In her recent blog entry in the Danish newspaper Politiko, Krarup suggested that the EU is badly in need of a sober analysis of Russia and lamented Brussels' inability and unwillingness to look realistically at Russia. Krarup ventured to call Kristian Jensen "a victim of EU propaganda."
Er Kristian Jensen offer for EU propaganda? Lav en sober analyse af Rusland. https://t.co/Xt1kmXNq9B
— Marie Krarup (@MarieKrarup) September 16, 2016
The West's relations with Moscow rapidly deteriorated in light of Crimea's re-unification with Russia. According to Kristian Jensen, Russia must be punished for violating the international legal order.
"Frankly speaking, international legal order is politically determined. When someone says that it's fine for Kosovo to break away from Serbia, then no international law is violated. When the Crimea does, then it is, all of a sudden. International legal order is not carved in stone," Marie Krarup retorted.
"Long before Vladimir Putin came to power, Solzhenitsyn raised the issue of Crimea and the Russian regions in the eastern and southeastern part of the Ukrainian Soviet republic. In 1991, he urged Russian President Boris Yeltsin to reserve the right to revise borders if the Ukrainians were to declare independence. Solzhenitsyn asked why the Ukrainians on the one hand quite understandably toppled statues of Lenin, while on the other hand kept clinging to the false boundaries that the very same Lenin had redrawn for tactical reasons after the Civil War," Krarup wrote, questioning sarcastically whether Solzhenitsyn, too, "lay himself flat for Putin."
Krarup compared Ukraine's situation to a child forced to choose between mother and father in a divorce, but instead would like to escape the choice and continue living with both of them. According to Krarup, it was "very foolish" of the EU to force Ukraine into such a choice that eventually led to the country's break-up.
"Open your eyes, make a sober analysis and try to avoid the conflicts that might arise if the West continues its confrontation with Russia. We need each other in the long term," Krarup wrote.
Earlier, Krarup notoriously said that she would gladly accept the help of Vladimir Putin, Marine Le Pen and "Satan himself" in dismantling the EU, despite ideological differences.
Unsurprisingly, Krarup's remarks, which obviously contradict the Danish political discourse, triggered a lot of criticism even from the Danish People's Party government allies the Conservatives.
"It's worrisome that the Danish People's Party's defense spokeswoman is so fond of the biggest military threat to Denmark in the form of Mr. Putin's Russia," Conservative defense spokesman Rasmus Jarlov wrote on Facebook.