The 80th Anniversary Victory Day Parade has concluded in Moscow ๐ท๐บ, with President Vladimir Putin delivering a powerful speech ๐ฃ: Russia will never accept the rewriting of history and will always honor the heroes who freed the world from fascism โ๐๏ธ.
From the rooftops of Moscow to the cobblestones of Red Square, our correspondents captured every moment ๐ฅ๐. Despite Western pressure and threats, global dignitaries gathered to pay tribute to this historic victory. ๐๐
#VictoryDay #Russia #MoscowParade #PutinSpeech #80YearsOn #WWIIHeroes #NeverForget #RedSquare #GreatPatrioticWar #HistoryMatters #FascismDefeated #VDay2025 #RussianHistory #Dignitaries #Geopolitics #WesternNarrative #Veterans #GlobalTribute #HistoricalTruth #MilitaryParade
From the rooftops of Moscow to the cobblestones of Red Square, our correspondents captured every moment ๐ฅ๐. Despite Western pressure and threats, global dignitaries gathered to pay tribute to this historic victory. ๐๐
#VictoryDay #Russia #MoscowParade #PutinSpeech #80YearsOn #WWIIHeroes #NeverForget #RedSquare #GreatPatrioticWar #HistoryMatters #FascismDefeated #VDay2025 #RussianHistory #Dignitaries #Geopolitics #WesternNarrative #Veterans #GlobalTribute #HistoricalTruth #MilitaryParade
Category
๐
NewsTranscript
00:00Vinci was speaking. Towards the end of the parade now, a lot of the military
00:05hardware just coming out behind us here. We've got the anti-tanks, we've got the
00:11we've already seen the tanks, we've seen the missile charges, the flamethrowers
00:17as well are there. A lot going on.
00:23Rolling out the red carpet, dignitaries turned up in their droves to honor the
00:27memory of the victory. That is despite Western efforts to rain on Moscow's
00:32parade and even issue threats against those attending.
00:57Midday in Moscow, you are very welcome to our rolling coverage of Victory Day 2025 here
01:11on the banks of the Moskova River. The main parade finished up, wrapped up not very long
01:18ago, but we've got much reaction and all the highlights from the morning that was.
01:24I'm Yunnan O'Neill. This is Saskia Taylor.
01:27And it is, of course, 80 years since Nazi forces were finally defeated.
01:33Moscow has been the epicenter of Russia's celebrations and commemorations.
01:38Vladimir Putin addressed the crowds in Red Square, underlining that Russia will never
01:43allow anyone to rewrite history and will always remember its heroes.
01:52I congratulate you on the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War.
01:57Today, we are all united by feelings of joy and sorrow, pride and gratitude, admiration
02:03for the generation that crushed Nazism at the cost of millions of lives, won freedom and
02:08peace for all mankind. We faithfully preserve the memory of these historical triumphant events.
02:15And as the heirs of the victors, we celebrate the holiday of May the 9th as our own, as the
02:20most important for the country, for each family, for each of us.
02:24Our fathers, grandfathers and great-grandfathers saved the fatherland and bequeathed to us to
02:29defend the homeland, firmly defend our national interests. A thousand-year history, culture, traditional
02:35values, everything that's dear to us, that is sacred to us. We remember the lessons of
02:40the Second World War and will never agree with the distortion of its events, with attempts to
02:44justify the executioners and slander the true victors. Our duty is to defend the honor of the
02:50soldiers and commanders of the Red Army, the great feet of various representatives of different
02:55nationalities who will forever remain in world history as Russian soldiers. Russia has been and will
03:01be an indestructible barrier to Nazism, Russophobia, anti-Semitism. We'll fight the atrocities
03:07committed by the proponents of these aggressive, destructive ideas. Truth and justice are on our
03:14side. The entire country, society and people support the participation of the Special Military
03:20Operation. We're proud of their courage and determination, that strength of spirit that has always
03:25brought us only victory.
03:55The hundreds of military personnel, dozens of tanks, vehicles and jets all have been passing
04:09along and above Red Square in a showcase of Russia's military might.
04:15And taking part, by the way, for the first time ever, was a column of drones.
04:20Here's some of the highlights of our special coverage right from the heart of the Victory
04:24Day Parade.
04:27As per tradition, the armored portion is going to be led by the legendary T-34 tank and right
04:36behind it is a brigade of other T-34 tanks as well as more modern tanks and other hardware
04:42that's going to follow.
