Medvedev proposes list of ‘Russia’s enemies’
Moscow’s foes need to fear the revenge that is coming, the former president has said
Moscow should start putting together a database of “Russophobic scum” and put them on notice of inevitable retribution for their misdeeds, former president and head of Russia’s Security Council, Dmitry Medvedev, has said.
Medvedev has long been a hardliner on the Ukraine conflict and began his latest Telegram post by criticizing “vile scum” in the West who advocated for letting Kiev strike deep into Russian territory with NATO weapons.
“I want to talk about something else, however: about the need to remember the criminal calls of individual Western freaks and prepare for retribution,” Medvedev wrote.
“It is necessary to use the enemy’s own weapon. Despite a number of obvious legal issues, it is worth considering creating an open public database of our enemies with their personal data. For quite practical purposes,” he added.
This was likely a reference to Mirotvorets (‘Peacemaker’), the notorious Ukrainian government-linked website that has hosted a database of supposed enemies of the state since 2014, following the US-backed coup in Kiev.
A number of people in the database have ended up assassinated by Ukrainian intelligence, earning Mirotvorets the moniker of “Kiev’s kill list.” It has never been denounced, either by the Ukrainian government or its backers in the West.
According to Medvedev, justice demands that sponsors of terrorism and those who incited violence be put on notice.
“History is full of examples of revenge delayed,” he added, noting the Soviet Union’s relentless pursuit of Leon Trotsky or Ukrainian Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera, Russia going after “terrorists and traitors” in modern times, and the US and other Western countries targeting their enemies.
The important thing, he argued, was the “inevitability” of revenge, so that “every creature, regardless of its nation, faith, citizenship and position, who committed a crime against our country and our people,” knows it is coming and turns into “a rat sick with anxiety and paranoia.”
“Such operations are carefully planned and do not always work out. But they need to be done. This is extremely important, for the sake of ultimate justice and in memory of the innocent victims,” Medvedev said.
A legal scholar by education, Medvedev was considered “liberal” by the West when he presided over Russia between 2008 and 2012. He went on to serve as prime minister until 2020, when he was put in charge of the national Security Council.
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