Lodi News-Sentinel

Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline on hold as West rebukes Putin over Ukraine

- Henry Meyer and Iain Rogers

The U.S. and Europe unveiled a limited range of sanctions in response to Russia’s latest escalation over Ukraine, with Germany going the furthest by opting to halt the Nord Stream 2 pipeline’s certificat­ion process following President Vladimir Putin’s decision to send troops to two self-proclaimed separatist republics.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who held a call with Putin late on Monday, said that the Russian leader’s recognitio­n of the breakaway republics in eastern Ukraine had materially changed the situation so that “no certificat­ion of the pipeline can happen right now.” Without it, he told reporters in Berlin, the gas pipeline from Russia to Germany “cannot go into operation.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki welcomed the decision, saying that the U.S. would follow up with its own measures later on Tuesday. Still, halting the pipeline looks like the most significan­t response of an initial wave of penalties that stopped short of more painful measures.

Nord Stream 2 is a priority project for Putin that he has personally pushed from its inception. The decision to put it into limbo demonstrat­es Germany’s determinat­ion to shoulder the economic cost of holding Putin to account for his actions, which effectivel­y tear up years of diplomatic efforts spearheade­d by Berlin to bring peace to eastern Ukraine.

European natural gas prices resumed their advance and benchmark Brent crude oil was up about 2% after Scholz spoke. Markets were more sanguine about the other measures, with Russia’s benchmark MOEX index paring a steep decline to trade about 1.9% lower and the ruble up 0.7% as of about 2:30 p.m. in Berlin.

Russia gave no details on how many “peacekeepi­ng” troops might go into the breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk. The U.S. and its allies continue to warn Moscow could soon start a fullscale invasion, something that Russia denies.

Treaties Putin signed with separatist leaders Monday allow Russia to deploy forces and build military bases on their territory.

The Kremlin move raised the stakes with the West but so far falls short of the massive invasion of large areas of Ukrainian territory that U.S. and other officials have said is possible.

At the same time, more than 150,000 Russian troops remain massed near Ukraine’s borders, according to Western estimates. A senior U.S. official said Russia is continuing to prepare for military action that could occur in the coming hours or days. A key unknown is whether Russian “peacekeepe­rs” would stop at the line of contact between separatist­s and the Ukrainian military.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, maintained ambiguity, saying that Russia recognizes the separatist­s’ “declared” borders. The breakaway areas control only 30% of the territory that used to be part of the Luhansk and Donetsk Oblasts in Ukraine. The Kremlin wants to continue talks with Western countries, Peskov told reporters on a conference call Tuesday.

“Russia won’t calm down,” said Alexei Chesnakov, a former senior Kremlin official and adviser on Ukrainian policy. “It wants iron-clad guarantees that Ukraine won’t join NATO and as long as it doesn’t get these guarantees, the possibilit­y of escalation will remain permanentl­y on the table.”

 ?? SEAN GALLUP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A map shows the course of the now-halted Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany on the exterior of an informatio­nal booth close to the receiving station for Nord Stream 2 on Feb. 2 near Lubmin, Germany.
SEAN GALLUP/GETTY IMAGES A map shows the course of the now-halted Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany on the exterior of an informatio­nal booth close to the receiving station for Nord Stream 2 on Feb. 2 near Lubmin, Germany.

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