GLOBALPOST LIVE BLOG: UKRAINE STRUGGLES FOR UNITY
UPDATE: 4/18/14 4:00 PM ET
UPDATE: 4/18/14 3:40 PM ET
'You can't treat Russia like a guilty schoolboy'
The Kremlin on Friday described as unacceptable a US threat
to impose sanctions if Russia fails to fulfill its side of an
international deal on Ukraine, accusing the White House of treating
Moscow like a "guilty schoolboy."
President Barack Obama said Thursday's deal in Geneva
between Russia, Ukraine and Western powers to reduce tensions in the
Russian-speaking east of Ukraine was promising but that Washington and
its allies were prepared to impose more sanctions on Russia if the
situation fails to improve.
"Statements like those made at a high level in Washington
that the United States will follow in detail how Russia fulfills its
obligations ... are unlikely to help dialogue," President Vladimir
Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said.
"You can't treat Russia like a guilty schoolboy who has to
put a cross on a piece of paper to show he has done his homework,"
Peskov said in an interview with Russia's First Channel. "That kind of
language is unacceptable."
UPDATE: 4/18/14 2:55 PM ET
US warns of sanctions against significant sectors of the Russian economy
The White House warned Russia on Friday that Moscow would
face tougher sanctions if it failed to abide by a new international deal
on Ukraine or moved to send Russian forces into eastern Ukraine.
"Those costs and sanctions could include targeting very
significant sectors of the Russian economy," Susan Rice, President
Barack Obama's national security adviser, told reporters.
She said Washington was watching very closely to see whether
Russia met its obligations to use its influence to get pro-Russian
separatists in eastern Ukraine to disarm and abandon public buildings
they had seized.
Separatists said on Friday they were not bound by the
agreement brokered by the United States, Russia, Ukraine and the
European Union in Geneva on Thursday.
Russia's envoy to the European Union, in the meantime, said
the authorities in Kyiv had incorrectly interpreted an international
deal to resolve the crisis in Ukraine, where rebellions have broken out
in Russian-speaking eastern provinces.
"If we are speaking about how the Geneva document is being
interpreted in Kyiv by the current authorities, then unfortunately they
understood this incorrectly," Vladimir Chizhov told the Russian state
television Rossiya-24.
"Particularly that it only applies to the eastern and
southern provinces and those who are demanding federalism, but not to
Kyiv, where (it thinks) everything is legal including the ongoing
occupation of Maidan (Independence Square)."
The separatists said they would only leave their occupied buildings when the Maidan protesters left as well.
This was the Maidan a month ago:
UPDATE: 4/18/14 1:05 PM ET
The separatists have some fangirls
Meanwhile, there's this priceless photo from Donetsk...
The caption reads: "Young women ask to take a photo of a
pro-Russian activist who is part of a group occupying the Donetsk city
government building on April 18, 2014 in Donetsk, Ukraine."
Is he a local militia man or one of the rumored "little green men" from Russia?
Here are some pro-Russia separatists outside the occupied building in Donetsk:
And then there's this...
UPDATE: 4/18/14 12:55 PM ET
Russia is not happy with the US' underwhelmed response
Reuters — Russia voiced disappointment on Friday with the US
assessment of an international deal to defuse the crisis in Ukraine,
saying the threat of new sanctions against Moscow by Washington was
"completely unacceptable."
The Foreign Ministry accused US officials of seeking to
whitewash what it said was the use of force by the Ukrainian government
against protesters in the country's mainly Russian-speaking eastern
provinces.
"American officials sounded ultimatums, and tried to
threaten us with new sanctions, which is completely unacceptable," the
ministry said in a statement.
Thursday's deal called among other things for all illegal
armed groups to disarm and end occupations of public buildings in
Ukraine's east. Armed pro-Russian separatists dismissed the accord,
saying they were not bound by it.
President Barack Obama said the meeting in Geneva between
Russia, Ukraine and Western powers was promising but that Washington and
its allies were prepared to impose more sanctions on Russia if the
situation fails to improve.
Moscow described Washington's stance as one-sided and said
it was "disappointed" by its remarks after the talks, which seemed to
offer the best hope of resolving a confrontation that has dragged
relations to their lowest ebb since the Cold War.
"The blame for the Ukrainian crisis and its current aggravation is unreasonably being placed on Russia," the ministry said.
"The American side is once again stubbornly trying to
whitewash the current actions of Kiev's authorities, who have embarked
on a course for the violent suppression of protesters in the southeast
who are expressing their legitimate indignation over the infringements
of their rights."
