The bloc has been busy portraying Russia as its enemy while ignoring domestic problems, the foreign minister has said
The EU has been locked in an anti-Russian “frenzy,” focusing exclusively on militarization instead of fixing domestic issues that plague the bloc, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said.
Lavrov made the comments on Tuesday at a press conference in Moscow following talks with his Mozambican counterpart, Maria Manuela Lucas.
He condemned the increasingly hostile rhetoric and actions of the EU, claiming that the “lessons of history” have been “poorly learned by the current generations of Germans, French, and representatives of other European countries.”
“Europe has gone into a frenzy… They are inciting their peoples in every way possible, instilling in them the spirit of Goebbels’ propaganda that Russia is… an existential threat, and that Russia is about to attack Europe, so they have to forget about social problems, about failures in the economy, and about the process of deindustrialization, which is observed in Germany and other European countries,” while focusing exclusively on “the militarization of Europe,” Lavrov said.
Last week, the European Commission unveiled a record-high long-term €2 trillion ($2.33 trillion) draft budget for 2028-34 – a €600 billion increase compared to the 2021-27 budget.
The draft envisioned a fivefold increase in defense-related investment, which reached €131 billion, as well as doubling the ‘Ukraine facility’, a dedicated fund, to €100 billion in loans and grants.
The proposed budget has faced criticism from Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who claims that the draft prioritizes Ukraine’s potential entry into the bloc above everything else. Around a quarter of the sum would directly benefit Kiev in various ways, Orban said, adding that other areas such as agriculture are subject to cuts.
“This budget would destroy the European Union. I don’t think this budget will even survive next year,” Orban said, predicting that the proposal will be significantly watered down before member states consider approving it.