Lord David Cameron has warned the UN in regards to the penalties of withdrawing assist for Ukraine in its conflict in opposition to Russia.
The overseas secretary was chatting with the United Nations General Assembly in New York on the eve of the second anniversary of the invasion.
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Lord Cameron mentioned: “Two years on, I recognise some want to rethink. There is a sense of fatigue, there are other problems, a compromise might seem attractive.
“But that is improper.
“We must recognise the cost of giving up.
“Putin has mentioned there will probably be no peace till Russia’s targets are achieved, and in his current interview, he studiously averted confirming he was happy with the land seized from Ukraine at current.
“This is not a man seeking compromise – rather, this is a neo-imperialist bully who believes that might is right.”
He added that, if President Putin have been to “eke out some kind of win, the rest of the world would suffer too”.
Lord Cameron began his speech by saying he warned in regards to the risks of Vladimir Putin in 2008, when he was chief of the opposition, and Russian troops entered South Ossetia in Georgia.
And he spoke of how he was prime minister in 2014 when Putin’s “little green men” entered Crimea.
“I said that if we did not stand up to Putin, he would be back for more,” the overseas secretary advised the UN.
“Now, having tried and failed to conquer all of Ukraine, the lesson of this history is clear. If we do not stand up to Putin, he will be back for more.”
He added that he believes the world “has started properly to wake up to Putin’s menace”.
Lord Cameron went on to criticise the Russian chief’s “ahistorical claim” Ukraine’s existence “is anti-Russian”.
“I claim which runs contrary to the principle of self-determination – One of the foundations of the United Nations.”
The overseas secretary criticised the Russian claims that Western nations are “somehow out to dismember Russia” – a “central lie” within the battle as he and different leaders spent years making an attempt to construct relationships with Moscow.
“We did that because we profoundly believe that a secure, stable Russia, at peace with its neighbours, is in our interests and the world’s,” he mentioned.
“It is a tragedy that Putin prefers to hark back to the ninth century to justify aggression rather than taking up this offer of a different path.”
The secretary went on to elucidate why he believes “we must stay strong”.
A “win” in Ukraine for Putin “would not end there”.
“Putin could easily apply his distortions of history elsewhere, such as Moldova or the Baltic States, and others will be emboldened to turn to fighting when it suits them,” Lord Cameron mentioned.
“No country with a large, aggressive neighbour would be safe.”
Source: information.sky.com”