​Putin: Russia & China worst affected by WW II, reject rehabilitation of Nazism & militarism

Image

© Reuters/Alexander Zemlianichenko
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (L) shakes hands with China's President Xi Jinping during their meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia May 8, 2015.

    
Russia and China suffered the worst casualties during World War II and thus have the greatest reasons to oppose attempts to rehabilitate Nazism and militarism, Russian President Vladimir Putin said after meeting China's President Xi Jinping.

Xi arrived in Moscow to meet his Russian counterpart with an array of economic deals to sign. The Chinese leader will also take part in the V-Day celebration in Moscow on Saturday. A military parade demonstrating brand new Russian weapons is part of the festivities to mark the 70th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany.

Putin said.

[embedded content]


He added that China and Russia paid the greatest price in loss of life from the war and that

Xi, who personally invited the Russian president to attend the September 3 commemoration in China, said the event is meant "to honor the memory of the lost heroes" and "not allow the tragic history of that war repeat again, to create world peace together.

Image

© RIA Novosti/Konstantin Chalabov
Ceremonial unit soldiers at the final rehearsal of the military parade to mark the 70th anniversary of Victory in the World War II

    
The hard lessons of the World War II say that coexistence of humanity is not ruled by the law of the jungle. The politics of peace is the exact opposite of the aggressive hegemonic politics of force. The path of human development does not lay in the principle 'the winner takes it all,' not in zero-sum games," he added.

China and Russia are strengthening cooperation amid a Washington-led effort to isolate Moscow over its position in the Ukrainian crisis. Russia sees China as a major importer of energy in decades to come. The two countries also want to develop ties in defense production, military training, fighting against extremism and international crime, cultural and scientific collaboration.

Categories: