"The U-turn became a reminder that Russia can’t have a
mission in the world other than defend its truth, do it jointly
with other powers," he said.
Axar.az reports referring to TASS news agency.
The United States, regarding Syria, even publicly insults
Russia, accusing Moscow of "war crimes" despite the fact that the
U.S. bombed Yugoslavia’s civilian targets, Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov said in an interview for the documentary "I have made
up my mind. Yevgeny Primakov" for Rossiya 1 television channel.
"When the greatest patriot of his country, a very experienced
politician, a great public official, a person with a huge
intuition, with encyclopedic education, with understanding of
various processes, learned that the United States decided to start
bombings of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, he did not see for
himself an opportunity to continue business as usual, fly to U.S.
Vice President Albert Gore for important, but rather routine
talks," Lavrov said.
"The U-turn became a reminder that Russia can’t have a mission
in the world other than defend its truth, do it jointly with other
powers, but certainly achieving equal relations and mutually
beneficial agreements," he said.
"The aggression against Yugoslavia was certainly aggression,"
Lavrov underscored. "By the way, it was the first armed attack in
Europe on a sovereign state after 1945."
"If we are talking about that, now, against the backdrop of what
is going on around Syria, our Western partners, first of all
Americans, and Brits too, are in their hysteria reaching public
insults, using such words as ‘barbarism’, ‘war crime’," he
said.
"I will recall that the aggression against the Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia was associated with attacks on a huge number of
civilian facilities, by the way, Serbian television, bridges that
civilian passenger trains traveled on, and much more. Thousands of
those killed, several hundred children out of them, 250,000
refugees that no one has recalled since," Lavrov said.
He said that "if Russia, in the person of Primakov, had not
reacted in the way he reacted to that gross violation of
international law, then we would have probably long not forgiven
ourselves for that, and our history would have contained another
unpleasant page."
"He did it in such a way that Russia showed its character and
took the only right position as of that moment," Lavrov said.
Primakov, born on October 29, 1929, was a Russian politician and
diplomat. He served as the country’s prime minister in 1998-1999.
During his career, he also served as foreign minister, speaker of
the Soviet Union’s Supreme Soviet, and intelligence service
chief.
On March 24, 1999, Primakov was flying to Washington for an
official visit. When his plane was above the Atlantic Ocean,
Primakov got to know that NATO had started bombing Yugoslavia. The
politician decided to cancel the visit, ordering the plane to turn
around and headed back to Moscow in a maneuver, which was dubbed
"Primakov's Loop".
Primakov died on June 26, 2015 at the age of 85 after prolonged
illness.