Toronto Star

U.S. nixes peace talks for now

Ceasefire would legitimize invasion, Blinken says

- SUSIE BLANN AND MATTHEW LEE EMMI KORHONEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday the United States won’t support peace talks in the war in Ukraine until Kyiv holds the upper hand, possibly after a Ukrainian counteroff­ensive that appears to be taking shape.

Blinken said heeding calls from Russia and others, including China, for a ceasefire and negotiatio­ns to end the war now would result in a “Potemkin peace” that wouldn’t secure Ukraine’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity or enhance European security.

“Potemkin Village” was a tactic Russia’s 18th-century government minister Grigory Potemkin used to build brightly painted village fronts to create an illusion of prosperity for Russia’s empress.

In a speech in Finland, which recently joined NATO and shares a long border with Russia, Blinken repeated the U.S. view that “a ceasefire that simply freezes current lines in place” and allows Russian President Vladimir Putin “to consolidat­e control over the territory he has seized, and rest, rearm and reattack — that is not a just and lasting peace.” Allowing Moscow to keep the one-fifth of Ukrainian territory it’s occupied would send the wrong message to Russia and to “other would-be aggressors around the world,” according to Blinken.

Blinken’s position is similar to that of Ukrainian officials, including his statement that Russia must pay for a share of Ukraine’s reconstruc­tion and be held accountabl­e for the full-scale invasion of its neighbour in February 2022.

Ukrainian officials have given confusing signals about whether a counteroff­ensive is coming or already underway. Some have suggested it will not be a barrage of simultaneo­us attacks across the entire front line, rather a series of more targeted, limited strikes, first to weaken Russia’s supply lines and infrastruc­ture, then broaden and intensify.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy weighed in again on Friday. “This is not a movie,” he told reporters in Kyiv. “It is hard to say how you’ll see the counteroff­ensive. The main point here is for Russia to see it. And not just see but feel it. Especially, we speak about the troops that have occupied our territorie­s. De-occupation of our territorie­s – this is the result of our counteroff­ensive. When you see this, you’ll understand that it has started.”

Zelenskyy has said his goal is to drive Russian troops out of the four territorie­s it has partially occupied and illegally annexed last fall, as well as from the Crimean Peninsula the Kremlin illegally seized in 2014.

Putin has said two of his goals in invading Ukraine were to improve Russia’s security and prevent Ukraine from joining NATO, but the Kyiv government has applied to join the alliance, and Sweden is hoping to be accepted as a member in July. That would leave Russia surrounded by NATO countries in the Baltic Sea.

Blinken described the Russian invasion of Ukraine as a catastroph­ic strategic failure for Moscow.

 ?? ?? During a speech in Finland on Friday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said “a ceasefire that simply freezes current lines in place” allows Russian President Vladimir Putin “to consolidat­e control over the territory he has seized.”
During a speech in Finland on Friday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said “a ceasefire that simply freezes current lines in place” allows Russian President Vladimir Putin “to consolidat­e control over the territory he has seized.”

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