National Post

Ukraine calls for show of unity on day of predicted invasion

Russia pushes talks with West to defuse crisis

- Darya Korsunskay­a natalia Zinets and

• Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called on his country to fly Ukrainian flags from buildings and sing the national anthem in unison on Wednesday, the day that some Western media have cited as a possible start of a Russian invasion.

Ukrainian officials stressed that Zelenskiy was not predicting an attack on that date, but responding with skepticism to foreign media reports. Several Western media organizati­ons have quoted U.S. and other officials citing the date as when Russian forces would be ready for an attack.

“They tell us Feb. 16 will be the day of the attack. We will make it a day of unity,” Zelenskiy said in a video address to the nation.

“They are trying to frighten us by yet again naming a date for the start of military action,” Zelenskiy said.

“On that day, we will hang our national flags, wear yellow and blue banners, and show the whole world our unity.”

Zelenskiy has long said that while he believes Russia is threatenin­g his country the likelihood of an imminent attack has been overstated by Ukraine’s Western allies, responding to Moscow’s efforts to intimidate Ukraine and sow panic.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Zelenskiy’s chief of staff, told Reuters the president was responding in part “with irony” to media reports of the potential date of the invasion.

“It is quite understand­able why Ukrainians today are skeptical about various ‘specific dates’ of the socalled ‘start of the invasion’ announced in the media,” he said. “When the ‘start of the invasion’ becomes some sort of rolling tour date, such media announceme­nts can only be taken with irony.”

U.S. officials said they were not predicting an assault ordered by Russian President Vladimir Putin on a specific day, but repeated warnings that it could come at any time.

“I won’t get into a specific date, I don’t think that would be smart. I would just tell you that it is entirely possible that he could move with little to no warning,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters. Earlier, Kirby said Moscow was still adding to its military capabiliti­es on the Ukrainian frontier.

Russia has more than 100,000 troops massed near the border of Ukraine. It denies Western accusation­s that it is planning an invasion, but says it could take unspecifie­d “military-technical” action unless a range of demands are met, including barring Kyiv from ever joining the NATO alliance.

Russia suggested on Monday that it was ready to keep talking to the West to try to defuse the security crisis.

In a televised exchange, Putin was shown asking his foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, whether there was a chance of an agreement to address Russia’s security concerns, or whether it was just being dragged into tortuous negotiatio­ns.

Lavrov replied: “We have already warned more than once that we will not allow endless negotiatio­ns on questions that demand a solution today.”

But he added: “It seems to me that our possibilit­ies are far from exhausted … At this stage, I would suggest continuing and building them up.”

Western countries have threatened sanctions on an unpreceden­ted scale if Russia does invade. The Group of Seven large economies warned on Monday of “economic and financial sanctions which will have massive and immediate consequenc­es on the Russian economy.”

After speaking with the foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine, UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres said he still believed “from his own analysis, his own hopes” that there would not be a conflict, a UN spokespers­on said.

Moscow says Ukraine’s quest to join NATO poses a threat. While NATO has no immediate plans to admit Ukraine, Western countries say they cannot negotiate over a sovereign country’s right to form alliances.

Ukraine is already suffering economic damage from the standoff. A surge in the price of five-year credit default swaps on Ukrainian sovereign bonds suggested that markets gave Kyiv a 42 per cent probabilit­y of defaulting.

U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan told congressio­nal leaders on Monday that Washington was considerin­g offering Ukraine up to $1 billion in sovereign loan guarantees to calm markets, a source familiar with the adviser’s call told Reuters.

Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines, Ukraine’s biggest airline, said its insurers had terminated cover for at least some of its aircraft on flights in Ukrainian airspace.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz held talks in Kyiv with Zelenskiy. On Tuesday, Scholz is due to fly to Moscow, the latest Western official to make the trip after French President Emmanuel Macron and two British ministers went last week.

 ?? ALEKSEY FILIPPOV / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A Ukrainian teenager digs trenches for soldiers serving on that country’s eastern front and facing off with Russianbac­ked separatist­s. U.S. and other officials have cited Feb. 16 as a date that Russian forces would be ready to attack.
ALEKSEY FILIPPOV / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A Ukrainian teenager digs trenches for soldiers serving on that country’s eastern front and facing off with Russianbac­ked separatist­s. U.S. and other officials have cited Feb. 16 as a date that Russian forces would be ready to attack.

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