UPDATE: 4/18/14 11:25 AM ET
Ukraine's leaders offer language concessions
Ukraine's acting president and prime minister offered some
of their strongest pledges yet on Friday to strengthen constitutional
rights to use the Russian language in a bid to defuse separatist
protests.
In a joint televised address, acting President Oleksander
Turchynov and Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk called for national
unity, urged people to refrain from violence and said they would support
constitutional change, decentralizing more power to local councils,
including over their official language — a key demand of
Russian-speakers.
UPDATE: 4/18/14 11:05 AM ET
'As far as I know, Maidan is legal'
Reuters — The Ukrainian government warned on Friday it could
take "more concrete actions" next week if pro-Russian separatists do
not end their occupations of public buildings under the terms of an
international accord.
Foreign Minister Andriy Deshchytsia gave no details and Kyiv
has threatened to use force before to little effect. The minister also
said that, despite demands from the separatists in the east, the
government saw no need under its deal with Russia to dismantle the
pro-European Maidan camp in Kyiv.
Asked whether there was a deadline for implementing the
agreement on clearing occupied buildings, Deshchytsia told a news
conference that he hoped this weekend's Easter holidays might ease
tension and let monitors from Europe's OSCE security body oversee the
process. He noted an amnesty was on offer.
"Hopefully, if those people are ready to leave the
buildings, to surrender weapons, today, tomorrow, so we can encourage
the OSCE mission to negotiate, to mediate and implement this," he said
in English.
"But if this will not start in a few days, I think that after Easter there will more concrete actions."
He echoed other officials in saying that an "anti-terrorist"
operation announced last week was continuing — though there has been
little evidence of attempts to use force on the ground.
"Its intensity will depend on the practical implementation
of this accord, on the real evacuation of occupied buildings and the
handing over of weapons," he said of the operation.
Russia, Ukraine, the United States and European Union have
agreed that: "All illegal armed groups must be disarmed; all illegally
seized buildings must be returned to legitimate owners; all illegally
occupied streets, squares and other public places in Ukrainian cities
and towns must be vacated."
Pro-Russian separatists have said they will not leave until
activists whose protests helped topple the pro-Moscow president in
February evacuate their barricaded camp known as Maidan.
But Deshchytsia said: "This is about streets and buildings
which are illegally occupied by protesters. As far as I know, Maidan is
legal."
Many of those on Maidan are suspicious of the government
that took power through parliament after President Viktor Yanukovych
fled to Russia and they say they will remain in place until after a
presidential election scheduled for May 25.
UPDATE: 4/18/14 10:30 AM ET
'We are expecting nothing from Kyiv'
The self-declared leader of pro-Russian separatists in
eastern Ukraine, Denis Pushilin, on Friday said he does not consider his
men to be bound by an agreement between Russia and Ukraine requiring
illegal groups to disarm and vacate buildings.
The Geneva agreement, signed by the United States, Russia,
Ukraine and the European Union on Thursday, requires all illegal armed
groups to disarm and end the illegal occupation of public buildings,
streets and squares.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov "did not sign
anything for us, he signed on behalf of the Russian Federation,"
Pushilin, head of the self-declared Donetsk People's Republic, told
journalists in Donetsk.
"We will persevere until the end," he said, flanked by two
masked men in the occupied building of the Donetsk city administration.
Ukraine announced a military-backed operation last weekend
to flush out pro-Russian rebels who have taken over state buildings
including police stations in the Donbass region, though the operation
faltered when pro-Russian forces seized several army troop carriers.
The diplomatic agreement in Geneva was seen as the best chance for reducing tensions in the region.
Pushilin said his men will only consider leaving public
buildings when the government in Kyiv, which he said was showing no
signs of fulfilling its part of the Geneva deal, does the same.
"As far as vacating of buildings and areas is concerned —
everyone must leave them including Yatsenyuk and Turchynov — as they
also took them illegally," he said. "We are ready to do it after them."
Preparations for a regional referendum on increased autonomy from Kyiv will go ahead as planned, he said.
"We are expecting nothing from Kyiv," he said. "The date for referendum is not changing, no later than May 11."
Pushilin said any calls for pro-Russian separatists to
disarm should be matched by a withdrawal of the Ukrainian military from
the east Ukraine cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk.
"We do not want double standards," he said.
UPDATE: 4/18/14 7:40 AM ET
The separatists aren't budging, and neither is the Maidan
Reuters — Armed pro-Russian separatists were still holding
public buildings in eastern Ukraine on Friday, saying they needed more
assurances about their security before they comply with an international
deal ordering them to disarm.
