San Diego Union-Tribune

WESTERN ALLIES BOOST PRESSURE ON PUTIN

Britain imposes new round of sanctions; Sweden weighs NATO membership

- BY MARC SANTORA, MARK LANDLER & MICHAEL LEVENSON

President Vladimir Putin of Russia faced fresh setbacks Friday over the Ukraine invasion, as Sweden became the second neutral country in two days to move toward joining NATO and the West devised ways to reroute Ukrainian grain past a Russian naval blockade.

New signs of a Russian military retreat near Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, also added to Putin’s challenges, appearing to subvert or at least delay the Kremlin’s goal of encircling Ukrainian forces concentrat­ed in eastern Ukraine.

But for Putin, the biggest vexation may have been the most personal: Britain slapped sanctions on his ex-wife, Lyudmila Ocheretnay­a; on a former Olympic gymnast long rumored to be his girlfriend, Alina Kabaeva; and on three cousins: Igor, Mikhail and Roman Putin.

“We are exposing and targeting the shady network propping up Putin’s luxury lifestyle and tightening the vise on his inner circle,”

Britain’s foreign secretary, Liz Truss, said.

The West faced challenges of its own. Even as Sweden signaled that it would benefit from joining NATO — one day after Finland said it was ready to join — the president of Turkey signaled his objections to an expansion of the alliance, a possible complicati­on that could work in Russia’s favor. Foreign ministers of the alliance were meeting today in Germany, and invited counterpar­ts from Sweden and Finland to join them.

In a sign that not all diplomatic channels have been cut off, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke on Friday with Sergei Shoigu, Russia’s defense minister, for the first time since Feb. 18 — six days before the invasion of Ukraine. Austin pushed for an immediate cease-fire in Ukraine and emphasized the importance of maintainin­g lines of communicat­ion, according to John

Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman.

The Russian Defense Ministry said the call had been held “at the initiative of the American side,” which two senior U.S. officials confirmed.

Top Pentagon officials, including Austin, had repeatedly tried to contact their Russian counterpar­ts in the aftermath of the invasion. Until Friday, those efforts had been unsuccessf­ul.

“What motivated them to change their mind and be open to it, I don’t think we know for sure,” one senior Pentagon official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to describe a confidenti­al call. He said the hourlong conversati­on was “profession­al” but broke no new ground. Austin neverthele­ss hoped it would “serve as a springboar­d for future conversati­ons,” the official said.

It was the highest-level contact between U.S. and Russian leaders since Jake Sullivan, President Joe Biden’s national security adviser, spoke with Gen. Nikolai Patrushev, secretary of the Russian Security Council, on March 16, to reiterate the United States’ strong opposition to the invasion.

Russia has taken roughly 80 percent of the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, where its latest offensive has been concentrat­ed. If Moscow can hold that territory, it would gain significan­t leverage in any future talks. Yet it has been struggling to gain more ground against Ukrainian forces wielding heavy weapons supplied by the West.

On Friday, Russian forces bombarded largely abandoned and devastated towns in Donbas while Ukrainian forces drove Russian troops further away from Kharkiv in the northeast. The Ukrainian counteroff­ensive there was beginning to rival the one that pushed Russian troops away from Kyiv, Ukraine’s

capital, last month, said the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington research group.

The British Defense Ministry said satellite imagery confirmed that Ukrainian forces had also decimated a Russian battalion as it tried to cross pontoon bridges over a river in northeast Ukraine earlier this week. While it was not clear how many soldiers were killed, the scattering of burned-out and destroyed vehicles along the riverside suggested that Russia had suffered heavy losses.

“Conducting river crossings in a contested environmen­t is a highly risky maneuver and speaks to the pressure the Russian commanders are under to make progress in their operations in eastern Ukraine,” the ministry

said in its daily intelligen­ce update.

In moving closer to joining NATO, Sweden contended in a report that Russian aggression in Ukraine had fundamenta­lly altered Europe’s security and that Swedish membership in the alliance would “have a deterrent effect in northern Europe.”

“Through NATO membership, Sweden would not only strengthen its own security, but also contribute to the security of like-minded countries,” the report stated.

If Sweden joins, it will end more than 200 years of neutrality and military nonalignme­nt and deliver another rebuke to Putin, who had invoked NATO expansion as a rationale for the invasion.

But the addition of Sweden and Finland could be

complicate­d by Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who suggested Friday that his country, which has one of the largest armies among NATO members, would be reluctant to welcome them into the alliance.

“Right now, we are following developmen­ts regarding Sweden and Finland, but don’t have positive views,” Erdogan told reporters after attending Friday prayer at a mosque in Istanbul.

Turkey has generally supported Western responses to the invasion, agreeing to block Russian warships from passing through the Turkish Straits.

But Sweden and Finland would need unanimous support from NATO’s 30 members to join. Erdogan could be withholdin­g Turkey’s approval

for leverage on issues he cares about, such as Turkey’s long-standing concerns about a guerrilla group known as the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which launched a violent separatist movement in Turkey in the early 1980s.

“Sadly, Scandinavi­an countries are almost like guesthouse­s for terrorist organizati­ons,” Erdogan said, naming the PKK.

Karen Donfried, the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, told reporters in Washington on Friday that the United States was “working to clarify Turkey’s position.” She said U.S. officials do not assume that Turkey opposes NATO membership for Finland and Sweden.

“We respect the political processes that are under way in both Finland and Sweden,” she said.

In Germany, agricultur­al ministers from the Group of 7, representi­ng the world’s wealthiest democracie­s, discussed ways to circumvent Russian warships that have blocked Ukrainian grain from reaching global markets through the Black Sea. Ukraine is the world’s fourthlarg­est grain exporter, and the blockade has threatened to worsen a global food crisis.

Cem Özdemir, the German agricultur­al minister, said the G-7 would seek routes to transport Ukrainian grain by road and rail, as well as via the Danube River. He called the blockade “part of Russia’s perfidious strategy to not only take out a competitor, which they’re not going to be able to do, but it’s also economic war that Russia is waging.”

Meanwhile, with Ukraine pleading for more arms to fend off the invasion, the European Union’s foreign affairs chief announced plans to give Kyiv an additional 500 million euros ($520 million) to buy heavy weapons.

Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov welcomed the heavy weapons making their way to the front lines but admitted there is no quick end to the war in sight.

“We are entering a new, long-term phase of the war,” he wrote in a Facebook post. “Extremely difficult weeks await us. How many there will be? No one can say for sure.”

In Kyiv, Ukrainian judicial authoritie­s began hearing a case against a Russian soldier accused of shooting a civilian, the first trial involving a suspected war crime by a Russian service member since the invasion began.

Prosecutor­s said the soldier, Sgt. Vadim Shysimarin, fatally shot a 62-year-old man on a bicycle in a village in the Sumy region, about 200 miles east of Kyiv, on Feb. 28.

 ?? FINBARR O'REILLY NYT ?? Mechanics at a garage in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv repair military vehicles, including captured Russian tanks.
FINBARR O'REILLY NYT Mechanics at a garage in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv repair military vehicles, including captured Russian tanks.
 ?? AP ?? A photo provided by the Armed Forces of Ukraine shows dozens of destroyed or damaged Russian armored vehicles on the banks of the Siverskyi Donets River after their pontoon bridges were blown up.
AP A photo provided by the Armed Forces of Ukraine shows dozens of destroyed or damaged Russian armored vehicles on the banks of the Siverskyi Donets River after their pontoon bridges were blown up.

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