04:44In terms of, of course, the military hardware that was involved in World War II, the Nazis
04:51caught the Soviet Union by surprise in 1941.
04:54Their idea, of course, was Blitzkrieg, lightning war.
04:58They wanted to take the Soviet Union by surprise and take it in a matter of weeks.
05:02But they stopped them at the gates of Moscow.
05:06And many factories were able to be evacuated farther eastward in the Soviet Union.
05:11They were not destroyed by the Nazis.
05:14And they were able to continue their production of military hardware farther east in the country
05:20within the framework of the Soviets' military wartime planned economy that was able to turn things
05:27around in terms of around 1943, pretty much after the Battle of Stalingrad was won by the Soviets
05:36in February of 1943.
05:38That was when the tide was really changed.
05:41That was when reserves were brought from the far east, more tanks and military equipment that had
05:48been produced during the Battle of Stalingrad and before also when the battle for Moscow was going on.
05:55That hardware was brought back to the eastern front.
05:59The reserves were basically, obviously, bringing more Soviet troops to the front after the Nazis were
06:07already on the retreat.
06:08And then that was trouble, of course, for the German military that was on retreat pretty much
06:14from 1943 onwards.
06:16So that's why this T-34 tank, I mean, of course, that tank was one of the main battle tanks in the
06:24Soviet military during that time, which you're going to see behind me right now.
06:27It's here we go.
06:30And they've got the red banner on top of the front tank as well.
06:36There we go.
06:37You're not going to hear much more of what I'm saying here.
06:39The whole earth is starting to shake as it always does on Red Square during the armored portion.
06:57You're not going to hear much more of what I'm saying here.
07:02Well, we have been talking a little bit about the 24th of June, 1945, when this very square
07:08filled with the triumphant march of the first victory parade.
07:13And it was held over a month after the Soviet flag flew high above Berlin's Reichstag.
07:20That delay was necessary because Moscow needed time to bring its troops home and prepare for
07:26the largest military procession the world had ever seen.
07:31That first victory parade was a display of raw emotion and patriotic pride.
07:37And Marshal Georgi Zhukov, the architect of Berlin's fall, he rode across the square on a white stallion.
07:45And then the soldiers, not just parade ground troops, but frontline veterans,
07:49many of whom still bore wounds as they marched across this bridge.
07:54And the parade almost didn't happen because of the raid, but Stalin insisted that it proceed.
08:02And so beneath the gray skies, columns of T-34 tanks, in fact, ones we just saw that
08:09crushed the Wehrmacht, rolled over the cobblestones. 1400 member band played nonstop for two hours,
08:16led by Major General Genetsky, who spent the war composing scores of military marches at the front
08:23line. A thousand artillery guns fired in salute. Scores of trucks released hundreds of balloons into the
08:31sky, followed by the national anthem. Around 35,000 people participated, three times more than today,
08:39representatives from the anti-hitler coalition, U.S., Great Britain, France. This was more than just a
08:45military parade. It was a demonstration of Russia's stature to the Soviet people, its new allies,
08:52its adversaries. A testament to resilience, to the millions who fought, suffered and triumphed over
08:59Nazism. Well, 80 years later, we stand here. I've got trunks, tanks to my left, trunks behind me too.
09:07And we honor those who marched that day, the fallen who never returned, and the unbreakable will of
09:14those who fought against Nazism. Today, as the march of generations continues, we carry forward
09:20their legacy, the fight against fascism, the defense of truth, the commitment to peace.
09:27Well, I want to cross now to Red Square, because the person who definitely cannot hear right now is
09:34Charlotte Dubinsky. I can barely hear myself even think as the tanks, the military equipment is just
09:42roaring past me. Just a moment ago, I had my head turned towards them, and I could see all of the smoke
09:49coming out, and I was looking for some of the military equipment that was involved in the second
09:55world war. There you go, getting a little bit quieter now as some of those tanks have gone passing.
10:00And one that I was really looking forward to seeing was, as I get louder again, was the self-propelled
10:07artillery unit. This is the SU-100s. They were involved in the war in 1944, and actually when they were
10:17introduced, they were extensively used. And one of the reasons for that is they were so popular, because
10:26the gun could pretty much penetrate anything. And as a result of that, that really shocked a lot of
10:33the Germans. So, yes, a little lull here, but it just feels like this rumbling, rumbling, rumbling.
