Immediately following President Vladimir Putin’s warning that he had not even begun to get serious in the war in Ukraine, the council of the Russian parliament decided on Monday that the lower house would meet in an extraordinary session on July 15 in Moscow.
Putin dared the US and its allies to try and defeat Russia in Ukraine, which Russia invaded on February 24 during a meeting with parliamentary leaders on Thursday. All of the parliamentary leaders praised Putin’s choices.
Some amendments on competition and information policy were listed by the Russian parliament, which is controlled by a party that consistently backs Putin.
The leader of the 325-seat United Russia party, Vladimir Vasilyev, announced that the 450-seat parliament would discuss more than 60 issues during the session.
On the Telegram channel of the pro-Putin party, Vasilyev stated that “it is essential that the processes taking place right now receive a legal response.”
Vasilyev explained, “The council discussed the agenda for the 15th: we plan to consider slightly less than 60 issues. He didn’t say what the problems were. More than 80 draught laws, according to the Communist Party, would be discussed.
Vyacheslav Volodin, the speaker of the Duma, informed Vladimir Putin during their meeting on Thursday that the Russian parliament would assist two self-declared breakaway republics in eastern Ukraine that receive support from Russia in developing their legal systems.
Putin claims that Moscow had to defend Russian-speaking people from persecution, a need for the “special military operation” in Ukraine, which he claims the West has ignored.
Putin, according to Ukraine and its Western backers, lacks justification for what they call a land grab a la imperialism against a nation whose borders Moscow recognised as the Soviet Union broke apart.
Putin has framed the conflict more and more as a conflict between Russia and the United States, which he claims has humiliated Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 by expanding NATO to the east and was using
The US has made it clear time and time again that it does not want to fight Russia. In March, President Joe Biden stated that Vladimir Putin could not continue in office. The White House later clarified that this did not imply that Washington was trying to overthrow the Russian government.