The Chancellor claims that if used “wrongly” they can hit Moscow.
Long-range cruise missile Taurus KEPD 350
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz continues to justify himself to the press for his reluctance to supply long-range Taurus missiles to Ukraine.
The German publication Tagesschau quotes the head of government as saying that a cruise missile with a range of 500 kilometers “if used incorrectly could hit a specific target somewhere in Moscow.”
To the question As for why Great Britain and France approved the provision of missiles to Kiev, Scholz said that he would try to explain this “as abstractly as possible from a diplomatic point of view”: they say, these countries “made sure to know what was landing where.”
The Chancellor also once again repeated the thesis about the mandatory participation of the German military in the process of deploying missiles on the territory of Ukraine, which, according to him, is “absolutely excluded.”
- Earlier, Olaf Scholz officially opposed the provision of Taurus missiles to Ukraine, arguing that Germany would seem to be drawn into the war.