The commemoration is Putin's fourth since sending troops into Ukraine

Moscow (AFP) - Russian President Vladimir Putin will host a lavish World War II Victory Day parade in Moscow on Friday, an event the Kremlin hopes will rally patriotism at home and project strength abroad as its troops fight in Ukraine.

More than 20 foreign dignitaries, including China’s Xi Jinping, are scheduled to attend the annual parade this year, the fourth since Moscow launched a full-scale military assault on its neighbour in 2022.

Officials promise that commemorations this year – the 80th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany – will be the “biggest” ever, with Putin ordering a “humanitarian” truce with Ukraine over the holiday.

Ukraine, which has dismissed the truce as a farce, has called the events in Russia a “parade of cynicism” and warned that it cannot guarantee the safety of world leaders attending.

The festival will be marked with a massive parade of military equipment and soldiers through Red Square, culminating in an address by Putin.

Since sending troops into Ukraine, Putin has frequently drawn parallels between Russia’s modern-day army and the Soviet soldiers who fought Nazi Germany.

In Moscow, which was adorned in red flags and signs reading “victory”, 40-year-old dentist Tatiana Rybakova said she hoped for peace.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and Chinese President Xi Jinping are in Moscow for the commemorations

“We are waiting for it so people can be happy and healthy, which is the most important thing,” she said, passing the tanks lined up before Red Square.

“The holiday makes us proud of our country,” said Vladimir, 40, who came with his pregnant wife and friends to see the military gear on display in the capital.

At a dinner in honour of visiting foreign leaders, Putin proposed a toast to “victory”.

Russia began its assault on Ukraine in February 2022, hoping to take the country in days, but has since become embroiled in a huge, bloody conflict that has killed tens of thousands.

- ‘Dear friend’ Xi -

Security has been tight in Moscow, where organisers have banned attendees from bringing vape pens, electric scooters or “any animals” to the Victory Parade.

Authorities have also jammed mobile internet connections in the capital, citing the threat of Ukrainian attacks.

China's Xi Jinping is attending events this year

Putin unilaterally ordered a three-day truce for the duration of the holiday, starting Thursday, but Ukraine has accused Russia of breaking it hundreds of times.

Ukrainian authorities reported strikes in the southern city of Kherson and the central Dnipropetrovsk region overnight, with two people wounded.

Authorities in western Russia’s Belgorod border region said a Ukrainian drone strike hit the city council building, adding that no one was injured.

Kyiv argues the parade has “nothing to do with the victory over Nazism” and that those marching on Red Square were “quite likely” implicit in crimes against Ukrainians.

The two most important guests this year are China’s Xi Jinping and Brazil’s Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Despite warnings from Brussels, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico will also attend – the only leader from the European Union taking part.

That drew criticism from France, whose Europe Minister Benjamin Haddad said: “It’s not the place of a European leader to be in Moscow today.”

Aleksandar Vucic, president of Serbia, a country with historically strong ties to Moscow, will also join.

The day before the parade, Xi and Putin met in the Kremlin, where the two held talks for more than three hours.

After their meeting, Putin addressed the Chinese leader as his “dear friend”, while the two issued messages of defiance towards the West.

- ‘Great Patriotic War’ -

World War II is officially remembered in Russia as the “Great Patriotic War”, beginning with Germany’s surprise invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 and ending with Germany’s capitulation in 1945.

The period between 1939 and 1941, when the Soviet Union had a non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany, is glossed over in official history books.

Putin has made May 9 Russia's most important public holiday

The war had a devastating impact on the Soviet Union, resulting in more than 20 million civilian and military deaths.

Throughout his quarter-century in power, Putin has tapped into this national trauma, making May 9 Russia’s most important public holiday and championing his army as defenders against fascism.

Authorities banned criticism of the military weeks after the Ukraine offensive began, and have since charged thousands in the biggest domestic crackdown in Russia’s post-Soviet history.

School textbooks introduced since the offensive refer to Ukraine as an “ultra-nationalist state”, likening it to the Nazi occupation government that ruled the country between 1941 and 1944.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has called such claims “incomprehensible”.

In a symbolic show of support for Kyiv to coincide with the parade, Ukraine’s Western backers are expected on Friday to sign off on the creation of a special tribunal to try Russia’s top leadership over its military offensive at a meeting in Lviv.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer also announced new sanctions targeting Russia’s so-called shadow fleet ahead of a meeting of the Joint Expeditionary Force (JEF) in Norway on Friday, with support for Ukraine set to be on the agenda.