Moscow Names Unfriendly Nations That Have Destabilized Global Security on Energy and Food With Their Sanctions

Moscow Names Unfriendly Nations That Have Destabilized Global Security on Energy and Food With Their Sanctions
Moscow calls out unfriendly nations that have placed dangerous sanctions that were illegal and said energy and food security is a trouble due to attempts to unseat Russian President Vladimir Putin. Putin greets veterans as he arrives to watch the Victory Day military parade at Red Square in central Moscow on May 9, 2022. MIKHAIL METZEL/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images

Russia blames unfriendly nations for destabilizing global energy and food markets via their recklessly illegal sanctions. The US and its allies risked global security to take down Russia, which has failed, leaving them with inflation and bad problems.

The West Messes by Supporting Ukraine

Vyacheslav Volodin, chairman of the Russian State Duma, shared a list of "unfriendly nations" ranked by the number of anti-Russian sanctions imposed, reported RT.

Last Thursday, he blamed them for the high prices due to their reckless actions that made food supplies and energy problematic.

Top of this infamous list in the US with 1,983 distinct sanctions against Russia; then Canada, Switzerland, Britain, the EU as a single entity, Australia, and Japan, cited the Economic Times-News.

According to Kremlin officials, these illegal sanctions against Russia caused a spike in energy and food prices. They are the primary perpetrators of the world's current and future crises.

He went on to say that Russia is the scapegoat for the increase in inflation that many countries are experiencing, which has now become a common theme for many Western countries.

The Biden administration invented the term "Putin's price hike," but the polls say Americans aren't buying it, and many genuinely think their government should have done more than that to fight inflation.

Europe Suffers From Its Actions

Prior to Moscow's offensive against Ukraine, European energy prices were at all-time highs, and they are part of unfriendly nations.

Earlier, the Kremlin stated that Europe could alleviate the surge by entering into long-term supply agreements with Russia that also included mechanisms to tamp down market surges in energy and food supplies.

Suggestions that the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline be able to operate as soon as possible in order to guarantee imports. Western sanctions on Russia now include the project's closure for the near future and a push to disentangle Europe from Russian energy.

Ukraine's hostilities have also cast doubt on the country's ability to sow and harvest grains this season. It is a major grain exporter, particularly wheat, which accounted for more than a quarter of global wheat supply last year, together with Russia.

The sanctions have also harmed the Russian and Belarussian chemical industries, including fertilizers.

On Wednesday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres stated that restrictions on Russian food and fertilizers must be lifted to avoid a major crisis. Or tens of millions of people would be pushed over the edge into food insecurity, followed by malnutrition, mass hunger, and famine in a long-term crisis.

The US, Global Banks Tackle Food Crisis

The United States, several global development banks, and other organizations revealed a multibillion-dollar policy to tackle a global food crisis aggravated by Russia's war in Ukraine last Wednesday, mentioned Al Jazeera.

The US Treasury confirmed that several global development banks are going quickly to organize their financing, policy engagement, and technical assistance to avoid starvation due to war, rising food prices, and crop failure from global warming.

Tens of billions of dollars will be financing farmers, answering the fertilizer supply dilemma, and food production.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, the International Fund for Agricultural Development, and the World Bank will donate tens of billions of dollars in the coming months to assist food producers and resolve supply shortage issues.

Moscow says unfriendly nations are causing fluxes energy and food security raising problems made worse by illegal sanctions, and the west is paying for listening to the Biden administration losing the proxy war in Donbas.

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