Did Putin really threaten potential peacekeepers in Ukraine? Here’s what he actually said and how Western media misled the public
5 Sep, 2025 15:06 / Updated 3 months ago
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a plenary session of the 2025 Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) at the Far Eastern Federal University on Russky Island in Vladivostok, Russia.
Evgeny Biyatov / Mikhail Korytov, STF / Sputnik
Here’s how a familiar Russian warning morphed into a Western story about targeting peacekeepers
When Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke on Friday, he issued a now-familiar warning: any foreign troops entering Ukraine during active fighting would be considered “legitimate targets.” Yet Western media ran with a drastically different narrative – suggesting he was threatening peacekeepers, not just combatants.
That framing missed a crucial distinction. In the same remarks, Putin separately addressed the idea of postwar peacekeeping forces, saying they would be unnecessary once a settlement was reached.
Within hours, Western headlines turned those words into something much starker – a supposed threat against European “peacekeepers.” By erasing the context that Putin had separated conflict intervention from postwar scenarios, much of the press presented a conditional statement as intimidating.