Russian battle group reaches Mediterranean after ‘causing stir’ in the West (VIDEO)
The
nuclear-powered heavy cruiser Peter the Great. © Dover-Marina.com
/ Sputnik
RT,
1
November, 2016
A
Russian naval group, headed by the Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier
and the battle cruiser Peter the Great, has made its way into the
Mediterranean, causing quite a stir in the West, the Russian Defense
Ministry said.
Moscow
has been surprised by the countries that have denied Russia’s
warships entry to their ports, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu
said, adding that ‘Western colleagues’ need to decide who they
are actually fight against – terrorists or Russia.
“The
movement of our ships has caused a stir among our Western partners,”
Shoigu said on Tuesday.
“But
the most surprising thing was the position of certain countries that,
under pressure from the US and NATO, have publicly refused our
warships entry to their ports.”
“It
did not affect the schedule of their movement along the chosen route,
as they had been provided with all the necessary resources,” he added.
The
defense minister noted that the decisions of some countries to deny
Russian ships entry to Western ports has demonstrated how, in fact,
“our
partners understand their contribution to the fight against
international terrorism in Syria.”
“It
is time for our Western colleagues to decide who they are actually
fighting – terrorists or Russia. As one poet once said, ‘one
cannot sit on one and the same place on different trains,’” Shoigu dded.
The
Ministry of Defense has released a sneak peak video, showing raw
images of Russia’s ship-borne air strike force and warships, headed
by the Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier, but it is unclear when
exactly the footage was shot.
A
war of words was unleashed in late October when the Spanish media
reported that the Russian naval ships would be making a stopover at
the autonomous port of Ceuta after passing the Straits of Gibraltar.
NATO
Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg made it crystal clear that the
bloc wanted Madrid to rethink the stopover permit. “We
are concerned and I have expressed that very clearly about potential
use of this battle group to increase Russia’s ability and to be a
platform for airstrikes against Syria,”
he said at that time.
Belgium’s
former prime minister and current EU envoy to the UK for Brexit
talks, Guy Verhofstadt, said in a Facebook post that, despite being a
NATO member, Spain “provides
assistance to a fleet which has one purpose,”
noting that “only
last week this Spanish Government signed up to a statement from the
European Council accusing Russia of war crimes against civilians in
Aleppo.”
Reneging
on a previous agreement with Moscow, the Spanish Foreign Ministry
reacted by issuing a statement declaring that Madrid could refuse
permission to the Russian warships, which were heading for the
Mediterranean to enter Ceuta, a Spanish enclave on the North African
coast.
While
the Western media reported that Russia had withdrawn its request for
a stopover, the Russian Defense Ministry said such a stop had never
been on the schedule in the first place.
“The
Russian aircraft carrier group is fully supplied with sufficient
material stocks to carry out its mission in the off-shore maritime
zone in autonomous mode,” said
ministry spokesman Major-General Igor Konashenkov.
Soon
thereafter, Malta was forced to make a statement refuting media
reports that the carrier group would be refueling at one of its
ports.
The
Russian warships, including the Admiral Kuznetsov, the Pyotr Veliky
battle cruiser, and the Severomorsk and Vice-Admiral Kulakov
anti-submarine warfare destroyers, were sent to the Mediterranean on
October 15.
“The
goal of the campaign is to ensure a naval presence in operationally
important areas of the oceans,” Russia’s
Defense Ministry said in a statement.
The
Admiral Kuznetsov carrier group’s tour has caused a media frenzy
across Europe, with British, Norwegian, and Dutch navies sending
frigates and surveillance vessels to shadow the Russian warships as
they rounded European shores through international waters.
Shoigu
said on Tuesday that the Russian naval group had arrived in the
Mediterranean Sea from the Atlantic Ocean, according to TASS news
agency.
“Last
week, our ship-borne air strike force, led by the missile cruiser
Pyotr Veliky, made a passage through the eastern Atlantic into the
Mediterranean Sea. On October 27-29, support vessels replenished the
naval group with all kinds of supplies to the required level,”
Shoigu said.
US
State Dept claims comparing Mosul with Aleppo is 'insulting'
Meanwhile
across the border, as U.S.-backed Iraqi forces enter the outskirts of
the ISIL stronghold of Mosul - a humanitarian crisis is unfolding
there too.
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