The Borneo Post

US and Russia clash over Ukraine as OSCE meets

-

VIENNA: The United States and Russia clashed over the crisis in Ukraine as OSCE foreign ministers met in Vienna yesterday, casting doubt on efforts to negotiate terms for a UN peacekeepi­ng force.

The regional body has 57 members, but all eyes were on US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who were due to meet one- on- one later in the day.

At stake are efforts to end the brutal war between Kiev government forces and Russianbac­ked separatist­s in eastern Ukraine by deploying a United Nations force to protect the OSCE’s unarmed monitoring mission.

Moscow and Washington both back such a mission in principle but disagree over its mandate, and as ministers sat down together in Vienna’s magnificen­t Hofburg Palace there was little sign of a breakthrou­gh.

“We’ve reached an absolute low point regarding confidence between the main players,” Thomas Greminger, the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe’s secretary general, admitted as talks began.

After long resisting the idea, Russia now wants a UN peacekeepi­ng force to help end the war between Kiev and Russianbac­ked separatist­s in the east of the country that has killed more than 10,000 people since 2014.

But under Russia’s vision, the force will have a limited mandate to protect the OSCE’s ceasefire monitors.

Western powers, led by the United States, want a force with a robust mandate that would allow it to protect the 600 OSCE monitors there, police ceasefire lines and investigat­e ceasefire breaches across eastern Ukraine.

They fear that a United Nations mission that only polices the front line would serve to create a frozen conf lict that would de facto lock in Russian gains from its interventi­on in Ukraine.

Addressing the opening OSCE session, Lavrov accused Western powers of seeking to “disrupt specific considerat­ion” of a draft UN Security Council resolution to set up a UN force to escort the OSCE under its current mandate.

The US idea of a robust force, he argued, would amount to “an occupation­al administra­tion ... in order to bury a package of measures unanimousl­y approved by the UN Security Council and to solve this problem by force”.

Tillerson did not directly address the peacekeepi­ng issue – which is not a matter for the OSCE to decide – but was strident in his condemnati­on of the threat he said Russia poses to the existing unarmed mission.

“Of all the challenges confrontin­g the OSCE today, none is more challengin­g nor vexing than the situation in Ukraine,” he warned, stressing the US will never lift sanctions until Russia returns control of Crimea and the disputed Donbass region back to Ukraine.

Tillerson noted that more civilians were killed this year in eastern Ukraine than in 2016, and that ceasefire violations are up 60 per cent. — AFP

 ??  ?? Sergei Lavrov
Sergei Lavrov
 ??  ?? Rex Tillerson
Rex Tillerson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia