The Scotsman

Ukrainian president urges calm and denies Russian invasion is imminent

- By YURAS KARMANAU newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Ukraine's leaders have sought to reassure the nation that an invasion by neighbouri­ng Russia is not imminent, even as they acknowledg­ed the threat is real and prepared to accept a shipment of US military equipment to shore up their defences.

Moscow has denied planning an assault, but has massed an estimated 100,000 troops near Ukraine in recent weeks, leading the US and its Nato allies to prepare for a possible war.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said late on Monday that the situation is "under control" and there is "no reason to panic".

Several rounds of high stakes diplomacy have failed to yield any breakthrou­ghs, and this week tensions escalated further.

Nato said it was bolstering its deterrence in the Baltic Sea region, and the US ordered 8,500 troops on higher alert to potentiall­y deploy to Europe as part of an alliance "response force" if necessary.

The State Department has ordered the families of all American personnel at the US Embassy in Kyiv to leave the country, and said non-essential embassy staff could leave. The UK is also withdrawin­g some diplomats and dependents from its embassy.

Ukrainian defence minister Oleksii Reznikov said that, as of Monday, Russia's armed forces had not formed what he called battle groups, "which would have indicated that tomorrow they would launch an offensive".

"There are risky scenarios. They're possible and probable in the future," he told Ukraine's ICTV channel on Monday. "But as of today... such a threat doesn't exist."

"Don't worry, sleep well," he added on Tuesday. "No need to have your bags packed."

Oleksiy Danilov, the secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defence Council, echoed that sentiment, saying the movement of Russian troops near Ukraine's border "is not news".

"As of today, we don't see any grounds for statements about a full-scale offensive on our country," he said on Monday.

Russia has said Western accusation­s that it is planning an invasion are a cover for Nato's planned provocatio­ns.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Tuesday again accused the US of "fomenting tensions" around Ukraine, a former Soviet state which has been locked in a bitter tug-ofwar with Russia for almost eight years.

In 2014, following the removal of a Kremlin-friendly president in Ukraine, Moscow annexed the Crimean peninsula and threw its weight behind a separatist insurgency in the country's industrial heartland in the east.

The fighting between Ukrainian forces and Russiaback­ed rebels has since killed more than 14,000 people, and efforts to reach a peaceful settlement have stalled.

In the latest standoff, Russia has demanded guarantees from the West that Nato would never allow Ukraine to join and that the alliance would curtail other actions, such as stationing troops in former Soviet bloc countries.

Some of these, like any pledge to permanentl­y bar Ukraine, are non-starters for Nato, creating a seemingly intractabl­e stalemate that many fear can only end in war.

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