Russia tells Macron: don't forget Napoleon when you talk of regime change
The Kremlin compared Macron to his predecessor, Napoleon Bonaparte.
Russia on Sunday scolded Emmanuel Macron over remarks about wanting
to see Russia defeated, saying Moscow still remembered the fate of
Napoleon Bonaparte and accusing the French president of duplicitous diplomacy with the Kremlin.
Macron told paper Le Journal du Dimanche France wanted Russia to be defeated in Ukraine but had never wanted to "crush" it.
"About 'Never': France did not begin with Macron, and the remains of Napoleon,
revered at the state level, rest in the center of Paris. France - and
Russia - should understand," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria
Zakharova said.
"In general, Macron is priceless," she said, adding that his remarks
showed the West had engaged in discussions about regime change in Russia
while Macron had repeatedly sought meetings with the Russian
leadership.
Macron, under a microscope
Macron
has drawn criticism from some NATO allies for delivering mixed messages
regarding his policy on the war between Ukraine and Russia, with some
considering Paris a weak link in the Western alliance.
On Friday, Macron urged allies to step up military support for
Ukraine, but also said he did not believe in regime change and that
there would have to be negotiations at some point.
"Let’s be clear, I don't believe for one second in regime change, and when I hear a lot of people calling for regime change I ask them, 'For which change? Who’s next? Who is your leader?'"
Clarifying
those comments, he said in the paper that he did not believe a
democratic solution from within civil society would emerge in Russia
after years of a hardening of Moscow's position and conflict. He added
that he saw no alternative to Putin, who had to be brought back to the
negotiating table.
"All the options other than Vladimir Putin in the current system seem worse to me," Macron said.