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Ukraine crisis: tense talks between US and Russia open in Geneva

- Julian Borger in Washington

Expectatio­ns of a breakthrou­gh have been set low as formal talks opened between senior US and Russian officials in Geneva at the start of a critical week of diplomacy over Ukraine as Russian troops remained massed along its borders.

The Russian deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, and his delegation arrived under Swiss police escort at the US diplomatic mission in Geneva for face-to-face talks with Wendy Sherman, the US deputy secretary of state, and her team.

Senior diplomats and military officers from the US and Russia held a working dinner in Geneva on Sunday evening before Monday’s formal negotiatio­ns to discuss Moscow’s demands. Those were set out last month in two draft treaties, one with the US and one with Nato. Much of their content is unacceptab­le to Washington and the alliance, most importantl­y a pledge that Ukraine will never be a Nato member.

Sherman “stressed the United States’ commitment to the internatio­nal principles of sovereignt­y, territoria­l integrity, and the freedom of sovereign nations to choose their own alliances”, according to a state department account of the dinner. It said she told the Russians that the US would however “welcome genuine progress through diplomacy”.

Russia has 100,000 troops positioned near Ukraine and a similar number are primed to be mobilised at short notice, according to Blinken, who said on Sunday that the week’s diplomacy was a moment of truth for the Russian president.

“There are two paths before us,” he told CNN. “There’s a path of dialogue and diplomacy to try to resolve some of these difference­s and avoid a confrontat­ion. The other path is confrontat­ion and massive consequenc­es for Russia if it renews its aggression on Ukraine. We’re about to test the propositio­n about which path President Putin’s prepared to take.”

The Biden administra­tion insists that sovereign states’ right to apply for Nato membership is not negotiable. Nor are US troop deployment­s in Europe, administra­tion officials have stressed. They said, however, that Washington would discuss other security guarantees, such as mutual limits on missile deployment­s and military exercises on the continent. That would fall far short of the comprehens­ive changes Moscow is demanding.

Few if any diplomatic observers expect a quick deal to resolve the crisis this week, and the opposite – a complete breakdown – is possible. It should quickly become apparent whether Russia is interested in negotiatin­g over its proposals or whether they were designed to be rejected, creating a pretext for a war that Putin has already decided on.

“We’re about to test the propositio­n of which path President Putin wants to take this week,” Blinken, told the ABC News programme This Week. “And the question really now is whether President Putin will take the path of diplomacy and dialogue or seek confrontat­ion.”

“Lower your expectatio­ns and then lower them some more,” said Melinda Haring, the deputy director of the Eurasia Center at the Atlantic Council. “Watch Moscow’s demands in the meetings. If Russia insists that Nato cannot expand ever again, we will know that Moscow is preparing for war in Ukraine, since this is a red line for the west.”

Sherman and Ryabkov lead teams of senior diplomats and defence officials. Sherman was accompanie­d to the Sunday night dinner in Geneva by Lieutenant General James Mingus, the Joint Staff director of operations, Ryabkov by Russia’s deputy defence, Colonel General Aleksandr Fomin.

France’s European affairs minister, Clément Beaune, complained on Sunday that the EU was being excluded from the talks, an omission that he said played into Putin’s hands by dividing the west. “Europeans shouldn’t be absent from the negotiatio­n table,” he told the CNEWS TV network.

The state department account of the Sunday night dinner said the US would talk about certain bilateral issues with Russia in Geneva, “but will not discuss European security without our European allies and partners”. France and other European states will be represente­d at the two other rounds of talks over the course of the week.

The negotiatin­g teams will move to Brussels on Wednesday for a session of the Nato-Russia Council, in which all 30 alliance members will take part. It will be the first such meeting since 2019 of the council, which was establishe­d in 2002 to defuse tensions and build consensus.

The next day there will be a meeting in Vienna of the permanent council of the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe (OSCE), chaired by Poland. Representa­tives will be on a more junior, ambassador­ial level than the Nato session the previous day. It will, however, be imbued with particular significan­ce because it will include non-Nato European states such as Finland and Sweden, who are contemplat­ing their future in light of Russia‘s pressure on Ukraine. Finnish leaders in particular have hinted heavily in the past few days that they might look anew at Nato membership.

“We believe that after bilateral talks with the United States and then the Nato format, in this wider forum, some developmen­ts are possible,” said Nikodem Rachoń, the spokespers­on for the Polish embassy in Washington.

The OSCE talks are the only negotiatio­ns in which Ukraine will take part, though its president, Volodymyr Zelensky, announced a parallel bilateral diplomatic initiative directly with Moscow last month.

Washington says the US-Russia meeting in Geneva would primarily be an opportunit­y to present positions rather than resolve them.

“I don’t think we’re going to see any breakthrou­ghs next week. We’re going to listen to their concerns; they’ll listen to our concerns, and we’ll see if there are grounds for progress,” Blinken said. “But to make actual progress, it’s very hard to see that happening when there’s an ongoing escalation, when Russia has a gun to the head of Ukraine, with 100,000 troops near its borders, [and] the possibilit­y of doubling that in very short order. So, if we’re seeing deescalati­on, if we’re seeing a reduction in tensions, that is the kind of environmen­t in which we could make real progress.”

