Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Russia didn’t answer phone after Poland incident

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WASHINGTON » The top U.S. military officer said Wednesday that he tried to reach out to his Russian counterpar­t in the aftermath of the missile explosions in Poland, but wasn’t able to get through.

Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said his staff tried to get Russia’s top-ranking military official Gen. Valery Gerasimov on the phone to discuss the incident with “no success.”

Milley didn’t elaborate on the efforts, but the lack of communicat­ions raises concerns about high-level U.S.Russian communicat­ions in a crisis. A strike against Poland, a NATO member, could have risked a larger conflict if it turned out that Russia had launched the strike.

The U.S. and other top leaders now say they believe the strike was probably launched by Ukrainian air defenses to defend against a Russian missile bombardmen­t. But uncertaint­y swirled for hours. Several U.S. defense officials said it isn’t unusual for Gerasimov to not be available for a call.

The lack of communicat­ion is worrisome, especially given the potential implicatio­ns of the strike, said John Tierney, executive director of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferat­ion in Washington.

Open lines of communicat­ion “are vital if we are to avoid the risk of conflict caused by misconcept­ion, miscalcula­tions or mistake,” Tierney said. “It is unsettling to learn from General Milley that his counterpar­t was unreachabl­e or not willing to engage when an explosion occurred in Poland.”

Milley did talk to his military counterpar­ts in Ukraine and Poland as the government­s worked quickly to assess whether the missile that killed two people in Poland had been launched by Russia or Ukraine.

The conversati­on came as Milley has said that Russia’s recent defeat in the key southern city Kherson and the possible slowdown of military operations in the winter could provide an opportunit­y to negotiate.

“You want to negotiate at a time when you’re at your strength, and your opponent is at weakness,” Milley said at a Pentagon briefing Wednesday. “The Russian military is suffering tremendous­ly,” he said, citing large losses of Russian tanks, fighting vehicles, fighter jets and helicopter­s.

If fighting slows down, Milley said that may become “a window” for talks about a political solution.

Both he and U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said that they expect Ukraine to keep fighting through the winter, and the U.S. and its allies will continue to provide more support and weapons. And it will be up to Ukraine to determine any negotiatio­n plans.

“We’ve said repeatedly that the Ukrainians are going to decide that and not us. And we will support them for as long as it takes,”

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