Putin: West openly preparing for war with Russia, hiking military budgets
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday declared that Western nations are openly discussing preparations for war with Russia and are steadily expanding their military offensive budgets, according to state media reports from Moscow. Putin made the remarks at a meeting with graduates of higher military educational institutions.
What Putin Said
Speaking to the gathering, Putin stated: 'We see that while NATO countries previously limited themselves to supporting the Kyiv regime, which came to power through illegal armed means and a coup d'etat, now the West is openly saying that they are preparing for war with us and are increasing their military offensive budgets.'
He argued that the 'pseudo-democratic West' first manufactures threats against Russia, compelling Moscow to take what he described as necessary self-defence measures, and then accuses Russia of 'all mortal sins' to justify continuing what he called aggressive policies and actions.
Rules-Based Order Under Fire
Putin also took direct aim at the Western concept of a 'rules-based world order,' asserting that this framework conceals 'blatant neocolonial ambitions' and a disregard for the sovereignty of independent states. His written statement read: 'Russia, like many others in the world, is categorically unsatisfied with such rules.'
He outlined Moscow's alternative vision, calling for 'truly democratic foundations of world order, binding norms of international law, the indisputable authority of the UN Security Council, mutual respect and equality for all countries, and their free choice of development paths.'
Context: Primakov Readings Forum
The remarks were delivered as part of Putin's greeting to participants of the 12th International Scientific and Expert Forum 'Primakov Readings,' themed 'A World Without Rules: A Power Game.' Putin described the forum's theme as one that 'very accurately characterises the alarming trends' now evident in contemporary international relations.
The greeting was read aloud by Yuri Ushakov, the Russian leader's aide for international affairs, in Putin's absence from the event.
Broader Significance
The statements come amid sustained Western military and financial support for Ukraine and repeated NATO expansions in eastern Europe following Russia's military campaign. Putin's framing — casting Russia as a reactive, defensive actor against an aggressive West — is consistent with the Kremlin's longstanding public narrative, though Western governments and independent analysts broadly contest this characterisation. Notably, this is among the most explicit public references by Putin to the West 'preparing for war,' language that raises the rhetorical stakes at a sensitive juncture in the conflict.