Texarkana Gazette

Tillerson: Ukraine factors into split

- BY JOSH LEDERMAN

VIENNA—U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Thursday that Ukraine was the sole sticking point keeping the United States and Russia from forging a closer relationsh­ip, suggesting that all other disputes were secondary.

“The issue that stands in the way is Ukraine,” Tillerson said.

The assessment from America’s top diplomat notably played down other areas of dispute, particular­ly Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election. U.S. intelligen­ce agencies, including the CIA and FBI, have concluded the Kremlin interfered in the election in an effort to help now-President Donald Trump and hurt Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Trump has repeatedly cast doubt on that finding, and a special counsel is investigat­ing whether members of the Trump campaign colluded with the Russian effort. He has said he believes Russian President Vladimir Putin’s personal denials that Moscow meddled.

But Tillerson hasn’t shied away from accusing the Kremlin of election interferen­ce. One of the Trump team’s toughest voices on Russia, he said in a speech last week that there was “clear evidence of Russia meddling in democratic elections in the U.S. and Europe,” and he called it part of an “active threat of a recently resurgent Russia.”

Tillerson’s focus on Ukraine came as he met with European diplomats at the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe, establishe­d during the Cold War to serve as a bridge between East and West. Tillerson insisted the U.S. could never overlook Russia’s “attempted annexation” of Crimea or Moscow’s military intrusion in eastern Ukraine.

“We should be clear about the source of this violence,” Tillerson said. “Russia is arming, leading, training and fighting alongside anti-government forces.”

Trump campaigned on the need to improve ties with Russia, Tillerson said, adding that “normalizin­g” relations between the nuclear powers was something the U.S. still “badly would like to do.” He said that from the start, the Trump administra­tion had told Moscow that addressing Ukraine was essential to warmer ties.

“We can have difference­s in other arenas, in Syria. We can have difference­s in other areas,” Tillerson said. “But when one country invades another, that is a difference that is hard to look past or to reconcile.”

The sharp rebuke of Russia came just before Tillerson met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. Seated around a large table with their aides, the two said nothing of substance when journalist­s were allowed in for a few seconds to witness the start of their meeting.

Tillerson met later with OSCE special monitors who track the security situation in Ukraine— including one injured by a hand grenade. The secretary of state said he’d made progress with the Russian diplomat, though he declined to tell reporters what it was.

“We get dialogue, we get cooperatio­n. We don’t have it solved,” Tillerson said. “You don’t solve it in one meeting.”

The strained ties between the two countries were also palpable in Moscow’s descriptio­n of the meeting. The Russian Foreign Ministry said Lavrov had told Tillerson that aggressive U.S. military rhetoric about North Korea is “impermissi­ble.” The Russian statement also included an unusual allegation: that the United States is trying to recruit Russian journalist­s in the U.S. as spies.

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