10:39You can feel it. It's almost like your heart is pounding. And so interesting to see the equipment that's
10:46from the past that's from the present, and to get a sense of just how enormous these pieces are, how
10:56mighty they must have seemed, particularly in the second world war, when there was so much
11:01development of military hardware and equipment, and how these fierce tanks, fierce military equipment,
11:09really did put such the fear into many in the German army.
11:15Charlotte, you manfully got through that. It's a noisy morning in Moscow. But just as
11:21Charlotte Dubincy was speaking, towards the end of the parade now, a lot of the military hardware
11:29just coming out behind us here. We've got the anti-tanks. We've already seen the tanks.
11:36We've seen the missile charges. The flamethrowers as well are there. A lot going on.
11:43Shea Bose has been watching it just before us, though. He's got the best seat in the house.
11:48Shea, how did you find that? It's just coming to a wrap.
11:52It's absolutely remarkable. The ground literally here shaking. All the camera crews from the assembled
11:58media, the cameras literally shaking as the self-propelled artillery rolled through. The noise is
12:04absolutely immense, the power of these machines. And right now behind us has just passed the S-300,
12:11the S-400 air defence system, which is probably the best one in the world. And it's protected
12:16numerous countries. It's the envy of many Western countries, of course, because it's
12:22defended Moscow today. It's defending Russia's borders. And as we've heard, the Soviet Union,
12:29as you said, Ewan, was a springboard for huge innovation and technology from the T-34, which
12:36Georgi Zhukov himself had inputs into from the battlefield of how they needed to destroy the
12:42Panther, the Tiger. The T-34 was developed as a working, living creature that rolled off the
12:49boundary manufacturing line straight out onto the battlefield. And they led the armoured
12:56element, if you like, of this movement. Right now behind us, you can see the Yars. These are
13:02intercontinental missiles, nuclear-capable missiles. They have a range of over 12,000 kilometres.
13:09And these are part of Russia's nuclear deterrent. And these machines are absolutely vast in scale.
13:17You're just across a river and a bridge and a bit of a square. And we can see we've just had
13:24the flyby. We have got that tricolore streaking across. And my goodness, what a beautiful day for
13:30it. We were worried that the outbreak might actually be shown, because we've had a bit of
13:35a few Arctic winds in recent time. It's been a bit cloudy as well. But everything just went off
13:42without a hitch. We just had one of the most extraordinary shows, not just on the square,
13:48but you can still see. Shea was talking about the Yars missile that is literally going along
13:53the embankment now. And I understand that the embankment is usually absolutely empty of people.
13:58And now we have the equipment. And of course, the military band, you can see, striking up. And it plays
14:03possibly the most famous war song of all time. And it talks about victory, how long we waited for you,
14:12and you finally came. No one, not everyone, had a chance to see it. But we tried as hard as we could
14:19to make it come faster.
14:25Well, it's always a good day when we can welcome into any studio,
14:29but especially this studio, Brazilian journalist, Pepe Escobar, long-time foreign correspondent.
14:36I shouldn't give it away, but more than four decades now, sir. And it's been...
14:39I don't believe it, Pepe. No. But it's been great all these years to talk to you on the screen. Now we
14:45have you in person. You know, it's fantastic. A lot of dignitaries, world leaders here today,
14:50including Brazil's president, making the effort to cross halfway across the world to come here
14:55for it. What does that tell us? Well, I think we have to be very clear about the gravity of the moment.
15:05This was an extremely serious celebration of something extremely serious in the history of
15:12the 20th century. How to subdue fascism and Nazism. And obviously, the Soviet Union was up there.
15:22Whatever the West, the fragmented West says about it, the Soviet Union was up there.
15:28So we had this precise, meticulous, outstanding ceremony. Very, very serious, but at the same time,
15:38not ostentatious at all. You know, everything was quite simple in the end. And we had a great deal of the
15:46global South or global majority here in the square. That tells us everything we need to know about,
15:55I wouldn't say alliance, but this embrace between the two leaders of the world that is being built now,
16:03who were seated side by side, by the way, President Putin and President Xi Jinping,
16:10and the global South around it. I love the fact, for instance, when we had the contingents from the
16:16old Soviet space. That was fantastic to see all the stands, Azerbaijan as well. But we also saw Vietnam.
16:24And very few people make the connection between World War II or Great Patriotic War with Vietnam.