The agreement, brokered by the United States, Russia,
Ukraine and the European Union in Geneva on Thursday offered the best
hope to date of defusing a stand-off in Ukraine that has dragged
East-West relations to their lowest level since the Cold War.
Enacting the agreement on the ground though will be
difficult, because of the deep mistrust between the pro-Russian groups
and the Western-backed government in Kyiv, which this week flared into
violent clashes that killed several people.
The fact any deal was reached at all came as a surprise, and
it was not immediately clear what had happened behind the scenes to
persuade the Kremlin, which had up to that point shown little sign of
compromise, to join calls on the militias to disarm.
In Slovyansk, a city that has become a flashpoint in the
crisis after men with Kalashnikovs took control last weekend, leaders of
the pro-Russian gunmen were holding a meeting early on Friday inside
one of the buildings they seized on how to respond to the Geneva
agreement.
On the street, there was little change. In front of the
Slovyansk mayor's office, men armed with Kalashnikovs peered over
sandbags which had been piled higher overnight. Separatists remained in
control of the city's main streets, searching cars at checkpoints around
the city.
"Are we going to leave the buildings so that they can come
and arrest us? I don't think so," said a man guarding the road to the
security office, another building the separatists seized, who identified
himself as Alexei.
But he acknowledged that the Geneva talks had changed the situation.
"It turns out Vova doesn't love us as much as we thought."
said Alexei, using a diminutive term for Vladimir Putin, the Russian
president viewed by many of the separatist militias in eastern Ukraine
as their champion and protector.
Pro-Russian militants control buildings in about 10 towns in eastern Ukraine after launching their uprising on April 6.
Separatists occupying a local government building in the
city of Donetsk said they would not leave until supporters of Ukraine's
new government quit their camp around the Maidan.
Asked how his group will react to the accord in Geneva,
Alexander Zakharchenko, a protest leader inside the Donetsk regional
government building, told Reuters by telephone:
"If it means all squares and public buildings, then I guess
it should start with the Maidan in Kyiv. We'll see what they do there
before we make our decision here."
In Luhansk, another city where pro-Russian separatists are
occupying public buildings, a militia member called Andrey said his
group had no plans to withdraw.
"Everything on the ground is the same as it was yesterday and the day before and the day before that. We're not leaving."
In the capital, Kyiv, people on the Maidan, the local name
given to Independence Square which was the center of protests that
eventually toppled Yanukovych, said the barricades would not come down
until the May 25 presidential election.
"People will not leave the Maidan. The people gave their
word to stay until the presidential elections so that nobody will be
able to rig the result. Then after the election we'll go of our own
accord," said 56-year-old Viktor Palamaryuk from the western town of
Chernivtsi.
"Nobody will take down our tents and barricades," said
34-year-old Volodymyr Shevchenko from the southern Kherson region. "If
the authorities try to do that by force, thousands and thousands of
people will come on to the Maidan and stop them."
UPDATE: 4/16/14 4:45 PM ET
UPDATE: 4/17/14 4:10 PM ET
Can't be sure of anything, says a skeptical Obama
When President Barack Obama was asked about his confidence in the Ukraine deal,
he responded: "I don't think we can be sure of anything at this point.
"There is ... the prospect that diplomacy may de-escalate
the situation and that we may be able to move toward what has always
been our goal, which is to allow Ukrainians to make decisions about
their own lives," he said,
according to the Guardian.
On Russia signing the agreement, Obama said, "The question
now becomes will they in fact use the influence that they've asserted in
a disruptive way, or to restore some order so Ukrainians can carry out
an election, move forward... we're not going to know whether in fact
there's follow-through on these statements for several days."
Obama maintained his skepticism, saying, "My hope is that we
do see follow... I don't think given past performance that we can count
on that."
The Guardian has more on Obama's response.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 2:20 AM ET
'We won't go until they do'
Reuters — Pro-Russian separatists occupying a local
government building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk said on
Thursday they would not leave until supporters of Ukraine's new
government quit their camp around Kyiv's main square, known as the
Maidan.
Asked how his group would react to an international accord
in Geneva under which the Ukrainian and Russian governments agreed that
illegal occupations of buildings and squares must end, Alexander
Zakharchenko, a protest leader inside the Donetsk regional government
building, told Reuters by telephone:
"If it means all squares and public buildings then I guess
it should start with the Maidan in Kyiv. We'll see what they do there
before we make our decision here."
Ukrainian nationalists and other groups who helped overthrow
the Moscow-backed president in Kyiv two months ago have maintained
barricades around the Maidan. Many have said they will not leave until
they are satisfied by the result of a presidential election to be held
on May 25.
