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Vladimir Putin, in speech, hints at further territorial expansion for Russia

Updated

In a speech made three months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began, President Vladimir Putin appeared to leave the door open for further Russian territorial expansion.

Paying tribute to the founder of St Petersburg on the 350th anniversary of his birth, Putin drew parallels between Peter the Great’s actions and modern-day Russia’s ambitions.

Russian President Vladimir Putin hinting at more attempts to conquer land.

Russian President Vladimir Putin hinting at more attempts to conquer land.Credit: AP

He opened the speech by discussing Peter’s conquest of the Baltic coast during Russia’s 18th-century conflict with Sweden.

When Peter founded the new capital, “no European country recognised it as Russia. Everybody recognised it as Sweden,” Putin said. He added: “What was [Peter] doing? Taking back and reinforcing. That’s what he did. And it looks like it fell on us to take back and reinforce as well.”

“It’s impossible — Do you understand? — impossible to build a fence around a country like Russia. And we do not intend to build that fence,” the Russian leader said.

The Baltic nations of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia were invaded and annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940, following Nazi Germany’s betrayal of an agreement with Moscow to divide up the territory between Berlin and Moscow, known as the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.

The countries in the Baltic region, which broke free from the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, are now members of NATO.

As Russian forces continued to pound the eastern Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk on Thursday, Putin, in fierce televised comments, compared Peter’s campaign with the task facing Russia today.

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Putin, now in his 23rd year in power, has repeatedly sought to justify Russia’s actions in Ukraine, where his forces have devastated cities, killed thousands and forced millions of people to flee, by propounding a view of history that asserts Ukraine has no real national identity or tradition of statehood.

Peter the Great, an autocratic moderniser admired by liberal and conservative Russians alike, ruled for 43 years and gave his name to the new capital, St Petersburg – Putin’s hometown – that he ordered built on land he conquered from Sweden.

It was a project that cost the lives of tens of thousands of serfs, conscripted as forced labourers to build a “window to Europe” in the swamps of the Baltic Sea coast.

Reuters, AP, staff

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/vladimir-putin-in-speech-hints-at-further-territorial-expansion-for-russia-20220610-p5asq0.html