16:33So this sends a message. It's like the global South was sending itself a message with,
16:39of course, Russia and China in a privileged position. But don't take this as, you know,
16:48as well. We are building the new world and we won't let that happen again. This is the number one
16:56message. Fighting the Third Reich and winning now is replicated in historical terms with fighting against
17:07a budding Force Reich. And it pains all of us to say, especially all of us who have European backgrounds,
17:16that once again, it's in Europe. And it's not populations in selected European nations. No,
17:25it's an analytic bureaucracy in Brussels. It's the, I would say, Kafka-like mechanism of the European
17:33Union and European Commission. They are trying to install a variant of the Reich, a Fourth Reich,
17:39which we can describe very succinctly as liberal totalitarianism. So this was the message that came
17:47from here. That's why it's, at the same time, we are dazzled at the blinding beauty of the ceremony
17:53itself. But we need a moment of trying to understand the much bigger picture. And I'm sure
18:01those two sitting side by side, especially after their meeting yesterday, they knew exactly what's going on.
18:08You know, picking up on what you said, not just foreign dignitaries, but also the foreign military
18:14personnel who are going through. And you obviously mentioned Vietnam. I mean, Laos was there as well.
18:20I mean, we had Myanmar. I mean, a whole range of countries. Egypt, actually, the first ever
18:26from personnel from the African continent to walk across Red Squares, Kabul. So really a historic moment
18:31in that regard. But I was thinking, I was looking, think about ties that bind so much of what brings
18:38these nations together is obviously the Soviet Union, right? And the offer that it helped in their
18:45own battles against colonialism. Well, in Vietnam as well, Laos, and still to this day, trying to
18:51help with that unexploded mines as well and bombs. The Soviet legacy is strongly felt in those countries,
19:00isn't it? As much as it's disregarded in Europe. It is. And we see that in Vietnam, in Laos,
19:06in Cambodia, in a great deal of Southeast Asia, especially Southeast Asia that was conquered
19:12and conquered by the Brits. And then they had to fight a war that was not theirs in the end.
19:19And of course, under subjugation of the Japanese empire at the time, which after that decided to
19:26invest in all these economies. They're like, okay, we're going to pay our Japanese retribution.
19:32We're going to be like a car factory for you. Okay. These are distortions of history. But
19:39all across East Asia and Southeast Asia, not to mention in China. China considers the Japanese
19:49domination as, let's say, the last bit of the century of humiliation. The thing is,
19:56they were so strong mentally that they overcame it completely. And now China is a mega superpower.
20:03I just came back from Shanghai a few weeks ago. And when you see that in front of you,
20:08it's beyond astonishing. They are self-assured, self-confident. At the same time,
20:16they are not bragging about anything, but they say, look, we overcame all that. And now
20:21this is our drive to become the great power of the 21st century. So it was great to have them all here,
20:29in the square as well. And these, let's say, these little touches of having
20:35Africa as well, and South America, priceless. Even someone who didn't send a military delegation,
20:44but he was in the audience like in awe. Captain Ibrahim Traorรฉ from Burkina Faso. He's probably the
20:53greatest indigenous, progressive African leader nowadays. And he was there. And he,
21:00you could see in his eyes that he understood perfectly, you know, the large symbolism of what
21:05was happening. They get that, don't they? They get the history, they understand, as Saskia said,
21:11the colonial links and overcoming that. But contrast that to Europe and Kaya Callas, the EU foreign policy
21:19chief, we can listen together, in fact, Pepe, to what she said.
21:26As we have the 9th of May tomorrow, which is a Europe day, then I want to stress that
21:32all those who truly, truly support peace cannot stand side by side by
21:40Putin, should be in Ukraine, rather than in Moscow tomorrow.
21:48Pepe, we'll get your thoughts on that in just a moment. But because the signal isn't the strongest,
21:53we're going to cross to another guest just for now. And that is George Galloway, veteran
22:01British MP. Mr. Galloway, you're just getting suited up there. I'm sure you can hear us.
22:07It's Saskia and Newton here from the other side of the river. You've been watching it all in Red
22:12Square, sir. How did you find it? Overwhelming, emotional, powerful, impressive, everything.
22:20I shed a tear, let me say that. It was an existential moment, the Second World War. To be or not to be
22:30was the question. And it was answered in the affirmative by the Red Army, by the USSR, more than
22:40by anybody else. Indeed, more than by everybody else put together. And that was represented here on Red
22:49Square. And it's just such a shame that the Great Wartime Alliance was not here present on the square.
