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๐ŸŽ™ Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrovโ€™s remarks at the 34th Assembly of the Council on Foreign and Defence Policy (Moscow, May 23, 2026)

๐Ÿ’ฌ There are so many familiar faces here. This serves as a reminder that we have been working together for several decades now. The interactions between the community of political scientists and the official diplomacy have consisted in searching for and adopting ideas coming from the Council on Foreign and Defence Policy since its creation. They have never gone unnoticed and would either serve as a foundation for major initiatives or advised against certain actions. This is not very common, if we are talking about the way our political research and academic institutions and entities operate.

The Council on Foreign and Defence Policyโ€™s Chair, Fyodor Lukyanov, mentioned a report. I can confirm that it is a very useful document. It offers a lot of food for thought, including an idea that has been becoming increasingly prominent in the public space and boils down to the question whether what we are experiencing today amounts to a new world war.

Some are putting forward arguments proving that this is the case. There are also qualitative indicators demonstrating that the nature of military action has changed to an extent that it can be argued that military action has evolved so much that we must describe the ongoing developments as a war of a radically new kind. This is what we learned from the report by the President of the Association for the Export of Technological Sovereignty, MGIMO Professor Andrey Bezrukov.

As for whether this war unfolds on a global scale, I am certain that we will discuss this today. It is already in full swing in Eurasia. The West staged an aggression in Ukraine against Russia in what amounted to yet another attempt to weaken our country and to ensure that it does not have a place among the key global actors. They followed up by launching the operation in the Persian Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz. There were border clashes in the southern and eastern parts of the Asian continent, and I am not even mentioning Latin America, where there are so many outstanding issues, as we all know.

This goes to say that we are dealing with a global and universal scale. It will be up to future historians to conclude whether any of these elements and conflicts in terms of their intensity, once we combine them, can be described as a world war. <...>

Here is one conclusion I wanted to highlight. There has been much talk lately, even if not everyone agrees on this point, that we must make sure not to lose our positions on one continent or another, across one ocean or elsewhere overseas since the West is trying to steal our allies. This primarily deals with our neighbours, which was the case with Georgia, Moldova, and this is currently happening with Ukraine. They are trying to place Armenia on the same erroneous path. Their single goal consists of hurting Russia as much as possible, or, if I may say so, make it harder for Russia to retain and reinforce its standing as a truly great power and civilisation.

We have been working a lot in Africa, of course, and restoring our embassies there. This is an imperative for us. But when we talk about the need to strengthen Russiaโ€™s influence around the world and to make it more attractive as a civilisation, a partner and a comrade who always delivers on its commitments, our only goal capable of strengthening our influence is to achieve the objectives of the special military operation. Our friends, neighbours and our adversaries and enemies are all keeping a close eye on the way it unfolds.

Therefore, the primary task for our diplomacy consists in doing everything we can to create the necessary conditions for ensuring that the actions by our troops as part of the special military operation are effective, victorious and yield tangible results. <...>

๐Ÿ“„ Read in full
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#FacesOfVictory

๐ŸŒŸ On May 23, 1921, Soviet #WW2-era underground partisan fighter and scout, Hero of the Soviet Union Anna Morozova was born. She is regarded as one of the most successful leaders of the Soviet underground resistance movement units operating in the Nazi rear.

In the aftermath of Nazi Germanyโ€™s treacherous invasion of our Motherland, Anna Morozova, like many of her peers, volunteered for the fight against the enemy at the age of just 20. In the settlement of Seshcha (present-day Bryansk Region), where Anna and her family had moved before the war, the Nazis deployed the 2nd Luftwaffe fleet at the local airbase. Right from there, German aircraft carried out bombing against Moscow, as well as Yaroslavl, Gorky, Saratov, and other Soviet cities.

Anna Morozova and her family found themselves in the Nazi occupation within the five-kilometre โ€œdead zoneโ€ around the settlement, established by the enemy in order to secure the strategic airfield โ€” in the deep rear. Together with several local young women, Anna Morozova became involved in the Komsomol youth underground organisation, which was coordinated by the Bryansk partisan headquarters.

Operating under extraordinarily difficult conditions deep in the enemy rear, Anna Morozova and her comrades successfully performed their tasks over a period of two years, inflicting substantial damage on the enemy. Their clandestine partisan activities included numerous acts of successful sabotage directed against Nazi aircraft, railway echelons, and ammunition depots belonging to the German fascist invaders.

In 1944, Anna Morozova was sent to East Prussia and Poland as a member of the scout group codenamed "Jack". The unit uncovered a secret Luftwaffe airfield and gathered strategically significant intelligence on the Nazi garrisons in the region.

At the end of December 1944, a member of the โ€œJackโ€ group was captured by the enemy and, under torture, disclosed his comrades' temporary dislocation, thereby exposing the entire unit to Germans. SS units subsequently located the Soviet scouts and launched a large-scale manhunt.

