Vladimir Putin is said to have "somehow threatened" former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, shortly before the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. According to Boris Johnson, who testifies in a BBC documentary, the Russian president would have said "A missile would take a minute".

The Kremlin reacted Monday morning by accusing Boris Johnson of "lying".

"It's either a deliberate lie, but then for what purpose? Or it's an unintentional lie, insofar as he did not understand what President Putin was telling him," the porter told reporters. word of the Kremlin, Dmitry Peskov.

He assured that there had been "no threat by means of missiles".

In the three-part BBC documentary, the first episode of which airs Monday night on BBC Two, the former UK prime minister recounts his "very long" and "amazing" call with the Russian president after his visit to Kyiv early last February.

At that time, Vladimir Putin continued to maintain that he had no intention of invading his Ukrainian neighbor, despite the massive influx of Russian soldiers into the border regions.

Boris Johnson, he says that he had warned the Russian president of the harsh sanctions that Westerners would take if he embarked on this path.

"I don't mean to hurt you, but it would take a minute"

"He said: 'Boris, you say that Ukraine is not going to join NATO anytime soon. (...) What do you mean by 'not anytime soon'?" Says Boris Johnson.

"Well, she is not going to join NATO in the near future, you know that perfectly well," continues the former British leader, an early supporter of the Ukrainians.

"At one point he kind of threatened me and said, 'Boris, I don't want to hurt you, but with a missile it would take a minute' or something," Boris Johnson continued. .

"I think that from the very relaxed tone he took, the detachment he seemed to have, he was playing with my attempts to get him to negotiate," adds the former British leader, who left Downing Street in early September after a succession of scandals.

In the documentary, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky recounts how he came to be enraged at the attitude of Westerners at the time: "If you know that tomorrow Russia is going to invade Ukraine, why is what you don't give me today what to stop it? If you can't, then stop it yourselves."

With AFP

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