22:59No president of the United States, no prime minister of the United Kingdom, that it was left to me,
23:08I think, the only political representative in Britain who was here. But I was representing the
23:16views and feelings of millions of people. You shouldn't confuse the poisonous words of EU leaders
23:27and the British prime minister for the countries that they represent all over Europe and certainly all
23:34over the United Kingdom. Millions of people recognize and cherish and salute the role of the Russian
23:45people and the people of the Soviet Union in the Second World War. If not for them, we'd be speaking,
23:52you and I in German, except we would not be because we'd be in a concentration camp somewhere.
24:04George, I also want to ask you sort of on a more, I suppose you could say, emotional level. This is
24:09obviously a world of tumult. It's a world of huge change. Values are changing. And I think people
24:17feel a bit lost. Do events like this help ground nations?
24:23I really feel that. I felt the the patriotism from foreigners, from me, from others,
24:32people who love Russia, who are not even Russia, but who recognize the significance of this country,
24:42the land of Tchaikovsky, the land of Pushkin, the land of Dostoevsky, the land of the Bolshoi,
24:50the land of the T-34 of the Soviet Red Army. This is a magnificent world historic country. And the more
25:02they try to freeze Russia out of the world, the taller Russia stands, and in the eyes and in the minds of
25:12free people everywhere. I mean, why was Captain Ibrahim Traore here today? He represents the hope of all
25:21Africa. All Africans are now looking to the captain. He is the iconic African leader. He was here. The leader of
25:31China was here. The leaders of the free countries of the earth who wish sovereignty for their own
25:40people are here because Russia represents national sovereignty and ideas of faith, of God, of family,
25:50of country. These ideas are largely lost in the Western world amongst the political class and their media
25:59orchestra. But they still exist here. And this is the new Rome for me.
26:11The fact that we didn't see Western leaders come over, George, in like they used to do here, stand
26:21shoulder to shoulder with the people, with their allies, who defeated Nazism in Europe. I get the
26:29feeling this year around that Russia doesn't really care because they're looking to the global south.
26:35They're looking to other nations and saying, you're the future and we're not going to politicize this event
26:41by grandstanding what Europe is not doing. We're looking to other parts of the world.
26:46Yes, I think that's right. But as a person who was a member of the British parliament over
26:55five decades, from the 1980s until last year, I'm really bitter that our country was not only not
27:05represented here, but was excluding Russia from commemorations, celebrations at every level,
27:14and was spitting on this parade. I'm really bitter about it. I mean, I should just be sad,
27:21but actually I'm sad and bitter about it. But the rest of the world was here. The majority of the
27:30population of the earth, of humanity, was either here or their hearts were here. Their eyes were
27:39on here. And that's ultimately, I suppose, what matters. The Western European countries are dooming
27:46themselves to irrelevance by their churlish, insulting, contemptuous attitude towards this 80th
27:55commemoration of the great victory.
28:04Well, George Galloway, British MP, politician, of course, giving us his thoughts.
28:09One of the few, of course, who get the invitation to stand on those historic cobblestones for that hour
28:17and a bit and see this year what feels like history really in the making, but of course, what is a giant
28:22tribute to history itself. George, as always, we appreciate you joining us.
28:31And in the meantime, they've just been spoiling us today. We're going to go back to Peppa. And just
28:38to remind you, we obviously had that soundbite from Kalas talking about the 9th of May and basically
28:44chastising people saying, you all should have gone to Kyiv. I mean, where do we start, Peppa?
28:52Are we allowed to laugh? Yes, today's a celebration. With our audience. We should laugh with our
28:58audience. This woman doesn't have the skills to run a grocery store and she represents 450 million
29:08Europeans. This in itself spells out how Brussels is run. She's there because she's a Russophobe.
29:17That's it. There's no other reason. She's not, it's beyond incompetent. And why she's there? Because of
29:25that person that I call the toxic Medusa. And I'm sure our audience will understand who I'm talking
29:30about. So nowadays we have this a budding pre force right gang, which more or less hijacked the structures
29:42of the European Union, which was never created as an European Union for the peoples of Europe,
29:49was created as a bureaucratic mechanism from the beginning. Of course, the Americans were there.
29:55Okay, this is what you're going to do. Nowadays, we...
Comments