'We can resolve all issues by picking up the phone' – Russia's FM

Thứ Sáu, 13/04/2018, 15:34
The US and Russia can find a way out of the deadlock in Syria if they talk to each other, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova believes, but should Washington launch an attack, Moscow will stand by its people.

In an interview with Sky News on Thursday, Zakharova stressed that Moscow and Washington should not allow the tensions over Syria to spiral into a direct confrontation on the ground.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova

Asked about the chances of a doomsday scenario in which Russian and American blood will be spilled as result of the US-led military action, Zakharova said that Moscow and Washington have all the means to prevent such a showdown and its potentially disastrous consequences.

We're living in 2018 and we have all sort of communication, including Twitter, and we can resolve all the questions like that - just picking up the phone, just sending messages - and I think this is the case which should be resolved through the communication but not through force," the Foreign Ministry's spokesperson said.

Zakharova reiterated that Russia will protect its people on the ground should missiles start flying. Commenting on the earlier statement by Moscow's envoy to Lebanon, Alexander Zasypkin, who warned that the Russian military reserves the right to intercept incoming missile and strike launch sites in case of an attack, Zakharova said that the envoy's words should be understood in the sense that Russia will not abandon its people.

"I would stress one more time and that was the idea of our ambassador in Lebanon as well that Russia will protect its people on the ground. It's obvious," Zakharova told Sky.

Rejecting the parallels with the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, which put the world to the brink of a nuclear war, she argued that the times have changed. "I just want to remind you one more time it's 2018, it's not the middle of the 20th century," she said, adding that in a time of instant communications there's no reason "why people who are in charge of our security and international peace can't talk."


RT