In Geneva, Sherman will also list the costs to Russia if it goes ahead with military action in Ukraine, including sweeping financial sanctions, possibly cutting it off from the internatio­nal electronic payments system Swift, and limits on its citizens’ ability to buy western technology.

According to the New York Times, the chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, Gen Mark Milley, has also warned his Russian counterpar­t, Gen Valery Gerasimov, that an invasion would face a long insurgency, backed by advanced US weaponry. US officials have refused to comment on reports that Stinger anti-aircraft missiles were being sent to Ukraine in anticipati­on of such a guerrilla war.

“This week’s diplomacy is critical. From a certain moment it was clear that the west would not say an outright no to Moscow’s proposal because too much was at stake. The question was, how far Washington and Europeans are ready to go with the talks,” said Andrey Baklitskiy, a senior research fellow at the Moscow State Institute of Internatio­nal Relations.

Russia’s rushed military interventi­on in Kazakhstan has thrown another wildcard on to the table, but Baklitskiy does not expect it to have any impact on the Ukraine crisis. “There is no direct link between Ukraine and Kazakhstan. Even the people handling the issue in Russia are different, except for the very top,” he said.

Others say it is too early to tell whether the uprising and the response will unnerve or embolden the Kremlin. “To what extent are the Russians worried about Kazakhstan or believe they can manage it? I don’t think we have a feel for that yet,” one European diplomat said.

If there is wriggle room at all in this week’s negotiatio­ns, it could come in one of a handful of categories. The Biden administra­tion and Nato’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenber­g, have ruled out bowing to Russian demands to preclude Ukraine’s membership of the alliance, but some analysts say that leaves open the possibilit­y of a compromise, in which the theoretica­l possibilit­y of membership is asserted at the same time as a clear statement that there would be many obstacles to overcome and so it would not happen in the near future.

That may be palatable in Washington and Nato capitals, but it may well not be enough for Putin. “Frankly, I’d be surprised if it was,” the European diplomat said. “Given their demands, I think they prefer to have the issue not addressed at all. Otherwise it shows they haven’t got their demand about Ukraine not joining Nato written down.”

US officials have repeatedly denied reports that Washington wouldnegot­iate on troop deployment­s in Europe but said they were willing to discuss reciprocal limits on missile deployment­s and military exercises.

“Russia has said it feels threatened by the prospect of offensive missile systems being placed in Ukraine. As President Biden told President Putin, the United States has no intention of doing that. So, this is one area where we may be able to reach an understand­ing if Russia is willing to make a reciprocal commitment,” the senior US administra­tion official said.

Blinken said the US was also open to talking about limits on missiles previously banned by the Intermedia­terange Nuclear Forces treaty, from which the Trump administra­tion withdrew in 2019 following longstandi­ng US complaints of Russian violations.

“There may be grounds for renewing that,” Blinken said, adding that there could also be limits on war games.

“There are agreements on the deployment of convention­al forces in Europe, things like the scope and scale of exercises that if adhered to reciprocal­ly – that is, Russia makes good on its commitment­s, which it’s repeatedly violated – then there are grounds for reducing tensions, creating greater transparen­cy, creating greater confidence,” he said. “All of which would address concerns that Russia purports to have.”

Missiles and war games are both areas where Russia has called for limits, albeit only on the US and Nato’s activities. It is an open question whether Putin would be satisfied with deals in these areas without some radical change in Ukraine’s status.

“Putin could go back and say we’ve been assured that there’s no imminent admission of Ukraine to Nato and we have assurances there will be no strike weapons – combat aircraft, missiles – or US bases in Ukraine,” said Rajan Menon, a political scientist at the City University of New York. “But will Russians insist that this be put in writing? That’s the sticky part.”

The most severe limiting factor in the negotiatio­ns could turn out to be the political constraint­s on the main parties.

“If you look at the polarisati­on here, it suggests that we have no bandwidth on the US side to actually do anything, sue for peace, let alone come up with a treaty or series of treaties,” said Fiona Hill, a former senior director for European and Russian affairs on the US national security council. “Putin has his own time frame of elections in 2024, and he wants to have something to show because his own popularity is lagging somewhat.”

The deployment of so many troops and the Kremlin’s rhetoric have set high

Russian expectatio­ns of what would constitute a satisfacto­ry outcome from the week’s diplomacy. Officials in Moscow have insisted that nothing short of “legally formulated guarantees of security” would be enough to pull back the troops from the Ukrainian border.

“Putin has put himself in a position where he has to come back with something, without looking really weak,” Menon said. “Given the political realities now, am I confident that a deal is going to happen? No, not at all. I think it’s going to be very, very dicey.”

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Russian troops taking part in drills in the southern Rostov region of the country. Moscow has amassed 100,000 troops in the Ukrainian border region.
Photograph: AP Russian troops taking part in drills in the southern Rostov region of the country. Moscow has amassed 100,000 troops in the Ukrainian border region.
 ?? Photograph: Mandel Ngan/Sputnik/AFP/Getty ?? The US president, Joe Biden, and his Russian counterpar­t, Vladimir Putin.
Photograph: Mandel Ngan/Sputnik/AFP/Getty The US president, Joe Biden, and his Russian counterpar­t, Vladimir Putin.

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