Bangkok Post

Russia, US ‘stuck’ over Ukraine

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Russia told the United States at tense talks on Monday that it had no plans to invade Ukraine, as the two sides agreed to more efforts to keep tensions from turning into a fullblown confrontat­ion.

After more than seven hours of negotiatio­ns in Geneva, the Russian and US officials both offered to keep talking, though there was no sign of a major breakthrou­gh.

The high-stakes meeting came amid fears of a Russian invasion of its proWestern neighbour Ukraine. Moscow has demanded wide-ranging concession­s from Washington and its Nato allies, which in turn have threatened severe sanctions for any attack.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said he had assured his US counterpar­t, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, that the fears were unfounded.

“We explained to our colleagues that we have no plans, no intentions to ‘attack’ Ukraine,” he told reporters. “There is no reason to fear any escalation in this regard.”

Mr Ryabkov said the United States “took Russian proposals very seriously” and that Moscow was “for the continuati­on of dialogue”.

Ms Sherman said Russia offered no proof it would not invade or any explanatio­n for why it has deployed some 100,000 troops towards the Ukrainian border. That assessment was repeated at the Pentagon, where spokesman John Kirby said there had been “no major changes” to Moscow’s force posture.

But Ms Sherman also offered reciprocal moves with Russia on de-escalation on missile placements and exercises.

Ms Sherman insisted that some of Russia’s demands were “simply nonstarter­s”, including a ban on Nato’s further eastward expansion.

“We will not allow anyone to slam closed Nato’s open-door policy,” Ms Sherman said.

Monday’s talks in Geneva launched a week of diplomacy between Russia and the West after Moscow’s troop movements triggered a Cold Warstyle standoff.

A meeting of the Nato-Russia Council will take place in Brussels today, then the permanent council of the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe (OSCE) will meet in Vienna tomorrow, with the issue of Ukraine expected to dominate.

US State Department spokesman Ned Price said not to expect “any breakthrou­ghs could be achieved or really even contemplat­ed” in the week’s talks.

The United States was putting ideas on the table to see if progress was possible, he said.

If Russia invades, Ms Sherman warned, “there will be significan­t costs and consequenc­es, well beyond what they faced in 2014” when Moscow seized the Crimean peninsula and backed an insurgency in eastern Ukraine.

Mr Ryabkov denounced US threats as “attempts at blackmail and intimidati­on”. But he added: “I don’t think the situation is hopeless.”

Any direct military action by the US or Nato in defence of Ukraine is extremely unlikely.

But Western officials have warned Moscow would face economic and financial consequenc­es if it invades, and could see Nato boost its presence near Russia’s borders.

 ?? AFP ?? Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, left, and Russian Ambassador Gennady Gatilov at a press conference after talks on soaring tensions over Ukraine, in Geneva, on Monday.
AFP Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, left, and Russian Ambassador Gennady Gatilov at a press conference after talks on soaring tensions over Ukraine, in Geneva, on Monday.

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