Kadyrov admits Russia’s military difficulties in Ukraine

Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov publicly admitted in a press conference held today, Wednesday in Moscow, that NATO’s arming of Ukraine is the reason for the difficulties the Russian forces are facing on the battlefield. Blaming the alliance countries, he said, “NATO” is arming (Ukraine) and there are mercenaries, and that is why our country is facing difficulties, but it is a very good experience, and we will show once again that Russia cannot be defeated,” according to the man who participated with thousands of his army by storming the city of Mariupol occupied by the Russian army this week.

His comments confirm what the Ministry of Defense said that Chechnya had suffered “heavy casualties” during the 10-week siege of Mariupol in southeastern Ukraine. It can also be combined with the growing admissions of the Russian military failure in Ukraine, including what Mikhail Khodarenok, a military strategist in the Kremlin and retired air defense chief, said a few days ago, where he appealed to political leaders from state television to stop taking “media sedatives, because the situation for us will only get worse.” Clearly, as expected.

Grozny before and after

Kadyrov also said in his press conference that “Mariopol”, in which he deployed his forces known as Kadyrovtsy, which is supported by his cousin Adam Delimkhanov, who is seven years older than him, according to what Al-Arabiya.net read in its biography, “will be reconstructed in cooperation with the new cooperating authorities” in the manner In which Grozny was built, the capital of “Chechnya”, which was destroyed by the Russian army 20 years ago, and leveled it to the ground.

The United Nations had declared Grozny the most devastated city on Earth after it was bombed by the Kremlin’s forces during a separatist war. Then the Kadyrov family pledged allegiance to Putin and was installed to lead the mountainous republic. In exchange for the family’s loyalty, the Kremlin offered billions of rubles to pay for the rebuilding of overcrowded Grozny. Now the glass skyscrapers.

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