview with CBC News Network'sPower & Politics.He added he doesn't think Canada and the U.S. are afraid of Russia.

"You are good guys. At least, this is what I want to believe."

While he didn't name any specific allies, Kulebasaid some capitals have had to work to overcome an ingrainedfear of Moscow and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"They cannot imagine, in their boldest dreams and reflections, the defeat of Russia. It's intellectually impossible for them," said Kuleba. "Sometimes politicians lack this vision and this boldness in thinking and in imagining a new reality."

Over the course of the war, Ukraine has been critical of two major NATO allies: Germany and France.

Germany failed to follow through on a promise made in April to facilitate the delivery of heavy weaponry to Ukraine, including tanks and armoured personnel carriers.

"Not a single rational argument on why these weapons cannot be supplied, only abstract fears and excuses," Kulebatweeted last month.

NATO ally Poland was also angered by Germany's failure to follow through on the promise of heavy weapons.

"Berlin's hesitation, its inaction, seriously calls into question the value and the alliance with Germany," Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told German news outletDer Spiegellast month.

Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki attends the Informal EU 27 Summit and Meeting within the European Political Community at Prague Castle in Prague, Czech Republic on October 7, 2022. (REUTERS)

A longstanding German policy has leftEurope's largest economy reliant on Russian energy and Moscow is now squeezing that supply, raising genuine fears of energy shortages this winter.

While Germany has failed to deliver on the promised tanks, Berlin did send four air defence systems to Ukraine this week, following a renewed plea from Kyiv.

France says it also will provide Ukraine with radar and air defence systems, but this followedharsh criticism levelled at French President Emmanuel Macron.

Former top NATO diplomatAnders Fogh Rasmussen slammed Macron last month over his "disastrous" diplomatic efforts.

"Macron astonished us at the beginning of the crisis with his, to say the least, unique and critical statement that Putin should not be humiliated and offered an exit ramp. Such statements were disastrous and deeply harmful," Rasmussen told the French magazine Le Point.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, former prime minister of Denmark and former NATO secretary-general, speaks during the annual Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany on February 16, 2019. (REUTERS)

Despite criticism from some NATO allies, Macron pledged Thursday that he will continue to talk directly with Putin and he calledon the Russian president to come back to the negotiating table.

Retired Canadian lieutenant-general Andrew Leslie saidthe delivery of air defence systems to Ukraine shows that France and Germany are not afraid of Russia.

"It shows that they're willing to reduce their own defence capabilities to beef up that of Ukraine," Leslie told CBC News. "Could they have done more? Absolutely. We all could have, frankly."

On the prospect of peace talks, Kuleba said there is no country in the world that wants peace more than Ukraine.

"We tried everything to negotiate with them," he said. "Everything we received in return were more attacks, more atrocities and more missiles.

"The question that we all have to focus on is how to bring Russia to the table in a position where it will be ready to negotiate in good faith. We believe that the best way to reach that point is to defeat Russia on the battleground because everything that has happened so far proves that Russia has to lose in order to behave in good faith."

Leslie said Ukraine knows Russia far better than most countries.

"If Russia wants the war to stop, get out of Ukraine. Stop smashing their cities and killing their civilians," said Leslie.

"If Ukraine stops fighting, Ukraine dies."

Watch: CompletePower & Politics Interview with Ukraine's Minister of Foreign Affairs Dmytro Kuleba

Ukraine's foreign minister says some allies still fear Russia

2 years ago
Duration 12:25
"They cannot imagine, in their boldest dreams and reflections, the defeat of Russia. It's intellectually impossible for them," said Ukraine's Foreign Affairs Minister Dmytro Kuleba. "Sometimes politicians lack this vision and this boldness in thinking and in imagining a new reality."

With files from Reuters