Albuquerque Journal

US-Russia tension on Ukraine erupts as top diplomats face off

Intelligen­ce points up potential invasion

- BY ALBERTO NARDELLI, JENNIFER JACOBS AND NICK WADHAMS

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had a testy exchange over Ukraine at a dinner with dozens of their colleagues this week, according to people familiar with the discussion­s.

The verbal tension erupted as the U.S. and its European allies seek ways — including possible sanctions — to counter the threat of a Russian invasion of Ukraine after President Vladimir Putin’s troop buildup on the neighborin­g country’s border.

Lavrov took the floor at the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe dinner in Stockholm on Dec. 1 to revisit Russia’s view that the collapse of a pro-Moscow administra­tion in Ukraine in 2014 was a coup, according to two of the people. He also alleged that the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on and the European Union were suppressin­g dissent and threatenin­g Russia.

Blinken responded by recapping the 2014 events, including that forces loyal to then-President Viktor Yanukovich fired on peaceful protesters in Kyiv, killing more than 100 people, before he fled and surfaced in Russia. Blinken also told his Russian counterpar­t that NATO is a defense alliance.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova dismissed reports that Blinken had shut down Lavrov during the exchange at the 57-nation forum. She was responding on Facebook to Ukrainian media reports that Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and Blinken had put Lavrov, one of the world’s most senior diplomats, in his place.

Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde, who hosted the dinner preceding an OSCE meeting on Thursday, said on Twitter that the conversati­on suggested the formal talks would be “lively, brave and truthful.”

President Joe Biden and Putin are expected to hold a virtual meeting as early as Tuesday amid the surge in tension. A video conference between Biden and Putin is planned for Dec. 7, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said by text Saturday. The White House didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Biden said Friday he anticipate­s a “long discussion” with the Russian president over the threat of an invasion of Ukraine. He dismissed the Russian leader’s warning that deployment of Western weapons or troops represente­d a “red line.”

Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine by military force in 2014, causing a standoff between Moscow and the west that remains unresolved. Putin has denied planning to invade Ukraine.

The U.S. has shared intelligen­ce with its allies setting out Russian plans to potentiall­y invade in early 2022, should Putin decide to make a move. White House officials said Friday they were considerin­g economic sanctions and security assistance to Ukraine in response.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States