This was the scene in Kyiv two days ago:
UPDATE: 4/17/14 1:10 PM ET
Full statement from Geneva
Here is the full statement of the agreement that came out of talks between the US, the EU, Russia and Ukraine (
via Kyiv Post):
The Geneva meeting on the situation in Ukraine agreed on
initial concrete steps to de-escalate tensions and restore security for
all citizens.
All sides must refrain from any violence, intimidation or
provocative actions. The participants strongly condemned and rejected
all expressions of extremism, racism and religious intolerance,
including anti-semitism.
All illegal armed groups must be disarmed; all illegally
seized buildings must be returned to legitimate owners; all illegally
occupied streets, squares and other public places in Ukrainian cities
and towns must be vacated.
Amnesty will be granted to protestors and to those who have
left buildings and other public places and surrendered weapons, with the
exception of those found guilty of capital crimes.
It was agreed that the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission
should play a leading role in assisting Ukrainian authorities and local
communities in the immediate implementation of these de-escalation
measures wherever they are needed most, beginning in the coming days.
The U.S., E.U. and Russia commit to support this mission, including by
providing monitors.
The announced constitutional process will be inclusive,
transparent and accountable. It will include the immediate establishment
of a broad national dialogue, with outreach to all of Ukraine’s regions
and political constituencies, and allow for the consideration of public
comments and proposed amendments.
The participants underlined the importance of economic and
financial stability in Ukraine and would be ready to discuss additional
support as the above steps are implemented.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 1:05 PM ET
What if separatists don't lay down their arms?
Kerry was asked what would happen if pro-Russian separatists
refused to lay down arms. He responded that the responsibility would
lie with those who equipped and organized the groups. "We have made it
very clear that Russia has huge impact on all these forces," Kerry said,
referring to the West's assertions that Russia has influence over some
of the groups.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 12:55 PM ET
Kerry outlines the agreement
The United States, Russia, Ukraine and the EU have decided
to support the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to
begin a mission of de-escalation in Ukraine, including providing
monitors, according to Kerry.
Ukraine's interim leaders have agreed to constitutional
reform that would protect the rights of minorities and give Ukraine's
regions greater autonomy, Kerry said.
Kerry also said the United States expected Russia to
persuade pro-Russian separatists to lay down their arms and pursue their
agenda through peaceful methods.
"We will have no choice but to impose further costs on Russia" if there is no progress in the situation, Kerry said.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 12:45 PM ET
The four sides have agreed on something
Reuters — The United States, Russia, Ukraine and the
European Union on Thursday together called for an immediate halt to
violence in Ukraine, where Western powers believe Russia is fomenting a
pro-Russian separatist movement.
"All sides must refrain from any violence, intimidation or
provocative actions," said a joint statement released after the four
foreign ministers met in Geneva. "All illegal armed groups must be
disarmed; all illegally seized buildings must be returned to legitimate
owners."
_________________________________________________________________________________
GlobalPost's Greg Feifer noted that the tone in Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's statement was a marked departure from
previous statements. Lavrov did not call for federalization in Ukraine,
something that Putin and other Russian officials have called for in the
past few weeks.
Lavrov also called for all illegal military formations in
Ukraine to disband, and for amnesty for all protesters. He said that the
crisis in the east was for Ukrainians to solve, and called for
constitutional reform.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 12:20 PM ET
US approves sending non-lethal military aid to Ukraine
Reuters — The United States will send additional non-lethal
military support to Ukraine, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said on
Thursday, in the latest US move to reassure allies following Russia's
annexation of Crimea and a buildup of Russian forces on the Ukrainian
border.
"Earlier this morning I called Ukraine's acting defense
minister to tell him that President Obama has approved additional
non-lethal military assistance for health and welfare items and other
supplies," Hagel said, speaking at a Pentagon news conference after
talks with Polish Defense Minister Tomasz Siemoniak.
The new support follows NATO's announcement on Wednesday
that it would send more ships, planes and troops to eastern Europe
"within days." NATO has made clear it will not intervene militarily in
Ukraine, which is not a NATO member.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 12:10 PM ET
The pro-Ukrainians have come out again
There's a pro-Ukrainian rally taking place in Donetsk this
evening. In recent days, the eastern Ukrainian city and region have seen
pro-Russian separatists
take over local government buildings
and demand a referendum like the one Crimea held before joining Russia.
The government in Kyiv and Western powers have accused Russia of having
a hand in the unrest.
