The day after the terrible Moscow massacre it doesn't bode well. The Tsar Vladimir Putin announced not only that he had already arrested the material authors of the massacre which left over 140 dead and 200 injured and he openly claimed that now the objective is to make "all those who are behind this barbaric terrorist act" pay, but he dangerously called in question theUkraine, bombarded yesterday by new heavy bombings on Kiev.
Putin said that the 4 have already been arrested terrorists “all foreigners” who attacked the concert hall on the outskirts of Moscow but he dangerously claimed that there would be “a window on the Ukrainian border to let them return”. A statement that threatens a storm as the bombs on Kiev testify. The whole world was unanimous in condemning the massacre in Moscow, claimed byIsis, but now unanimously fears theescalation of Putin. And he also fears that terrorism will spread throughout the world. It is no coincidence that all capitals are rushing to strengthen security measures.
The Ukrainian president's reaction is harsh Zelensky to the accusations of the Russian tsar: "Putin is trying to blame others for what happened, as he always has." It remains to be clarified why Moscow shrugged its shoulders and even considered as "blackmail" the information it received from the American secret services according to which preparations had been underway for days for a possible attack in the Russian capital. But now it is the fear of Russian escalation that is shaking Ukraine and the world.