Oman Daily Observer

Russia dismisses US Crimea declaratio­n

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MOSCOW: Russia scoffed at a US declaratio­n that said Washington would not accept Moscow’s annexation of Crimea, suggesting the country’s Ukraine policy could change in the future.

“We know the worth of these ‘fateful declaratio­ns’,” Russian foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said in a sarcastic comment on Facebook late on Wednesday.

She suggested that Washington’s Crimea policy could still change — perhaps even under a new leader in the future.

In the declaratio­n, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on Russia to “end its occupation of Crimea,” and said Moscow had sought to “undermine a bedrock internatio­nal principle” shared by democratic states, that no country can change the borders of another by force.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko hailed Washington’s “historic” statement, calling it a “worthy response” to the Kremlin’s provocatio­ns after Donald Trump’s hugely controvers­ial summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week.

The US administra­tion stepped up its damage control operation and on Wednesday also delayed a second summit with the Kremlin chief until next year.

There was no immediate Kremlin reaction to the postponeme­nt, which was announced just a day after the Kremlin said Putin and Trump had agreed in Helsinki to continue their “useful contacts”.

Zakharova derided what she called the inconsiste­ncy of Washington’s policies, citing as examples US reversals on the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and the Paris agreement on slowing climate change.

These “were also official US policy not long ago” because Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama “personally decided so”, she said.

“And then Trump came and decided differentl­y,” she said.

The US declaratio­n came after the Russia’s ambassador to Washington said Putin had made concrete proposals on resolving the conflict in eastern Ukraine to Trump at the Helsinki summit.

The Ambassador, Anatoly Antonov, spoke after a media report said Putin had called for a referendum to be held with the help of the internatio­nal community in Ukraine’s breakaway regions of Donetsk and Lugansk, which Russia-backed separatist­s control.

Speaking about a possible new summit between the Russian and US leaders, Putin’s top foreign policy aide Yury Ushakov said earlier this week that the Kremlin received several days after the Helsinki meeting a US proposal to organise a new summit in Washington “at the end of the year.” Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Centre, said the postponeme­nt of a new summit was “the right move”. “Both sides need to focus on what deliverabl­es can be,” he said on Twitter.

“Most important however is not to let US domestic politics overshadow internatio­nal diplomacy. Learn from Helsinki!”

After a Western-backed popular uprising in Kiev in 2014 ousted a prokremlin regime, Russia annexed Crimea and moved to support a separatist insurgency in Donetsk and Lugansk.

Moscow made Crimea part of Russia after a hastily conducted referendum whose results were rejected by the internatio­nal community.

Putin has said the results of the vote would not be revisited.

In the declaratio­n, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on Russia to “end its occupation of Crimea,” and said Moscow had sought to “undermine a bedrock internatio­nal principle” shared by democratic states, that no country can change the borders of another by force

 ?? — Reuters ?? A Russian armoured vehicle fires during a rehearsal for the Navy Day parade in the Black Sea port of Sevastopol, Crimea, on Thursday.
— Reuters A Russian armoured vehicle fires during a rehearsal for the Navy Day parade in the Black Sea port of Sevastopol, Crimea, on Thursday.

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