Kyiv Post reported that thousands had gathered for the rally, with 1,200 law enforcement officials expected to provide security.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 11:50 AM ET
The Ukrainian army is David in this situation
Agence France Presse talked to military experts about the Ukrainian army's humiliating failure on Wednesday.
"It was a mistake to launch an 'anti-terrorist operation' in
the Donbass where the overwhelming majority is against the government,"
Ukrainian political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko told AFP. "Targeted
operations against armed groups is one thing, but when there are tanks
in the street, people block them."
A military expert at a think-tank in Kyiv criticized the
leadership for hesitating to use force, saying that further weakened the
army's resolve. Oleksiy Melnik, of the think-tank Razumkov, said, "The
armored vehicles were stopped by unarmed civilians, who they cannot
shoot. That showed how badly thought-through the operation was."
"These sorts of defeats are demoralizing the army, whose
fighting spirit has already been undermined by the events in Crimea," he
said, referring to how Ukrainian soldiers withdrew from the peninsula
without offering Russian forces any resistance.
"The arguments that 'We mustn't provoke Russia' are absurd
in the current situation, because Russia needs no pretext to carry out
its plan. The reason behind what happened is government inaction,"
Melnik said.
Another military expert said Ukraine's best men and
equipment are at the border — but they may not be able to defend against
much beyond a first assault.
Read the full report here.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 11:20 AM ET
Putin praises the Berkut riot police
During his marathon televised phone-in today, Russian
President Vladimir Putin took a moment to praise Ukraine's now-disbanded
Berkut riot police force.
Putin told a former Berkut officer, "There is no doubt you
and your colleagues ... professionally and honorably carried out your
duty," according to Reuters.
He said the decision to disband the Berkut after the deadly
clashes in Kyiv's Independence Square in February would "backfire for
the Ukrainian state because you cannot humiliate fighters and make kneel
fighters who are defending the interests of the state."
The New York Times pointed out
that Ukraine's military (which faced a humiliating defeat in Kramatorsk
on Wednesday) and the national guard (which fended off a crowd of
separatists in Mariupol overnight but killed three) were not trained or
equipped to deal with a mixed crowd of armed separatists, local militia
and unarmed civilians.
"Driving off the separatists in such a mixed
crowd, or even trying to arrest them, would be a difficult task for a
well-disciplined force with high morale. It would risk endangering
civilians, potentially leading to bloodshed that might provoke a Russian
military reaction."
UPDATE: 4/17/14 10:40 AM ET
Paratroopers who surrendered will be punished: Ukraine's president
Remember the humiliated Ukrainian soldiers from yesterday's
misguided "anti-terrorist operation" in the eastern cities of Kramatorsk
and Slovyansk?
Acting President Oleksander Turchynov said on Thursday that
the entire paratrooper brigade would be disbanded, according to Reuters.
Those who surrendered would be punished.
Kyiv Post quoted him
saying, "The 25th airborne brigade that displayed cowardice and gave up
to the enemy, will be disbanded. And the soldiers who are guilty of
this will be held accountable in court."
This tweet is from BuzzFeed's Max Seddon who was actually near Slovyansk when the events unfolded:
In his recap of the events on Wednesday,
Seddon wrote this:
Standing on the hood of an armored personnel
carrier as his ashen-faced paratroopers slumped behind him, Col.
Alexander Shvets of Ukraine’s 25th Airborne reported back to command on a
cheap cell phone.
“We’ve been taken captive. They used dirty tricks,” he said.
The hundreds of local residents and ragtag militiamen that had
surrounded his column of 13 APCs throughout Wednesday bayed. “Look,” he
continued, losing his patience. “I’ve been surrounded by a human shield
of 500 people all day. You don’t know what you’re fucking talking
about.”
The 40 or so soldiers BuzzFeed found being held captive
behind city hall in mid-afternoon, however, said they had not defected
and refused to explain how they had wound up under the guard of ragtag
militiamen with machine guns. “It’s a long story,” one of them said,
shrugging his shoulders as he reclined against his pack.
Read the entire, fascinating
recap at BuzzFeed.
Earlier on Wednesday, The Telegraph's Roland Oliphant spoke
to soldiers who were surrounded by locals and did not want to fire on
Ukrainian civilians.
And journalist Leonid Ragozin captured this candid moment:
UPDATE: 4/17/14 10:00 AM ET
Ukraine's interim leader says Putin is trying to wreck the election
Reuters — Ukraine's prime minister on Thursday accused
Russian President Vladimir Putin of trying to sabotage the country's
upcoming presidential election and said Moscow was responsible for
deaths in recent clashes in eastern Ukraine.
"Russia is playing only one game: further aggravation,
further provocation, because the task, that Putin today officially
announced, is to wreck the presidential election on May 25," Arseniy
Yatsenyuk told journalists in Kyiv.
Putin on Thursday said Ukraine's presidential election
campaign was being conducted in an unacceptable manner and Russia would
not view its results as legitimate if the race continued in the same
manner.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 8:10 AM ET
Ukraine's security service says it detained 10 Russians
Reuters — Ukraine is holding in detention about 10 Russian
citizens, all of whom have intelligence backgrounds, the State Security
Service (SBU) on Thursday.
Answering a journalist's question about comments made on
Thursday by Russian President Vladimir Putin about the extent of Russian
involvement in the Ukraine crisis, an SBU spokeswoman said: "We have
about 10 Russians, with Russian passports, who have been detained.
"They have all had experience of intelligence work," she said. They were being investigated, she said.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 7:40 AM ET
Putin says Crimea's annexation happened because of NATO
Reuters — President Vladimir Putin on Thursday said Russia
had been forced to respond to NATO enlargement and that its annexation
of Crimea, home to its Black Sea Fleet, was partly influenced by the
Western military alliance's expansion into eastern Europe.
Putin said Moscow will respond if the United States moves
ahead with plans to base elements of a missile defense shield in eastern
Europe, accusing Washington of fueling a Cold War-style arms race.
"When the infrastructure of a military bloc is moving toward
our borders, it causes us some concerns and questions. We need to take
some steps in response," Putin said in a televised call-in with the
nation.
"Our decision on Crimea was partly due to ... considerations
that if we do nothing, then at some point, guided by the same
principles, NATO will drag Ukraine in and they will say: 'It doesn't
have anything to do with you.'"
Putin accused the military bloc of 28 nations of seeking to
squeeze Russia out of its historic stomping ground in the Black Sea
region, where Russian warships are based in the Tsarist-era city of
Sevastopol.
"NATO ships would have ended up in the city of Russian navy glory, Sevastopol," Putin said.
Putin said Moscow wants to continue talks with Washington
over its objections to US missile defense plans, but would take all
steps necessary to ensure its security.
The Ukraine crisis has left ties between Russia and the West at their lowest ebb since the Cold War.
Moscow has demanded binding guarantees from the United
States and NATO that the defense system would not threaten Russian
security, a non-starter in Washington because of strong opposition to
any set restrictions on missile defenses.
"The deployment of these systems near our borders cancels
out our strategic land-based missile positions ... We have to do
something in response. It is fuelling an arms race," Putin said.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 7:10 AM ET
Three separatists were killed in worst bloodshed yet in eastern Ukraine
Reuters — Separatists attacked a base of the Ukrainian
national guard overnight and Kyiv said three separatists were killed,
the worst bloodshed yet in a 10-day pro-Russian uprising in east
Ukraine, overshadowing crisis talks to resolve the conflict.
Ukrainian, Russian and Western diplomats arrived for the
emergency talks in Geneva, but there was little hope of any progress in
resolving a crisis that has seen armed pro-Russian fighters seize whole
swathes of Ukraine, while Moscow masses tens of thousands of troops on
the frontier.
At the national guard headquarters in Mariupol there was clear evidence that the building had come under attack.
A single grey police jeep was inside the compound on
Thursday morning with broken windows, flat tires and bent doors. The
gates of the compound had been flattened. There were shell casings
outside the gates and several unused petrol bombs.
"They came here around 8:15 p.m., demanding that we
surrender our weapons and join the people. There were some women with
them, but then they left," said police major Oleksandr Kolesnichenko,
deputy commander of the base.
"Then they used a truck to break through the gate. There was
some incoming fire. I could not see who was shooting — it was dark," he
said. "We fired first in the air. We fired warning shots after they
entered the compound. We had no casualties. We are safe."
A separatist representative, who gave his name only as Sergei, said there had been a peaceful rally at the base.
"We had a peaceful rally to urge the police to join the
people. The commander of the compound warned he would order troops to
shoot to kill."
"Then there was shooting. Some people came with Molotov
cocktails. We have verified that one person is dead and more than 10
wounded."
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said an armed group of about
300 separatists attacked the base with guns and petrol bombs. Three
separatists were killed and 13 wounded, he said. No guardsmen were hurt.
The new deadly clashes took place hours after a modest
Ukrainian military operation to recapture territory elsewhere from armed
pro-Russian rebels ended in disarray on Wednesday, with troops
surrendering rather than open fire.
