The Daily Telegraph

Separatist­s’ military exercise fuels Ukraine fears of Russian attack

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow

RUSSIA is leading “large-scale military exercises” of separatist forces in the east of Ukraine, Kyiv said yesterday, as concerns intensify over an invasion comparable with the 2014 annexation of Crimea.

Fears for the Donbass region, where areas are under the control of Russianbac­ked separatist­s, flared earlier this month when Moscow started moving troops towards the border with Ukraine. In a rare statement, Ukrainian military intelligen­ce said that separatist­s in both the Donetsk and Luhansk areas had mobilised their forces, including reservists, for drills that kicked off at the start of the week under the direction of the Russian military.

The Kremlin yesterday insisted that it was not planning to launch an attack.

“Russia is not harbouring any aggressive plans. It would be wrong to suggest otherwise,” said Dmitry Peskov, spokesman for Vladimir Putin.

Moscow has accused Kyiv of dragging its feet on implemente­nting peace accords from 2015, and claimed that the Ukrainian side is attacking the separatist­s. The Ukrainian defence ministry reported injuries to three of its soldiers in the region yesterday, amid simmering hostilitie­s.

Moscow has long denied its military involvemen­t in eastern Ukraine despite overwhelmi­ng evidence to the contrary, showing Russia deployed forces to flashpoint­s in the Donbass and dispatched senior officials to train local forces. Reports of the exercises came as the defence ministers in Russia and China, which already hold joint drills, agreed to further boost military cooperatio­n. Sergei Shoigu, the Russian defence minister, complained that an “increased number” of US aircraft were patrolling near his country’s eastern border, which he described as a threat to both Moscow and Beijing.

He accused US bombers of rehearsing a nuclear strike on Russia from two different directions earlier this month and complained that the planes had come within 13 miles of the border. The Kremlin, meanwhile, lambasted Washington over reports it was planning to send weapons and military advisers to Ukraine in a show of solidarity.

Mr Peskov said this would “definitely lead to a further escalation on the front line”.

A ceasefire and withdrawal of all heavy weaponry from the front line were agreed in a 2015 peace deal negotiated in Minsk. Government troops and separatist­s have withdrawn their weaponry several times on camera, only to move their artillery and tanks back later. Mr Peskov said: “Complying with the Minsk agreements will certainly be the best security guarantee since the lack of progress in their implementa­tion remains a significan­t irritant and a catalyst that leads to heightened tension in Europe.”

Nikolai Patrushev, a close ally of Mr Putin and chairman of the Russian security council, yesterday likened Washington’s increased support for Ukraine to its earlier presence in Afghanista­n.

He warned that this support would eventually disappear and Ukraine would implode.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom