Posted: 20.08.2024 16:22:00

Lukashenko: Ukrainians will be our people anyway, no one in the West needs them

The conflict in Ukraine will be resolved sooner or later, and normal relations will be restored – as stated by President of Belarus Aleksandr Lukashenko in an interview with Rossiya TV channel, BelTA reports

Photo: www.president.gov.by

"You need to understand: there will be no problems coming from here. Belarusians have always been reliable people, even at times when it was difficult for us to talk to Russia, when journalists were gathered there and said: ‘Lukashenko needs to be pressed!’ We have always adhered to one and the same position – like the Brest Fortress. We knew that the time will come, and everything will change," the Head of State noted.

Aleksandr Lukashenko is convinced that it will be the same in the case of Ukraine. "The time will come. Listen, we had such a brutal war against Germans once… It seems we have been friends until recently with these former fascists, have co-operated with them, and so on and so forth. There was some kind of unity, and the basis was found. Won't we restore our good relations? We will restore them,” he said. “After just a couple of facts from the West — when people in Ukraine realise that they were just used and then abandoned – Ukrainians will come to us. We will then restore everything that has been destroyed on a higher basis."

"Anyway, Ukrainians will be our people, no one there [in the West] is waiting for them, no one needs them. [Ukrainian] women will be used for pleasure there, as it is happening now. Ukrainian ladies are true beauties, but they are earning money there by selling themselves. In turn, men will be used as they [in the West] want. Recently they wished to send them back to the front, and the process has begun already: men are being pressed [out of the EU] and sent to their death. This is why it [the West] needs Ukrainians,” the Head of State stated.

"It is true what influential people in Washington [say]: ‘Let them kill each other, let them die’. Listen, this is politics," Aleksandr Lukashenko summed up.