Manawatu Standard

Putin pulls troops back from Crimea and Ukraine border

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Russia ordered its troops amassing at the border with Ukraine to pull back yesterday, dialling down fears of an imminent invasion that threatened to draw the West into conflict with Vladimir Putin.

An estimated 100,000 Russian troops had moved to the border with Ukraine and into the Russiaoccu­pied Crimean peninsula, something that the region has not seen since major hostilitie­s in eastern Ukraine in 2014-2015.

After weeks of tensions, prompting a phone call between Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden, Russia’s defence minister yesterday said that most of the troops would be withdrawn immediatel­y as the goals of what he described as a readiness exercise ‘‘have been fully achieved’’.

‘‘The troops have shown their capacity to provide a solid defence for our country,’’ Sergey Shoygu, defence minister, said in televised remarks after inspecting training grounds in Crimea where a heightened military presence raised a particular concern in the West.

Analysts said the build-up of forces may have been a show of strength by Putin designed to rile the West and distract from the plight of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, languishin­g in prison on hunger strike.

Kyiv had accused Moscow of trying to provoke fighting in the long-simmering conflict in eastern Ukraine but Russia insisted that the unusually high number of troops that had moved across the country in late March to its southweste­rn border were merely there for military exercises.

Starting today, all the troops involved in military drills in the south and the west would begin their withdrawal to their bases, Russia said.

Yet, some armoured vehicles will remain in one area in the south, about 100km from the Ukrainian border, until the end of summer when new military drills are set to begin in Russia’s west.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian president, cautiously welcomed the Russian withdrawal. ‘‘The reduction of troops on our border proportion­ally reduces tensions,’’ Zelenskiy tweeted in his English-language account,’’ adding that Ukraine will remain vigilant.

Putin responded to an offer from Zelenskiy to meet for peace talks in the warzone of contested eastern Ukraine by tabling a counter proposal to meet in Moscow.

Zelenskiy is highly unlikely to travel to Moscow for talks given the heightened tensions.

Putin also reiterated Moscow’s assertion that it has no role in the conflict in the east and that the Ukrainian president would be better off talking with the separatist leaders who all rely on Russian weapon supplies and aid.

The sudden end to Russia’s worrying sabre-rattling came the day after Putin issued a stern warning for the West, saying that Russia will never allow it to encroach on its ‘‘core interests’’ and referred to unnamed ‘‘red lines’’ which, he said, are up to Moscow to draw.

A few hours after the announced pull-back, President Putin took part in a virtual summit on climate change, chaired by US President Joe Biden who recently urged Moscow to deescalate.

Biden called Putin last week and offered a one-to-one meeting in what the Kremlin saw as the US backing down in the war of words with Russia.

The Kremlin was clearly encouraged by Biden’s phone call and felt no further need to demonstrat­e Russia’s military might, Kremlin watchers said.

Tensions between Russia and Ukraine flared up at the end of March when hostilitie­s in the simmering conflict in eastern

Ukraine resumed all of the sudden, resulting in a high number of casualties.

Satellite images released earlier this week showed a massive military build-up in Russiaoccu­pied Crimea, including dozens of fighter jets, which some Ukrainian politician­s called a potential invasion force.

Moscow’s redeployme­nt should include 15 ships from the Caspian Sea flotilla currently holding exercises around the Kerch Strait, which Russia has threatened to close to Ukrainian non-commercial ships.

Ukraine’s Navy deployed its small fleet on the Sea of Azov to monitor the Russian exercises.

A Ukrainian military source told the Telegraph before Shoygu’s announceme­nt that the Russian exercises, which appeared to simulate amphibious landings, were expected to run at least until Sunday.

‘‘The troops have shown their capacity to provide a solid defence for our country.’’

Sergey Shoygu Russia defence minister

 ?? AP ?? A Russian paratroope­r walks as others wait to be loaded into a plane for airborne drills during manoeuvres in Taganrog, Russia.
AP A Russian paratroope­r walks as others wait to be loaded into a plane for airborne drills during manoeuvres in Taganrog, Russia.
 ?? AP ?? Russian military vehicles mass during drills in Crimea.
AP Russian military vehicles mass during drills in Crimea.
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