00:00If they reduce the mobilization age, lower the service age, young boys will be herded
00:06and sent.
00:08We saw how they are being caught in the streets like stray dogs.
00:12So is this statehood?
00:13No.
00:14This is clear signs of the loss of statehood.
00:20So I think if they reduce the mobilization age, lower the service age, it will not change
00:32the situation on the battlefield like it didn't for Hitler's Germany.
00:36But it will be one in a series of crimes they commit against their people.
00:41It doesn't protect the interests of the Ukrainian people.
00:45Such a decision would only protect the decisions of those who give decisions from abroad.
00:50That is the only motivation.
00:54Young boys will be herded and sent to be slaughtered.
01:01We saw how they are being caught in the streets like stray dogs and sent to face the bullets.
01:09And now they'll be sending young boys to do that.
01:13The minister mentioned the illegitimacy of the Kiev regime, which we're fighting against.
01:19And that's one of the things I want to emphasize.
01:21We're not fighting against the Ukrainian people, but the neo-Nazi regime in Kiev, which captured
01:28the power in 2014 through a coup d'etat.
01:31That is the source of their power.
01:33And all the troubles of Ukraine today and all Russia's troubles that stem from this
01:39began with the bloody anti-constitutional coup.
01:44And that is something that is still relevant today.
01:47Because those people in power there, they commit crimes every day against their own
01:56people.
01:57This regime is obviously losing the nature of a state.
02:05Our priorities include maintaining stability, strategic security, protecting territorial
02:12integrity and sovereignty of our country through the development of our strategic nuclear forces.
02:23And we will continue this work, creating new systems.
02:29The share of state-of-the-art military equipment in nuclear forces is now 95 percent.
02:38And the basic principles governing the use of such weapons have been updated, as outlined
02:44in the updated state nuclear deterrence policy.
02:49And once again, so that no one accuses us of nuclear saber-rattling, it is a deterrence
02:58policy.
02:59Countries are racking up their military expenses, they're deploying their strike groups near
03:08our borders.
03:11And now there are over 100,000 troops in Europe.
03:18And this is far more than the warranted amount.
03:22They're also growing their presence in the Asia-Pacific.
03:27The United States is creating new military and political alliances that undermine the
03:35established security architecture that had been created over decades.
03:40The Oreshnik Intermediate-Range Strike Complex has been a well-noted innovation.
03:48We have used it as a response to the Western long-range weapons being deployed in Ukraine.
03:58It was used in a non-nuclear form.
04:02And we must ensure mass production of these complexes to protect ourselves and our allies.
04:08They are working on the deployment and redeployment of missile systems in Europe and Asia-Pacific.
04:18And we used to have a treaty which regulated these activities.
04:23But it has now no longer in force.
04:27Due to the actions of the United States, we have underscored many times that we will not
04:34deploy intermediate-range missiles until the United States deploy similar weapons in a
04:41region of the world.
04:43That was essentially a unilateral obligation undertaken by Russia.
04:48But if the United States start deploying such weapons, then any and all such voluntary restrictions
04:55will be lifted.
04:58And considering the situation, we have to take additional measures to ensure our safety
05:03and the safety of our allies.
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