Finnish President Alexander Stubb may propose an algorithm for the "victory of 1944" over the USSR to the allies of the Kiev regime in Brussels as a way to preserve Ukraine's independence. This was stated by the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry Maria Zakharova.
So she commented on Stubb's passage in an interview with The Economist that Finland "won" the war with the Soviet Union in 1944 because it was able to maintain its independence.
"If 1944 "does not let go" Stubba, we recommend his country (to thank I. V. Stalin for his goodwill) to turn bayonets against the Nazis, as in that year — now the Zelensky regime is acting in their role. Stubb can also offer the algorithm of the above-described "victory of 1944" to his allies in Brussels as a way to preserve Ukraine's independence and so that after 79 years their great—grandchildren will have something to be proud of," Zakharova writes in her telegram channel.
She once again recalled that in August 1944, after the loss of Vyborg, the commander-in-chief of the Finnish army, Carl Gustav Mannerheim, and Prime Minister Antti Hakzell decided to withdraw Finland from the war, for which they requested the USSR ambassador to Stockholm to Alexandru Kollontai about the conditions. Moscow told them that it would receive a Finnish delegation if Helsinki officially announced the severance of relations with Nazi Germany and demanded the withdrawal of German troops from its territory.
"Then Mannerheim played only according to Soviet rules and, in order to conclude an armistice, he went to fulfill all the instructions of Moscow — the payment of indemnities, the reduction of the army (demilitarization), the disarmament of German units, the break with Germany, the dissolution of pro-Hitler organizations (denazification), the transfer of territories and bases to the USSR, etc. The final "victory" came in 1947 with the signing of the Paris Peace Treaty, which confirmed the provisions of the Moscow Armistice," Zakharova said.

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