Russia celebrates Victory day and Medvedev sends a message of warning to the world
From UPI:
Thousands of parading armed services members shared Moscow’s Red Square with sophisticated weaponry Saturday to mark Victory Day, Russian officials said.
It was the country’s 64th annual Victory Day parade, which observes the date of the final surrender of Nazi Germany to the U.S.S.R. in 1945, marking the end of World War II. Some 9,000 soldiers and sailors accompanied 103 tracked and wheeled military vehicles and 69 aircraft and helicopters in the parade, RIA Novosti reported.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev attended the parade, praising the country’s war veterans and telling them he would produce “a peaceful future” for the country, telling the crowd, “Any aggression against our citizens will be met with an adequate response, and the future of Russia will be peaceful.”
VIDEO: Russia remembers tens of millions killed during war with Nazi Germany.
From REUTERS:
President Dmitry Medvedev warned on Saturday that Russia would “decisively rebuff” aggression, as troops who defeated Georgia in a war last year took part in the annual Victory Day parade.
Medvedev, opening the biggest and most spectacular parade in post-Soviet history, said the lessons of the Soviet Union’s World War Two victory were still relevant today — a clear reference to Russia’s five-day war with Georgia last August.
“Our victory over fascism is a great example and a great lesson to all nations, a lesson which is still topical today, when again and again people appear who indulge in military adventurism…,” Medvedev said from a dais in front of Lenin’s tomb in Red Square.
“Defense of our homeland is our holy duty… We are sure that any aggression against our citizens will be decisively rebuffed,” he added. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin sat next to Medvedev but did not speak.
Russia says it was forced to defend its peacekeeping troops and citizens in rebel South Ossetia when Tbilisi tried to seize the pro-Moscow region by force. Russia’s ties with NATO plunged to a post-Cold War low after the conflict and remain tense.
Underlining Russia’s present-day military power, troops drove trucks carrying the giant, nuclear Topol-M missiles and the latest S-400 “Triumph” air defense rockets through Red Square to gasps of admiration from the crowd of officials, veterans, officers and family members.
“It made a superb impression on me,” said Maria Glavdivana, an 87-year-old World War Two veteran, her chest festooned with clinking medals. “We are showing the world our masculinity, our strength. We will never ever weaken.”
Medvedev paid tribute to those who fought in Georgia, saying, “Those marching today in this square … will include the ones who in a real battle proved the high combat readiness of the modern Russian army.”
Goose-stepping guards of honor, clad in new dark-blue uniforms with crimson chests, golden shoulder-straps and embroidered peaked caps carried the Victory Banner at the start of the parade in Red Square, as 1,000 musicians from 19 military orchestras played stirring marches in bright sunshine.
The banner, a red hammer-and-sickle Soviet flag, was hoisted over the Reichstag building in Berlin, marking the end of what is known here as the 1941-45 Great Patriotic War. It cost around 27 million Soviet lives.
A Soviet victory symbol — a giant red-and-gold star — was erected on the facade of the GUM department store, now a luxury shopping arcade, facing the Kremlin.
Veterans, their chests heaving with medals, watched from a grandstand as 9,000 troops from various sections of the Russian armed forces including the Space Forces, Interior Ministry, Air Force, Navy and Federal Security Service paraded.
Big show? Symbolic words? Huge preparations signalling something big to come? Or just a mere warning?
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We have rose parades here; roses are symbols of love.