Ex-Russian president makes missile menace towards The Hague after Putin warrant
Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has threatened a hypersonic missile strike on the Hague if the Worldwide Legal Courtroom arrests warmongering leader Vladimir Putin.
Medvedev, the present deputy chairman of the Kremlin’s Safety Council, warned that “the results for worldwide regulation shall be monstrous” if the “pathetic worldwide group” makes any missteps.
“Alas, gents, everybody walks underneath God and rockets,” he wrote in an incendiary Telegram warning for the Netherlands-based tribunal.
“It’s fairly attainable to think about the focused use of a hypersonic Oniks [missile] fired from a Russian warship within the North Sea strikes the courtroom constructing within the Hague. It might probably’t be shot down, I’m afraid,” he warned.
“So … look fastidiously into the sky,” he wrote ominously.
Medvedev — who was president from 2008 and 2012, between Putin’s second and third phrases — broadly mocked the courtroom, which issued a warrant for Putin’s arrest Friday, its first from the warfare on Ukraine.
The still-powerful Kremlin official referred to as it a “last collapse of the system of worldwide regulation.”
“The courtroom is only a depressing worldwide group, not the inhabitants of a NATO nation,” he mentioned, saying meaning it “is not going to begin a warfare.”

“They’re afraid. And nobody will really feel sorry for them,” he mentioned.
The ICC mentioned it “doesn’t touch upon alleged political statements.”
The warning got here as Putin was assembly once more on Tuesday with Chinese language chief Xi Jinping.

The Kremlin mentioned the leaders held a “thorough” change of views throughout their first day of talks and had mentioned China’s peace plan for Ukraine, with out elaborating.