The war in Ukraine must stop to avoid the "nuclear precipice", according to the Belarusian president

"Come on, let's stop.

The war in Ukraine must stop to avoid the "nuclear precipice", according to the Belarusian president

"Come on, let's stop. We must not go further. Further is the precipice. Further is nuclear war. It must not go that far", he said .

"We must stop, agree, stop this chaos, the operation and the war in Ukraine," added Lukashenko.

But according to the Belarusian president, who lent his territory to the Russian army to attack Ukraine, it is up to kyiv to accept the concessions and go to negotiations, the only way out of the conflict.

Previous talks, which began in the early days of the Russian offensive, broke down, with each side blaming each other.

"It all depends on Ukraine, currently, the peculiarity of the moment is that the war can end in more preferable conditions, acceptable to Ukraine," said Lukashenko.

She must agree to "never have on the territory of Ukraine weapons threatening Russia", he noted.

According to him, the term "denazification" used by Russia about its military objectives in Ukraine, "is philosophy. The most important thing is the security of Russia".

The Belarusian president judges that otherwise things could get even worse, recalling that Vladimir Putin had warned that his army was not yet fully employed in Ukraine.

“The war that is going on there is not yet the one that Russia could fight,” he said, referring to “frightening” weapons that Moscow has not used.

According to Mr. Lukashenko, Ukraine must accept that the regions occupied by Russia in the east and south of the country are lost.

"This is no longer discussed, we could have discussed it in February, March", he judged.

Finally, Mr. Lukashenko blamed the West entirely for this war, believing that the threat he posed to Russia was such that Moscow had to attack its neighbour.

"We have seen the causes of this war, the cause is that if Russia had not outstripped NATO, you (Westerners) would have organized and hit it," he said. "You are at the origin and you prolong this war," he accused.

According to the Belarusian leader, the conflict would have been avoided if Western countries had given Vladimir Putin "the security guarantees he was asking for", namely the withdrawal of the Alliance to the 1997 borders and the cessation of the rapprochement with the West with Ukraine, which Russia perceives as a threat.

"Why didn't you give these guarantees? It means you wanted war," he said.