The National - News

US considerin­g ‘all options’ amid Russian troop build-up near Ukraine

▶ Washington consulting with allies while ‘monitoring region closely’

- JOYCE KARAM Washington

Washington is putting all options on the table in determinin­g its response to Russia’s continued military build-up near Ukraine, a senior US official has said.

US Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Karen Donfried said the US was consulting with its European allies on the next moves in responding to Russia’s military escalation.

“All options are on the table. And there’s a toolkit that includes a whole range of options,” Ms Donfried said on Friday.

“What we’re doing now is monitoring the region closely, consulting with our allies and partners on how do we deter Russian action.”

Russia has massed thousands of troops and artillery on the Ukrainian border in recent weeks, sparking US and European concerns of a possible invasion.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is travelling to Latvia and Sweden this week to attend a meeting of Nato Foreign Ministers, as well as the Organisati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe Ministeria­l Council.

Russia’s military manoeuvres and threats to Ukraine will be high on both meetings’ agendas, the US official said.

“The reason we take those kinds of unusual manoeuvres seriously is because we all remember what happened in 2014,” Ms Donfried said.

“We saw Russia illegally annex part of Ukraine’s sovereign territory when it occupied Crimea.

“And since then, we have seen ongoing violence in eastern Ukraine.”

Asked if the US was willing to increase its military presence in Europe and in countries such as Poland to deter Russia, the senior US official said the issue was being evaluated.

“We will continue to revisit and evaluate how we are postured on the eastern borders [of Ukraine],” she said

US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin hosted his Ukrainian counterpar­t Oleksii Reznikov last week at the Pentagon.

“Our support for Ukraine’s self-defence, sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity is unwavering,” Mr Austin said.

He did not elaborate on the nature of that support or how the US would react if Russia invades Ukraine.

The New York Times reported last week that US intelligen­ce officials warned their European allies that there is a short window of time to prevent Russia from taking military action in Ukraine.

It quoted US and British officials as saying they are “increasing­ly convinced that President Vladimir Putin of Russia is considerin­g military action to take control of a

larger swath of Ukraine”. The US is encouragin­g European countries to work together to develop a package of economic and military measures such

as sanctions and military deployment­s to deter Moscow.

In remembranc­e of the Holodomor, the man-made famine in Ukraine orchestrat­ed by the Soviet Union, President Joe Biden said on Wednesday that the US “reaffirms our commitment to the people of Ukraine today and our unwavering support for the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of Ukraine”.

Also known as the Terror Famine, the Holodomor resulted in the deaths of millions

of Ukrainians in 1932 to 1933, when Joseph Stalin’s government seized food, cut off aid and closed borders.

Mr Putin on November 24 told European Council President Charles Michel that he was concerned by Ukraine’s “provocatio­ns”, the Kremlin said.

The Russian president “expressed concern in connection with continuing provocatio­ns of the Ukrainian side aimed at exacerbati­ng the situation on the line of contact”.

Russia’s military manoeuvres will be on the agenda as the US secretary of state travels to Europe this week

 ?? AFP ?? A Ukrainian soldier in a dugout on the front line with separatist­s, not far from Gorlovka in the Donetsk region of Ukraine
AFP A Ukrainian soldier in a dugout on the front line with separatist­s, not far from Gorlovka in the Donetsk region of Ukraine

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