| Putin  says there can be no forgiveness for those who ‘again nurture aggressive plans’ MOSCOW (TASS) -- There can be no forgiveness for those  who have forgotten the lessons of World War Two and are again nurturing  aggressive plans, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Sunday.“The war brought about so many  unbearable ordeals, grief and tears that this cannot be forgotten. And there is  no forgiveness and excuse for
 
                    
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                      | Russian  President Vladimir Putin and Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon watch honour  guards passing by during a commemoration ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown  Soldier on Victory Day, which marks the 76th anniversary of the victory over  Nazi Germany during World War Two, in central Moscow, Russia May 9, 2021.                                     --Photo  agencies |  those who are again nurturing aggressive plans,”  the Russian president said from the reviewing stand during the military parade  on Moscow’s Red Square devoted to the 76th anniversary of the Soviet Union’s  Victory over Nazi Germany in the 1941-1945 Great Patriotic War.As the Russian leader pointed  out, almost a century has passed since “the monstrous Nazi beast was getting  brazen and gaining strength in the centre of Europe and the slogans of racial  and national supremacy sounded  increasingly cynically.” Agreements called upon to stop sliding into a world  war were easily crossed out, he added.
 “History requires making  conclusions and learning lessons but, regrettably, there are attempts to put  much of the ideology of Nazis and those who were obsessed with the delusional  theory of their exclusiveness into service again,” the Russian president  stressed. Putin emphassed that the talk was not only about various radicals and groupings  of international terrorists. “Today we observe a gathering of diehard  castigators, their followers, attempts to rewrite history, justify traitors and  criminals who have their hands  soaked in the blood of hundreds of thousands of civilians,” Putin stated.
 The year 2021 marks 80 years  since the beginning of the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War, the Russian  leader recalled. Putin stressed that June 22, 1941 was one of the most tragic  dates in the country’s history.
 “The enemy attacked our country,  came to our land to kill, sow death and pain, horror and innumerable  sufferings. It wanted not only to overthrow the political order and the Soviet  system but to destroy us as a state, as a nation, wipe our peoples off the face  of the earth,” the Russian leader said. As Putin added, “a common, formidable  and unconquerable feeling of the resolve to repel the aggression, do the utmost  to rout the enemy and ensure that the criminals and killers face inevitable and  fair punishment was a response to the invasion by the Nazi hordes.”
 The Soviet people defended  its Motherland and liberated the peoples of Europe from fascism and passed an  historic verdict on Nazism by the might of weapons on battlefields, the strength  of its moral rightness, the sacrificed courage of soldiers’ mothers,  faithfulness of those who waited for news from the front from their relatives  every day and the strength of love for one’s neighbor inherent in the Russian  character, Putin said.
 
 (Latest Update May 11, 2021)
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