Russia Praises Trump and Scolds Europe for Being the Crucible of War

 Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov speaks in a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. (AP)
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov speaks in a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. (AP)
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Russia Praises Trump and Scolds Europe for Being the Crucible of War

 Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov speaks in a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. (AP)
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov speaks in a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. (AP)

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Sunday praised US President Donald Trump's "common sense" aim to end the war in Ukraine, but accused the European powers which have rallied around Kyiv of seeking to prolong the conflict.

Lavrov said the United States still wanted to be the world's most powerful country and that Washington and Moscow would never see eye to eye on everything, but that they had agreed to be pragmatic when interests coincided.

"Donald Trump is a pragmatist," Lavrov told the Russian military newspaper Krasnaya Zvezda, according to a transcript released by the Foreign Ministry. "His slogan is common sense. It means, as everyone can see, a shift to a different way of doing things."

"But the goal is still MAGA (Make America Great Again)," Lavrov said, referring to Trump's political slogan. "This gives a lively, human character to politics. That's why it's interesting to work with him."

Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 with thousands of troops, triggering the biggest confrontation between Russia and the West since the depths of the Cold War.

The conflict in eastern Ukraine began in 2014 after a pro-Russian president was toppled in Ukraine's Maidan Revolution and Russia annexed Crimea, with Russian-backed separatist forces fighting Ukraine's armed forces.

The West and Ukraine describe the 2022 invasion as an imperial-style land grab by President Vladimir Putin and Kyiv has vowed to defeat Russia on the battlefield, though Russian forces control nearly one-fifth of Ukraine.

Putin casts the conflict in Ukraine as part of an existential battle with a declining and decadent West which he says humiliated Russia after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 by enlarging the NATO military alliance and encroaching on what he considers Moscow's sphere of influence, including Ukraine.

CRUCIBLE OF WAR

Trump has upended US policy on the Ukraine war.

On Friday, he and Vice President JD Vance clashed with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in the Oval Office. Trump accused Zelenskiy of disrespecting the United States, said he was losing the war and had no cards left.

European leaders leapt to Zelenskiy's defense.

But Lavrov criticized Europe, saying that for the past 500 years Europe had been the crucible of "all the tragedies of the world" including colonization, wars, crusaders, the Crimean War, Napoleon Bonaparte, World War One and Adolf Hitler.

"And now, after (former US President Joe) Biden's term, people have come in who want to be guided by common sense. They say directly that they want to end all wars, they want peace," Lavrov said.

"And who demands a 'continuation of the banquet' in the form of a war? Europe."

Lavrov also dismissed European ideas for sending in a contingent of European peacekeepers and said Russia had no trust in Ukraine after the collapse of the Minsk agreements, which were designed to end a separatist war by Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine.

Europeans, Lavrov said, could not explain what rights Russian speakers would have under the European peacekeeper plans, adding that Russia did not like the idea of Europeans propping up Zelenskiy.

"Now they also want to prop him up with their bayonets in the form of peacekeeping units. This will mean that the root causes will not disappear," Lavrov said.



Armenia PM’s Ruling Party Wins Polls, Show Preliminary Results

 Armenian Prime Minister and leader of the Civil Contract party Nikol Pashinyan holds a press conference following the parliamentary election at the party's headquarters in Yerevan early on June 8, 2026. (AFP)
Armenian Prime Minister and leader of the Civil Contract party Nikol Pashinyan holds a press conference following the parliamentary election at the party's headquarters in Yerevan early on June 8, 2026. (AFP)
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Armenia PM’s Ruling Party Wins Polls, Show Preliminary Results

 Armenian Prime Minister and leader of the Civil Contract party Nikol Pashinyan holds a press conference following the parliamentary election at the party's headquarters in Yerevan early on June 8, 2026. (AFP)
Armenian Prime Minister and leader of the Civil Contract party Nikol Pashinyan holds a press conference following the parliamentary election at the party's headquarters in Yerevan early on June 8, 2026. (AFP)

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's ruling party has won parliamentary elections, preliminary results showed on Monday, cementing the nation's Westward tilt after threats from Moscow and claims of Russian interference.

Pashinyan has sought to loosen the ex-Soviet republic's dependence on Moscow, while forging closer ties with the West.

His ruling Civil Contract party got 49.8 percent of the vote, comfortably ahead of the 23.3 percent of the Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan's Strong Armenia alliance, after all electoral precincts declared results, the Central Election Commission said.

