RT.com
19 Apr 2026, 01:10 GMT+10
The foreign minister has accused the EU and NATO of pushing Ukraine into a wider conflict and repeatedly crossing Moscow's red lines
Russia's patience is not unlimited and could eventually "run out," Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has warned, accusing the West of pushing Ukraine into a wider conflict and repeatedly crossing Moscow's red lines.
Speaking at the Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Trkiye on Saturday, Lavrov rejected what he called a growing Western perception that Russia is unable or unwilling to respond to provocations. He cited reports of Ukraine using the airspace of several NATO states for drone strikes on Russian territory as another breach of Moscow's "red lines," warning against dismissing Russia as a "paper tiger" amid its restraint.
"There is a chorus of voices saying that Russia should not be feared... some may even call us a paper tiger... But I would warn against such parallels," Lavrov said. "We have, in our national character, such a quality as patience. We say: 'God endured, and told us to endure as well.' But at some point, patience runs out."
Lavrov added that Moscow has deliberately avoided defining its exact red lines, suggesting that ambiguity itself acts as a deterrent.
"I think it is even good that no one understands where that red line is," he said, emphasizing that Russia is capable of acting if needed. "The president has said more than once: we have something to respond with," he added without elaborating.
Speaking amid continued Western military support for Kiev, Lavrov said the crisis fits a broader historical pattern, casting European NATO members as its main driver. He accused the West of trying to turn Ukraine into "a trigger for a global threat" and described the conflict as "a war against Russia that the West has been preparing for years." He argued that, as part of the drive for NATO expansion, Kiev was turned into a hostile state well before the open hostilities began.
Turning to NATO - whose future has been questioned amid US President Donald Trump's criticism and threats to withdraw - Lavrov said the bloc is "not in the best condition," though he does not expect it to be replaced. Instead, he predicted it would remain "an aggressive bloc" despite internal strains.
Russia has long accused the West of waging a proxy war against it through Ukraine, citing NATO expansion as a key root cause of the conflict. Moscow insists that any lasting settlement must address NATO's eastward expansion, Ukraine's military alignment with the West, and recognition of Russia's new borders.
Russia and Ukraine have held several rounds of direct talks, along with trilateral meetings involving the US over the past year, but the peace process has stalled amid the US-Israeli war on Iran.
Get a daily dose of Moscow Inquirer news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Moscow Inquirer.
More InformationDUBLIN, Ireland: The International Protection Bill, which introduces new asylum rules to speed up decisions and improve support for...
WARSAW, Poland: With Poland partially suspending the right to seek asylum last year, Afghan migrants are facing a life of fear and...
DUBLIN, Ireland: The government won the Dáil confidence vote tabled by Sinn Féin following the fuel protests by 92 votes to 78. The...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The global economy is entering a period of heightened risk as the war in Iran disrupts energy markets, with the International...
The foreign minister has accused the EU and NATO of pushing Ukraine into a wider conflict and repeatedly crossing Moscow's red lines...
State nuclear corporation Rosatom is closely monitoring the US-Iran talks, Aleksey Likhachev says ...
LONDON, U.K.: On April 17, Opposition politicians renewed their demands for the British Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, to resign after...
JERUSALEM/BEIRUT: After many hours of sirens in northern Israel mid-week, people felt an unusual calm later in the week as the ceasefire...
ANNANDALE, Virginia: Virginia's former lieutenant governor, Justin Fairfax, once seen as a rising Democratic leader before sexual assault...
ROME, Italy: The scope of a year-old law passed by Giorgia Meloni's government limiting citizenship claims to Italian descendants who...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: U.S. President Donald Trump said there would be a 10-day pause in fighting between Israel and Lebanon starting at...
GAZA CITY, GAZA—Three-year-old Yahya Al-Malahi lay on a metal table in the morgue of Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City. Family members...
