MOSCOW, Russia
Russia held its 80th anniversary Victory Day parade on Friday morning with a large military display on Red Square, as President Vladimir Putin welcomed a lineup of world leaders in a show of wartime defiance and international support more than three years into the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Nearly 30 world leaders attended the
celebrations in Moscow, which mark the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany
in World War II. Among them were China’s Xi Jinping, Brazil’s Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva and Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, alongside leaders of Russia’s
traditional allies in Central Asia.
Serbia’s Aleksandar Vučić and
Slovakia’s Robert Fico were the only European leaders
present. Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev and Laos’ Thongloun Sisoulith cancelled
their trips to Russia for Victory Day at the last minute.
As the parade began,
Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov greeted columns of
soldiers, breaking with his predecessor Sergei Shoigu, who now heads
Russia’s Security Council, by attending the Red Square event wearing a civilian
suit and tie.
An announcement at the
beginning of the parade said over 11,000 soldiers from the Defense Ministry and
other security services, including the Federal Security Service (FSB) and
National Guard, marched in the parade. Another 1,500 servicemen who fought
in the “special military operation,” the Kremlin’s official name for the
February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, made an appearance.
Servicemen from “friendly
nations” also took part in Friday’s event, though no North Korean soldiers
marched in the parade. However, after the main celebration, Putin did meet with North Korean officers and thanked them
for their help in fighting Ukrainian forces in the Kursk region.
During his traditional Victory Day address, Putin slammed what he called attempts “to slander the real winners” of World War II, a possible reference to Ukrainian officials who have criticized Moscow’s annual parade, or even to U.S. President Donald Trump’s claim earlier this week that America did more than “any other country in producing a victorious result.”
“Truth and justice are on our
side. The entire country — our society, our people — stand behind those taking
part in the special military operation,” the Russian leader added.
“We are proud of their courage
and determination, of the strength of spirit that has always brought us nothing
but victory,” Putin said. “Russia will remain an invincible defender against
those who support Nazism, Russophobia and anti-Semitism.”
In a nod to Xi, Putin also
highlighted China’s role in World War II, saying, “We’ll always remember that
opening the second front brought victory closer,” a reference to the Second
Sino-Japanese War between the Republic of China and the Empire of Japan.
Unlike previous years, the
Kremlin leader dedicated little of his speech on Friday to the ongoing war
against Ukraine and avoided direct condemnations of the West. In his 2024
address, for example, he criticized “Western elites” for revanchism and
“stoking regional conflicts.”
After Putin’s
speech, nearly 200 tanks, including the WWII-era T-34, opened up the
mechanized section of the parade. Various types of armored vehicles, artillery
systems, drones and infantry vehicles were also seen rolling across Red Square,
followed by a flyover of fighter jets and bombers.
No high-ranking U.S. officials
appeared to be present at the parade, as some had earlier speculated. The
Kremlin had said that
the U.S. Ambassador in Moscow Lynne Tracy was invited to attend, but it was not
immediately clear if she accepted the invitation.


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