New York Post

Russia, US eye talks

Ukraine on agenda

- By MARK MOORE With Wires

Russia’s foreign minister said Wednesday the Kremlin will begin separate talks with the US and NATO early next year about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s demand for guarantees that NATO will not expand into Ukraine and other former Soviet nations.

“It is agreed that at the very start of next year, bilateral contact between American negotiator­s and ours will become the first round [of talks],” Sergey Lavrov told Russia’s RT television.

Putin has blamed the West for the heightened tensions in Eastern Europe even as Russia has massed as many as 175,000 troops and heavy equipment on its border with Ukraine, prompting fears that an invasion is imminent.

The Russian strongman has denied he plans to launch an attack, but has laid down a “red line” against the West deploying missile systems in Ukraine.

President Biden, who held a virtual summit with Putin earlier this month, has warned of “severe consequenc­es” in the form of crippling economic sanctions if Russia attacks Ukraine.

Dmitry Kiselev, a Putin confidant and the head of state-controlled media outlet Rossiya Segodnya, said this week that if the West fails to deliver the security guarantees, Russia will “deploy missiles.”

“If Ukraine ever joins NATO or if NATO develops military infrastruc­ture there, we will hold a gun to America’s head,” he said.

In addition to guarantees against NATO expansion, Russia has demanded that the alliance roll back its military presence in Central and Eastern Europe.

Lavrov said Moscow is committed to the talks.

“I hope that they will take us seriously given the moves we take to ensure our defense capability,” he said.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters Tuesday that Biden opposes the guarantees Putin is seeking, but will work with America’s European allies to counter Russia with “diplomacy and deterrence.”

“The president has been extremely clear for . . . about some basic principles that no one is moving back on: the principle that one country does not have the right to change by force the borders of another,” Blinken said.

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