The night of the Hamas massacre in Israel, the Israeli flag lit up on buildings throughout Kyiv in solidarity with the Jewish state, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the terrorist group and called Israel’s right to defence “unquestionable”. Zelensky even criticised Iran’s role in the attack, going farther than even US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Contrast that with the muted statement from the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which framed the attack as “another … vicious circle of violence” and called for the establishment of a Palestinian State on 1967 borders. In Moscow, three days after the massacre, Russian President Vladimir Putin blamed the United States for the incident and didn’t offer a word of condolence or condemnation. In St. Petersburg, police even prevented people from laying flowers outside the Israeli consulate.
Russia has not always been so cold to Israel, nor has Ukraine always been so warm. In the past Putin has made efforts to court Israel, even holding yearly meetings with Israeli leaders. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has previously campaigned on his purported close relations to Putin. The Russian president himself once reportedly warned Yasser Arafat that he would consider an attack on Israel an attack on Russia due to the millions of Russian citizens living there.