UPDATE: 4/17/14 6:50 AM ET
Putin admits Russian troops were in Crimea, hopes he doesn't have to use military force in eastern Ukraine
Reuters — Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday
that Ukraine's government needs to provide guarantees to its
Russian-speaking population in the east of the country to resolve the
crisis.
"The compromise must be found not between third party
players but between the different political forces within Ukraine
itself," Putin said in a televised call-in with the nation. "This is
extremely important, it is the key issue."
Putin said Russia "would do everything possible" to help the
Russian-speaking population in eastern Ukraine, where separatist
rebellions have broken out.
But in a sign Russia is invested in international crisis
talks being held in Geneva, Putin said that it was an illusion that
force can solve all problems in international affairs.
"The Federation Council (the upper house of parliament)
granted the president the right to use military force in Ukraine. I
really hope that I do not have to exercise this right and that we are
able to solve all today's pressing issues via political and diplomatic
means," Putin said.
"We must do everything to help these people (in eastern
Ukraine) defend their rights and independently determine their own
destiny. This is what we're going to push for."
He also said that Russian forces had been active in Crimea
in order to support local defense forces, the first time he has admitted
deployment of Russian troops on the Black Sea peninsula.
"We had to take unavoidable steps so that events did not
develop as they are currently developing in southeast Ukraine," Putin
said in a televised call-in with the nation. "Of course our troops stood
behind Crimea's self-defense forces."
UPDATE: 4/17/14 6:40 AM ET
Putin accuses Kyiv of dragging Ukraine 'into an abyss'
Reuters — Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday
that Ukraine's decision to send armed forces into the east of the
country instead of trying to establish a dialogue with the
Russian-speaking population there was a "grave crime."
In a televised call-in with the nation, Putin also dismissed
allegations that Russian forces were present in east Ukraine and
emphasized the importance of international talks on the crisis taking
place in Geneva.
Putin criticized the government in Kyiv for what he said was
a mishandling of the situation in eastern Ukraine that is "dragging the
country into an abyss."
"Instead of realizing that there is something wrong with the
Ukrainian government and attempting dialogue, they made more threats of
force ... this is another very grave crime by Kyiv's current leaders,"
he said.
"I hope that they are able to realize what a pit, what an abyss the current authorities are in and dragging the country into."
He said the Geneva talks were very important and urged the
government in Kyiv to sit down to talks with Russian-speaking
communities in the east.
"The start of today's talks are very important, because it
is important that we together think about how to get out of the
situation," Putin said.
He said claims that Russian forces were present in east Ukraine were "rubbish."
"It's all nonsense. There are no kinds of Russian units in
eastern Ukraine. No special forces, no instructors. They are all local
citizens."
UPDATE: 4/16/14 4:40 PM ET
UPDATE: 4/16/14 4:30 PM ET
What happened in eastern Ukraine?
So what exactly happened in eastern Ukraine today? Did
Ukrainian soldiers defect? Were they humiliated? Did they abandon their
armored vehicles?
Kyiv Post has a round-up of events that attempts to answer some of the questions:
The citizens of Kramatorsk, a city of 250,000 people, were
outraged when several groups of Ukrainian paratroopers entered the
city's suburbs on armored vehicles on the morning of April 16.
Confident that the army arrived to violently suppress the
protesters, the civilians blocked some 18 vehicles with soldiers in two
locations near Kramatorsk.
Six more vehicles were captured by armed insurgents in
Kramatorsk and taken to Sloviansk, a city some 15 kilometers away, where
the pro-Russian insurgents have been holding administrative buildings
since April 12.
Dmitriy Di, a spokesman for the insurgents' People's Guard
of Donbas, said the vehicles will be used "at least for blocking
streets."
According to Di, a dozen Ukrainian soldiers who rode in the
captured vehicles surrendered and took the insurgents' side. However,
the insurgents kept the soldiers in the seized city hall and refused to
let anyone see them or talk to them.
"This is crap. They could not surrender," said Dmytro, 19, one of the paratroopers blocked in Kramatorsk.
You can find
the Kyiv Post's full account here.
And the UK's Telegraph produced this
video dispatch from the tense scene of the standoff as Ukrainian jets buzzed overhead.
The Telegraph's piece attributed the Ukrainian soldiers reticence to not wanting to harm fellow Ukrainians.
"We’re just following orders," one paratrooper told the Telegraph. "Nobody wants a war."
UPDATE: 4/16/14 3:20 PM ET
More clues about the 'little green men'
The Financial Times has more on the "little green men":
The “separatists” do include at least some men
previously in Crimea. Soldiers dressed in military fatigues but without
insignia in Slovyansk told the Financial Times they had operated in the
Black Sea peninsula then moved into eastern Ukraine several weeks ago —
though they described themselves only as “Cossacks.”