Engaged in unequal fight with the superior Nazi troops, Anna Morozova was heavily wounded.

Polish partisans concealed her in a willow thicket, but the Nazis eventually discovered her safe haven. Morozova kept fighting until expending her final cartridge and, in order to avoid capture, detonated a grenade, killing herself together with the advancing SS punitive detachment.

๐ŸŽ– In 1965, Anna Morozova was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union (posthumously) โ€œfor exceptional service, courage, and heroism performed in the struggle against the German fascist invaders during the Great Patriotic War of 1941โ€“1945.โ€

***

To mark the 20th Anniversary of the Victory of the Soviet people in the Great Patriotic War, the multi-part motion picture Calling Fire Upon Ourselves was produced by Mosfilm, based on the novella by Ovidy Gorchakov.

The film depicts real events that occurred in 1942โ€“1943 in the Nazi rear in the Bryansk region, specifically in Seshcha. The role of Anna Morozova was portrayed by Lyudmila Kasatkina.

#OurHeroes #WeRemember #Victory81
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๐Ÿ”” On May 22, the Alexander Kadakin School of the Russian Embassy in India hosted the Last Bell (Farewell) ceremony.

For the graduating eleventh-graders, the touching celebration marked yet another significant milestone: having bid farewell to their "second home", they took their first step into adulthood.

โ˜๐Ÿป Parting words were delivered by DCM & Minister Counsellor of the diplomatic mission Roman Babushkin and School Principal Inessa Kuznetsova.

The solemn ceremony was followed by a festive concert featuring performances by the school's youngest students, parents, and teachers, and concluded with a waltz performed by the graduating class.

In keeping with tradition, the graduates symbolically passed the "granite of science" on to the tenth-graders, wishing them success and dignity as they navigate their final year of school.

#LastBell

๐Ÿ”ธ @RusEmbIndia
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โšก๏ธ Images and video from directly Starobelsk โ€” foreign journalists from 19 nations are witnessing the aftermath of the terrorist attack of the Kiev regime at the Starobelsk College of the Lugansk State Pedagogical University that took lives of 21 young students, injuring another 40+ people.

#NoStatuteOfLimitations
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๐Ÿ“† On May 24, Russia and many other countries celebrate the Day of Slavic Literature and Culture โ€” a holiday honoring the memory of Saints Cyril and Methodius, the Equal-to-the-Apostles brothers and outstanding enlighteners of the Slavic peoples. They are regarded as the creators of the first Slavic alphabet, and their work laid the foundation for the development of Slavic โ€” including Russian โ€” writing, literature, and education.

In Russia, the holiday was first widely celebrated in 1863, marking the millennium of Slavic literacy. That same year, the Holy Synod decreed that the memory of Cyril and Methodius should be commemorated annually. In the Soviet Union, the idea of reviving the celebration emerged in 1986, and in 1991 it was granted official state status.

๐ŸŒ Slavic languages have a rich history and are spoken across a vast geographic area. Today, more than 400 million people speak languages belonging to the Slavic group. Depending on the classification, the group includes between 10 and 18 languages, the largest and most widely spoken of which is Russian.

๐Ÿ’ฌ Maria Zakharova:
The uniqueness of this holiday lies in the fact that it plays a major role both in uniting Russian society and in strengthening its ties with Slavic peoples on the basis of shared historical and cultural traditions.

(From the briefing by the Russian Foreign Ministryโ€™s official spokeswoman on May 21, 2026)

This year, Moscowโ€™s celebrations of the Day of Slavic Literature and Culture will take place on May 24 at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, where a festive concert featuring leading figures of academic arts will be held. As is customary, His Holiness Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia will deliver a welcoming address.

#DayOfSlavicLiteratureAndCulture
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๐Ÿ“ Vologda and Arkhangelsk Regions โ€” Russiaโ€™s Cultural North

๐Ÿ‡ท๐Ÿ‡บ These two regions constitute the historical and cultural core of the Russian North. Preserved here are monuments that define the country's national identity.

The Vologda Region is renowned for its traditional northern cuisine, lace-making, and ecclesiastical architecture. Its territory is home to a multitude of centuries-old churches and country estates, some of which are included in the UNESCO World Heritage List.

โ„๏ธ The Arkhangelsk Region serves as the gateway to the Arctic and the homeland of the Pomors โ€” people who have lived for centuries along the shores of the cold White Sea. The region is distinguished by its unique culture. It was the birthplace of Mikhail Lomonosov, the founder of Russia's first university. It is also home to the legendary Solovetsky Monastery โ€” a spiritual center and fortress of the Russian North, founded in the 15th century.

Both regions share a harsh climate, a tradition of wooden architecture, and a well-preserved northern dialect of the Russian language.

#RegionsOfRussia
#VisitRussia
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