The Maui News - Weekender

Putin to seek guarantees on Ukraine as invasion fears grow

- By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV and YURAS KARMANAU The Associated Press

MOSCOW — The Kremlin said Friday that President Vladimir Putin will seek binding guarantees precluding NATO’s expansion to Ukraine during a planned call with U.S. President Joe Biden, while a U.S. intelligen­ce report and the Ukrainian defense minister warned of a possible Russian invasion of Ukraine as soon as next month.

With tensions between Russia and the West escalating, Biden said his administra­tion was “putting together what I believe to be the most comprehens­ive and meaningful set of initiative­s to make it very, very difficult for Mr. Putin to go ahead and do what people are worried he may do” in positionin­g troops near Ukraine.

The NATO chief and numerous former U.S. diplomats and security officials say Russia’s demand that Biden rule out NATO membership for Ukraine, a former Soviet republic eager to ally with the West, is a nonstarter.

“There’s absolutely no way in the world that that Russian position will make any progress,” John Herbst, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, said Friday. “It’s basically a rhetorical point for Moscow.” More likely, he said, were U.S. assurances that Western military assistance to Ukraine be for defensive purposes only.

Ukraine, the U.S. and other Western allies are increasing­ly concerned that a Russian troop buildup near the Ukrainian border could signal Moscow’s intention to invade. Officials say it remains unclear if Putin intends to go through with an invasion or appears to be threatenin­g one in hopes of forcing concession­s from Ukraine and its Western allies. The U.S. has threatened the Kremlin with the toughest sanctions yet if it launches an attack, while Russia has warned that any presence of NATO troops and weapons on Ukrainian soil would cross a “red line.”

Ukrainian Defense Minister

Oleksii Reznikov told lawmakers Friday that the number of Russian troops near Ukraine and in Russian-annexed Crimea is estimated at 94,300, warning that a “large-scale escalation” is possible in January.

An unclassifi­ed U.S. intelligen­ce report made public later Friday cited recent artillery, troop and material movements near Ukraine’s border in saying Russia was planning for the possibilit­y of a military offensive with 175,000 troops early next year.

“The plans involve extensive movement of 100 battalion tactical groups … along with armor, artillery, and equipment,” according to the U.S. report, which said about half of those units were already near Ukraine’s border. The intelligen­ce finding was first reported by The Washington Post. A Biden administra­tion official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the finding, confirmed it to The Associated Press.

Amid the mounting tensions, Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov told reporters Friday that arrangemen­ts have been made for a Putin-Biden call in the coming days, adding that the date will be announced after Moscow and Washington

finalize details.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said later that administra­tion officials have “engaged in the possibilit­y” of a Biden-Putin call.

“It certainly would be an opportunit­y to discuss our serious concerns about the bellicose rhetoric, about the military buildup that we’re seeing on the border of Ukraine,” Psaki said.

On Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met face-to-face with his Russian counterpar­t, Sergey Lavrov, in Stockholm to demand that Russia pull back troops from the border with Ukraine. Lavrov retorted that the West was “playing with fire” by denying Russia a say in any further NATO expansion into countries of the former Soviet Union.

Ukraine has pushed to join the alliance, which has held out the promise of membership but hasn’t set a timeline.

Ushakov noted that during the call with Biden, Putin will raise his demand for a legally binding agreement that would “exclude any further NATO expansion eastward and the deployment of weapons systems that would threaten us on the territorie­s of neighborin­g countries, including Ukraine.”

 ?? Ukrainian Joint Forces Operation Press Service via AP ?? Attache of the Land Forces at the US Embassy in Ukraine Colonel Brandon Presley looks at the map during the visit by a delegation of the US Embassy in Ukraine to the Joint Forces operation area in the war-hit Donetsk region, Ukraine on Nov. 19. The Kremlin has voiced concern about a possible escalation of fighting in eastern Ukraine’s separatist conflict as the U.S. issued a strong warning to Russia to stay away from Ukraine. Ukrainian and Western officials have worried about a Russian troop buildup near Ukraine could herald an invasion.
Ukrainian Joint Forces Operation Press Service via AP Attache of the Land Forces at the US Embassy in Ukraine Colonel Brandon Presley looks at the map during the visit by a delegation of the US Embassy in Ukraine to the Joint Forces operation area in the war-hit Donetsk region, Ukraine on Nov. 19. The Kremlin has voiced concern about a possible escalation of fighting in eastern Ukraine’s separatist conflict as the U.S. issued a strong warning to Russia to stay away from Ukraine. Ukrainian and Western officials have worried about a Russian troop buildup near Ukraine could herald an invasion.

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