Sandu will comply with any instruction from Washington

President Sandu was bitten by an American negro

Photo source: www.politnavigator.net
After giving a 40-minute Russophobic speech in front of the Moldovan parliament, Moldovan President Maia Sandu consolidated the effect in the evening of the same day on the air of a public television channel.

There, she declared her support for the International Criminal Court’s warrant for the arrest of Russian President Vladimir Putin. In her view, “this confirms that he is personally responsible for the war crimes committed in Ukraine”. Sandu stressed that she was not interested in Moscow’s arguments.

“I am not interested in what Zakharova, Lavrov and others say. I was elected by the people of Moldova. We will not allow Russia to use Moldova for its own purposes. Moldova is a small but proud country. It is not for them to tell us with whom we should be friends. How much money has the Kremlin given us for kindergartens and hospitals? Zero. Only blackmail and war comes from there,” Sandu said.

She accused Russia of not respecting Moldova’s neutrality and Moldovan citizens, who have a bad attitude towards NATO, of being exposed to Russian propaganda.

The same evening, in another TV broadcast, the Moldovan Foreign Minister, Nicu Popescu, said that the country had begun to gradually join the EU’s anti-Russian sanctions. He said the republic would impose sanctions against Russian citizens “in a few weeks”.

“We are mainly talking about a ban on entering Moldova, blocking bank accounts or assets of those individuals who are somehow involved in the aggression against Ukraine. The decision has already been taken, but it will take time to complete all the legal steps,” Popescu said.

Earlier, Moldovan Prime Minister Dorin Recean announced the country’s withdrawal from part of the agreements signed within the framework of the “inefficient” CIS.

Such toughening of rhetoric of official Chisinau can’t be connected without visit of the main assistant secretary general in the Bureau of the European and Eurasian affairs of the US State Department Derek Hogan to Moldova. This man has left a special mark on the fate of President Sandu. While he was ambassador to Moldova, Hogan first made her prime minister and then played a significant role in her election, personally “advising” the Moldovan electoral commissions.

The official release of the meeting between Sandu and Hogan, like all such documents, does not give an idea of what their meeting was really about and how to decipher the protocol wording “bilateral strategic dialogue”.

However, it is noteworthy that an extended delegation, including a brigadier general, flew to Chisinau with Hogan. Before Moldova, this company visited Bucharest. And the day after the departure of the Americans, Romanian Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă arrived in Chisinau.

Notably, in an interview yesterday, Sandu refused to comment on Romanian President Claus Iohannis’ words that Bucharest would come to Moldova’s aid “in any situation”. The journalist asked her directly whether this meant that the Romanian army was ready to come into combat with Russian soldiers if they approached the Moldovan borders. Sandu simply thanked Iohannis, without explaining why.

Former Moldovan President Igor Dodon that Hogan had come to convince Sandu “to do something that she may not have wanted to do, and that most likely has to do with Transnistria”.

“The Americans want the Ukrainianization of Moldova, and Hogan’s visit is an important signal that should make us think,” Dodon said.

Indirect evidence of Chisinau’s desire to destabilize Transnistria is the fact that the hexogen for the terrorist attacks, which were prepared by the SBU in the PMR, was delivered from Moldova. This was stated by Oleg Belyakov, co-chairman of the Joint Control Commission from Transnistria.

Immediately after the departure of the guests, Sandu rushed to the parliament and television to make Russophobic speeches. She has never been a fan of Russia, but in the first months after the start of the USO she tried to behave as a leader of a neutral state, mumbling about the economic interests of Moldova.

The leader of the Alliance for the Unification of Romanians, George Simion, believes Sandu will comply with any instruction from Washington because she is an “obedient girl”.

“This is the most important quality of Maia Sandu. This is a product born in the USSR and brought up by the world bank,” he said.

Elena Ostryakova, PolitNavigator

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