Any attempts to “terrorize” the international community with nuclear threats should be stopped, the Russian Foreign Ministry has said
The international community should resolutely respond to reports about alleged plans by Kiev to attack the nuclear power plant in Kursk, Russia, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Saturday.
Earlier, Russian journalists reported on the plot, and the Defense Ministry vowed a swift and harsh response if these plans come to fruition.
The Ukrainian military launched a cross-border incursion into the Russian border region where the plant is located last week.
The facility is 90km from the border, which has become the arena of fierce clashes in recent days.
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“We call on the international bodies, the UN and the [International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)] in particular, to immediately condemn the provocative actions prepared by the Kiev regime and to prevent the violation of both nuclear and physical security of the Kursk Nuclear Power Plant,” Zakharova said in a statement published by the ministry on Telegram. These actions by the Ukrainian military “could result in a large-scale technogenic catastrophe in Europe,” she warned.
Kiev’s plans do not just pose a “direct threat” to the nuclear power plant’s security but also go against the principles of the IAEA formulated by its head, Rafael Grossi, in 2022, amid the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, the spokeswoman stated.
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Russia vows harsh response if Ukraine attacks Kursk nuclear plant
“The entire international community should understand the threat posed by the neo-Nazi Kiev regime to the European continent,” Zakharova said. She also maintained that any attempts to “intimidate and terrorize entire regions and all of the international community should be resolutely stopped by joint efforts.”
Neither the UN nor the IAEA have responded to the Russian Foreign Ministry’s statement as of Saturday evening.
Russian military journalist Marat Khairullin reported on Friday, citing sources, that Kiev was plotting a false flag operation involving the detonation of a dirty atomic bomb and targeting the spent nuclear fuel storages of a nuclear power plant. According to reporters, the operation would either be directed against Russia’s Zaporozhye NPP in Energodar or the Kursk NPP.
The Zaporozhye plant is the largest in Europe and is also located close to the front line. Kiev has vehemently denied the allegations.
The Russian Defense Ministry responded to the reports by saying that any attempts to create a “man-made disaster in the European part of the continent” would be met with “tough military and military-technical countermeasures.”