Mirror quoted the Russian deputy: Alaska and Antarctica belong to us

A deputy of Russia's parliament has demanded compensation from the United States, including the return of Alaska under Kremlin control, writes Mirror, past Periscope. Oleg Matveychev, a member of Russian Dumes, was presented Sunday in one of the state news broadcasts with a series of requests to Washington and Kiev. List [...]
A deputy of Russia's parliament has demanded compensation from the United States, including the return of Alaska under Kremlin control, writes Mirror, past Periscope.
Oleg Matveychev, a member of Russian Dumes, was presented Sunday in one of the state news broadcasts with a series of requests to Washington and Kiev.
His list included restoring the territory of 586,412 square miles bought by the Russian Empire from the United States in the Alaskan agreement in 1867.
Matveychev demanded that Russia be compensated by the US state after his country faced the consequences in response to Ukraine's invasion.
Speaking on the Sunday Eve show with Vladimir Sorovyov, he said: “We have to think about damages as a result of the damages caused by sanctions and the war itself because it costs money and we have to compensate for them. ”
He added: “Returning all property to Russia, to those of the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and today's Russia, which have been seized in the United States, and so on,”.
Asked whether the lawmaker meant Alaska and Russia's former ownership of Fort Ross, California, he replied: “This was my next point, just like Antarctica. We discovered it, so it belongs to us”, he stressed.
It was not clear whether he was questioning the legitimacy of the 1867 agreement when the US had bought him for $7.1m, or was having political intention.
All in the end, Solovyov seemed to have been put behind a nuclear threat to those who took our money.
He said: “
Your choice. Tactical or strategic, make your choice. You stole our money, you're our thieves, our conversation is very short with you: a bullet in our heads”.
The first Russian colony in Alaska took place in 1784 and was called "Three Saints Bay"
Fort Ross, a former Russian boss who Sorovyov applied to return to them, is three hours from San Francisco and was built by a Russian-American company in 1812. /Mirtor/Periscope












