San Antonio Express-News

U.S. military equipment arrives in tense Ukraine

Nation’s leaders urge calm as NATO readies for Russian invasion

- By Yuras Karmanau

KIEV, Ukraine — This nation’s leaders sought Tuesday to reassure their country that an invasion from neighborin­g Russia was not imminent, even as they acknowledg­ed the threat is real and received a shipment of U.S. military equipment to shore up their defenses.

Moscow has denied it is planning an assault, but it has massed an estimated 100,000 troops near Ukraine in recent weeks and is holding military drills at multiple locations in Russia. That has led the United States and its NATO allies to rush to prepare for a possible war.

President Joe Biden told reporters that Russian President Vladimir Putin “continues to build forces along Ukraine’s border” and that an attack “would be the largest invasion since World War II. It would change the world.”

Several rounds of highstakes diplomacy have failed to yield any breakthrou­ghs, and tensions escalated further this week. NATO said it was bolstering its deterrence in the Baltic Sea region, and the U.S. ordered 8,500 troops on higher alert for potential deployment to Europe as part of an alliance “response force” if necessary. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he is prepared to send troops to protect NATO allies in Europe.

“We have no intention of putting American forces or NATO forces in Ukraine,” Biden said, adding that there would be serious economic consequenc­es for Putin, including personal sanctions, in the event of an invasion.

In a show of European unity in Berlin, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron called for an easing of the crisis.

Scholz said he wanted “clear steps from Russia that will contribute to a de-escalation of the situation.” Macron, who said he would talk to Putin by phone Friday, added: “If there is aggression, there will be retaliatio­n

and the cost will be very high.”

The U.S. and its allies have threatened sanctions like never before if Moscow sends its military into Ukraine, but they have given few details, saying it’s best to keep Putin guessing.

The State Department has ordered the families of all American personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Kiev to leave the country, and it said nonessenti­al embassy staff could leave. Britain said it was withdrawin­g some diplomats and dependents from its embassy, and families of Canadian diplomatic staff also have been told to leave.

Ukrainian authoritie­s, however, have sought to project calm. Speaking in the second televised speech to the nation in as many days, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Ukrainians not to panic.

“We are strong enough to keep everything under control and derail any attempts at destabiliz­ation,” he said.

The decisions by the U.S., Britain and Canada, along with Australia and Germany, to withdraw some of their diplomats and dependents from Kiev “doesn’t necessaril­y signal an inevitable escalation and is part of a complex diplomatic game,” Zelenskyy said. “We are working together with our partners as a single team.”

Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov told parliament that “as of today, there are no grounds to believe” Russia will invade imminently, noting that its troops have not formed what he called a battle group to force its way over the border.

“Don’t worry, sleep well,” he said. “No need to have your bags packed.”

In an interview late Monday, however, he acknowledg­ed “risky scenarios” are possible.

Russia has said Western accusation­s that it is planning an attack are merely a cover for NATO’S own planned provocatio­ns. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov again accused the U.S. of “fomenting tensions” around Ukraine, a former Soviet state that has been in a

conflict with Russia for almost eight years.

Moscow has rejected Western demands to pull its troops back from areas near Ukraine, saying it will deploy and train them wherever necessary on its territory as a response to what it called “hostile” moves by the U.S. and its allies. Thousands of troops from Russia’s Southern and Western Military Districts took part Tuesday in readiness drills in those regions in maneuvers involving Iskander missiles and dozens of warplanes.

In 2014, after the ouster of a Kremlin-friendly president in Kiev, Moscow annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and threw its weight behind a separatist insurgency in the country’s eastern industrial heartland. Fighting between Ukrainian forces and Russiaback­ed rebels has killed over 14,000 people, and efforts to reach a settlement have stalled.

In the latest standoff, Russia wants guarantees from the West that NATO will never admit Ukraine as a member and that the alliance would curtail other actions, such as stationing troops in

former Soviet bloc countries. Some of these guarantees, such as the membership pledge, are nonstarter­s for NATO, creating a seemingly intractabl­e stalemate that many fear can only end in a war.

Moscow has accused Ukraine of massing troops near rebel-controlled regions to retake them by force — accusation­s Kiev has rejected.

Analysts say Ukraine’s leaders are caught between trying to calm the nation and ensuring it gets sufficient assistance from the West in case of an invasion.

“The Kremlin’s plans include underminin­g the situation inside Ukraine, fomenting hysteria and fear among Ukrainians, and the authoritie­s in Kiev find it increasing­ly difficult to contain this snowball,” political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko said.

Kiev resident Andrey Chekonovsk­y said Ukrainians have been living with the threat of a Russian attack for eight years, “and I think that the fact that we are worried now is connected with diplomatic games.”

The crisis didn’t stop a large group of people from rallying outside parliament, demanding changes to the country’s tax regulation­s and even clashing with police at one point.

Other Ukrainians are watching warily.

“Of course we fear Russia’s aggression and a war, which will lead to the further impoverish­ment of Ukrainians. But we will be forced to fight and defend ourselves,” said Dmytro Ugol, a 46-year-old constructi­on worker in Kiev. “I am prepared to fight, but my entire family doesn’t want it and lives in tension. Every day, the news scares us more and more.”

Putting U.s.-based troops on heightened alert for Europe on Monday suggested diminishin­g hope in the West that Putin will back away.

The Pentagon said Tuesday that it is still identifyin­g the roughly 8,500 U.S. troops being placed on higher alert for possible deployment to Europe and that more could be tapped if needed. The U.S. is still in “active consultati­on” with allies about the capabiliti­es they might need, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said.

As part of $200 million in new security assistance directed to Ukraine from the U.S., a shipment including equipment and munitions arrived Tuesday in Ukraine, according to Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar.

If Russia invades, “we will provide additional defensive material to the Ukrainians, above and beyond what we have already sent,” Kristina Kvien, U.S. charge d’affaires in Ukraine, said at the airport.

“And let me underscore that Russian soldiers sent to Ukraine at the behest of the Kremlin will face fierce resistance. The losses to Russia will be heavy,” Kvien said.

 ?? Brendan Hoffman / New York Times ?? Workers unload a shipment of U.S. military aid at the internatio­nal airport in Boryspil, Ukraine. President Joe Biden said Russian President Vladimir Putin “continues to build forces along Ukraine’s border.”
Brendan Hoffman / New York Times Workers unload a shipment of U.S. military aid at the internatio­nal airport in Boryspil, Ukraine. President Joe Biden said Russian President Vladimir Putin “continues to build forces along Ukraine’s border.”
 ?? Alexei Alexandrov / Associated Press ?? A serviceman checks his machine gun in a shelter in territory controlled by pro-russian militants in Slavyanose­rbsk in eastern Ukraine.
Alexei Alexandrov / Associated Press A serviceman checks his machine gun in a shelter in territory controlled by pro-russian militants in Slavyanose­rbsk in eastern Ukraine.
 ?? Alexei Alexandrov / Associated Press ?? A serviceman walks in territory controlled by pro-russian militants in Slavyanose­rbsk, Ukraine. Russia has rejected Western demands to pull its troops back from areas near Ukraine.
Alexei Alexandrov / Associated Press A serviceman walks in territory controlled by pro-russian militants in Slavyanose­rbsk, Ukraine. Russia has rejected Western demands to pull its troops back from areas near Ukraine.
 ?? Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press ?? U.S. military aid is unloaded in Boryspil, Ukraine. The U.S. and its allies have threatened sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine.
Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press U.S. military aid is unloaded in Boryspil, Ukraine. The U.S. and its allies have threatened sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine.

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