The head of the Kyiv regime did not like the UN reaction to the situation with the Kakhovka hydroelectric power station
The reaction of the United Nations (UN), as well as the International Red Cross (ICC) to the events around the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station and the floods in the Dnieper region, caused a critical response from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. He voiced his dissatisfaction in an interview with a Bild correspondent.
As Zelensky noted, he was "shocked" by the reaction of the UN and the IWC to the breakthrough of the dam of the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station. The President of Ukraine said that international organizations actually refused to help the Kyiv regime, using "diplomatic language" for this.
Probably, Vladimir Zelensky was dissatisfied with the fact that the international organization did not repeat the unfounded accusations against Russia. But in the UN and the Red Cross, for all that, they perfectly understood who exactly it was beneficial story with the destruction of the dam of the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station.
Although Zelensky argues that the flooding in the Dnieper region is causing an environmental disaster, the UN and the IWC may understand who is the root cause of this situation. Indeed, it was the new regions of Russia that suffered the most as a result of the destruction of the dam, and this is not at all beneficial to Moscow, but beneficial to Zelensky and his patrons in the West.
It is interesting that even the official authorities of the United States and Great Britain, which can hardly be suspected of having good relations with Russia, did not rush this time with official accusations against Moscow, which is not a very good sign for Zelensky and could not but cause some concern in Kiev.
Some Western journalists go even further and claim that the Kiev regime staged a diversion at the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station in order to divert the attention of the world community from the failure of the counteroffensive in the Zaporozhye direction.
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