The Guardian (USA)

Nato chief warns Russia against ‘further provocatio­n’ amid Ukraine tensions

- Andrew Roth in Moscow

The Nato secretary general, Jens Stoltenber­g, has cautioned Moscow against “any further provocatio­n or aggressive actions” following warnings by US officials that Russia could be preparing to a launch a winter offensive in Ukraine.

The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said last week that Russia had amassed nearly 100,000 soldiers near Ukraine’s border, as Washington warned that Moscow may be “attempting to rehash” its 2014 invasion.

“We have seen large and unusual concentrat­ions of Russian forces close to Ukraine’s borders,” Stoltenber­g said on Monday. “Nato remains vigilant … Any further provocatio­n or aggressive actions by Russia would be of serious concern. We call on Russia to be transparen­t about its military activities.”

Stoltenber­g’s remarks came at a meeting with the Ukrainian foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, at Nato headquarte­rs in Brussels, where the two discussed “the security situation in and around Ukraine”.

“We have to be clear-eyed,” Stoltenber­g said. “We need to be realistic about the challenges we face. And what we see is a significan­t, large Russian military buildup.”

Satellite imagery and videos uploaded to social media have shown tanks, artillery and short-range ballistic missiles on the move in the border regions of Ukraine and Belarus since late last month.

Some of that weaponry was moved to the region earlier this year during a large-scale buildup that set alarm bells ringing in the west. But new rail transports of military hardware have been spotted in southern Russia and from as far away as Russia’s Urals region, as well as on the Crimean peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014.

While Stoltenber­g said he did not want to speculate about the intentions of the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, he called the situation “dangerous” and said it would allow Russia to launch offensive operations at short notice.

Analysts have noted that a previous Russian offensive into Ukraine against the city of Debaltseve in 2015 was also launched in winter, when the lower temperatur­es make it easier to transport armour and other heavy weaponry.

British prime minister Boris Johnson argued on Monday that the west may soon have to stop relying on Russian oil and gas if it wants to stand against aggression towards Ukraine.

In a warning to European countries that are heavily dependent on Russian gas in particular, the prime minister signalled he believed Putin could be serious about restrictin­g supplies from pipelines that run through eastern Europe if the west signalled its intention to defend Ukraine.

Speaking at the Lord Mayor’s banquet in London, Johnson said: “When our Polish friends asked for our help to deal with a contrived crisis on their

border with Belarus, we were quick to respond. And we hope that our friends may recognise that a choice is shortly coming between mainlining ever more Russian hydrocarbo­ns in giant new pipelines and sticking up for Ukraine and championin­g the cause of peace and stability, let me put it that way.”

The US president, Joe Biden, dispatched the CIA director, Bill Burns, to Moscow this month to warn Putin that the US was watching the buildup closely, US media have reported.

“I hope the whole world can now clearly see who really wants peace and who is concentrat­ing nearly 100,000 soldiers at our border,” Zelenskiy said in a speech last week.

Russia meanwhile has denied that it has any plans to launch offensive operations against Ukraine.

Putin this weekend complained about Ukraine’s use of Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 drone strikes in Donbass, saying that they violated a 2015 ceasefire agreement. And top Russian military officials have accused Nato of a buildup in Europe and in the Black Sea.

The Russian military movements come as tensions increase over the migration crisis on Belarus’s border with the European Union. Belarus has warned that any conflict could draw in Russia as the two countries are allies and jointly defend the country’s borders with Nato.

Moscow last week also sent nuclearcap­able bombers and paratroope­rs on training missions to Belarus’s western borders with Poland and Lithuania as Moscow and Minsk held joint exercises.

Lithuania’s foreign minister, Gabrielius Landsbergi­s, also suggested the Kremlin could be using the Belarus border crisis as a smokescree­n to prepare an attack.

“It is very likely that Ukraine could be attacked while we are dealing with the situation on the Polish, Lithuanian and Belarusian border,” he said.

He added that the buildup was “actually the same distance from the border of Belarus and the same distance to the border of Ukraine, so I think that what Putin might be playing is that we don’t have an answer [are kept guessing] to who is under attack”.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Jens Stoltenber­g (right) and the Ukrainian foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, at a joint press conference in Brussels.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Jens Stoltenber­g (right) and the Ukrainian foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, at a joint press conference in Brussels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States