Two other opposition forces -- ex-president Robert Kocharyan's "Armenia" alliance and the Prosperous Armenia party -- also cleared the electoral threshold to get into parliament, winning 9.9 percent and four percent of the vote, respectively.

Turnout was 59 percent, the commission said.

Pashinyan hailed his party's "historic victory that will ensure Armenia's eternity and development."

He pledged to "continue the course of rapprochement with the West" while also developing Armenia's relations with Russia.

His opponent Karapetyan called the elections "shameful" and denounced violations and repression, saying dozens of his campaign staff had been arrested.

Armenia's Investigative Committee said it had opened 59 criminal cases over alleged electoral violations -- including multiple voting -- and detained nine people.

Pashinyan has frozen participation in a Russia-led security bloc while deepening ties with the European Union and United States, and set Armenia on a path toward possible EU membership.

Moscow has bristled at the possible loss of yet another ally in its backyard.

In a pointed remark, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in May: "We all see what is happening with Ukraine now... How did it all begin? With Ukraine's attempt to join the EU."

The Kremlin has been accused of seeking to sway the vote.

Analysts have noted misinformation on the web, hacker activity and Kremlin-friendly narratives portraying Western cooperation as dangerous.

In the weeks before the vote, Russia banned the import of several products from Armenia -- seen as a move to heap economic pressure on the country.

And Armenian officials have warned "enemies of freedom" are funding propaganda efforts.

For many Armenians, the opposition remains associated with Russian influence and oligarchs.


Taiwan Says China Maritime Operation ‘Provocative’

A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)
A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)
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Taiwan Says China Maritime Operation ‘Provocative’

A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)
A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)

Taiwan said Monday that China's maritime operation in waters to the east of the island democracy was "provocative" and "expansionism in disguise".

Chinese ships are conducting a "law enforcement operation" in response to talks between Japan and the Philippines to draw a boundary in waters to the east of Taiwan, Chinese state media said Saturday.

China, which asserts Taiwan is part of its territory, called the talks "illegal" and has claimed exclusive control over the waters.

"It's nothing but expansionism in disguise that threatens regional peace & stability," Taiwan's National Security Council chief Joseph Wu wrote on X.

Defense Minister Wellington Koo said the Chinese actions were "provocative".

Koo told reporters that the move was a "cognitive warfare operation" designed to claim that the waters off Taiwan's east coast fell within China's "enforcement jurisdiction".

Taiwan's coast guard has deployed seven patrol vessels to monitor the Chinese ships.

The Taiwanese vessels expelled four Chinese ships from waters off the island's southernmost tip on Sunday.

The ships have since moved further east, Taiwan's coast guard said Monday, after an hours-long standoff.


Ukrainian Drone Kills One in Russia-Annexed Crimea, Moscow-Installed Governor Says

A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)
A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)
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Ukrainian Drone Kills One in Russia-Annexed Crimea, Moscow-Installed Governor Says

A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)
A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)

A Ukrainian drone struck a train in Crimea, killing its assistant driver and injuring the driver, the peninsula's Russian-installed governor Sergei Aksyonov said in a Telegram post early on Monday.

Passengers on the train, commuting between Moscow and Simferopol, the main city of the Russia-annexed Black Sea Crimea peninsula, were not harmed, Aksyonov added. The train connection in Crimea was ‌suspended, Interfax ‌news agency reported.

Russia seized and ‌annexed ⁠Crimea in 2014 - ⁠long before its 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine - after public protests in Kyiv prompted a Moscow-friendly president to flee Ukraine. Crimea is a popular destination for Russian tourists.

Drone raid sirens were sounded in the early hours of Monday in the Black ⁠Sea port of Novorossiysk, a ‌major export hub for oil ‌and grains in Russia's Krasnodar region about a ‌two-hour drive from the bridge Moscow built to ‌connect to Crimea, local authorities said on Telegram.

The most recent Ukrainian drone strikes, attacking fuel infrastructure, have forced the Russian-controlled Crimea to tighten its rationing of fuel ‌supplies.

In the Crimean port of Sevastopol, the peninsula's second-largest city where the Russian ⁠Black ⁠Sea fleet is stationed, the local Russian-installed governor, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said on Telegram that fuel rationing would continue.

"The number of (electronic) codes issued for (fuel refill at) the gas stations for tomorrow was bigger than yesterday. Those were gone in just a few dozen seconds," he said on Monday.

"Those who received a code today will not be able to get the new one for the next seven days."

Reuters could not independently verify all the reports.