The FT article pointed out
that while the "green men" were more easily identifiable as Russian
when they were in Crimea, they have taken greater pains to conceal their
affiliations in eastern Ukraine, blending in with the pro-Russian local
militia.
Still, experts pointed to their Russian military-issue boots
and the grenade launchers some carried as equipment that set them
apart.
The
full FT piece can be found here.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 3:10 PM ET
'Russia has no plans to invade'
"Russia has no plans to intervene militarily, no plans to
invade anybody — not Ukraine, not any other country; or to annex
anything," Russia's ambassador to the EU
told CNN's Christiane Amanpour.
"You do not calm a popular protest by sending troops, by
declaring an anti-terrorist operation," Vladimir Chizhov said during the
interview.
When
Amanpour asked him about why people in eastern Ukraine were protesting, Chizov said, "They are doing that out of desperation, I suppose."
"Because those who have taken power in Kyiv, they have not
been listening to the demands, to the requests of people in the eastern
part of the country."
Find the full story here.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 2:45 PM ET
Loathing and lawlessness in eastern Ukraine
Underneath all the headlines, warnings and tension, there's real anger in eastern Ukraine.
Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk
talked to residents in Slovyansk:
“For three months, we watched this scene on the Maidan and
were against it, but no one listened to us,” said 55-year-old local Olga
Vladimirovna, standing near the blockaded police station on Tuesday.
“We knew how this would all end,” Vladimirovna added. “We’re not stupid people here — we knew it would result in collapse.”
Read his full report from Slovyansk here.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 2:25 PM ET
Humiliation for Ukrainian soldiers who set out on 'anti-terrorist operation'
This is Reuters' report on the goings on today in eastern Ukraine (the events of which still remain unclear for the most part):
Separatists flew the Russian flag on armored vehicles taken
from the Ukrainian army on Wednesday, humiliating a Kyiv government
operation to recapture eastern towns controlled by pro-Moscow partisans.
Six armored personnel carriers were driven into the
rebel-held town of Slovyansk to waves and shouts of "Russia! Russia!" It
was not immediately clear whether they had been captured by rebels or
handed over to them by Ukrainian deserters.
Another 15 armored troop carriers full of paratroops were
surrounded and halted by a pro-Russian crowd at a town near an airbase.
A Ukrainian officer said his men were not prepared to fire on fellow Ukrainians.
"I am a Ukrainian officer, that's the first thing. The other
is that I will not shoot at my own people no matter what," said the
officer who said he could not give his name as he was not authorized to
speak to the media.
"I want things to be normal, people to go back home, not sit
in some fields with weapons. I want children to see weapons only on TV
... I want us to live together as we were. And I want to be back home to
my wife and child."
The crowd blockaded the troops until the commander of the
unit, Colonel Oleksander Schvets, agreed to order his men to hand over
the firing pins from their rifles to a separatist leader.
The military setback leaves Kyiv looking weak on the eve of a
peace conference on Thursday, when its foreign minister will meet his
Russian, US and European counterparts in Geneva.
_________________________________________________________________________________
BuzzFeed's Max Seddon captured the moment when Ukrainian soldiers were dismantling their guns:
UPDATE: 4/16/14 1:50 PM ET
Dire warnings from Ukraine's security service
Ukraine's Security Service, known as SBU, made some serious allegations against Moscow on Wednesday.
The SBU claimed that "a special reconnaissance and
operations unit within the Moscow-based 45th Detached Reconnaissance
Regiment of Russian Airborne Troops and military intelligence units from
southern Russia are leading the insurgency,"
according to the Kyiv Post.
A high-ranking member of the state agency's
counter-intelligence department, Vitaly Naida, said the Russians'
objective was to "cause bloodshed on the streets of our cities" and
provide a pretext for Russia to invade Ukraine.
Once "100-200" Ukrainians were killed,
Naida predicted "in an hour-and-a-half, tanks and armored personnel carriers of the Russian army will appear on the territory of Ukraine."
The SBU also said Ukrainian citizens who were suspected of
helping Russian security services had confessed and were actively
cooperating with the investigation,
according to the Kyiv Post.
When the Ukraine crisis first began spiraling into a
territory issue between the former Soviet satellite and Russia, a former
aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin
told GlobalPost that Russia would stage attacks to give itself a reason to invade.
In early March, Andrei Illarionov, a former economic adviser to Putin,
warned,
"Right now, Russian special forces from the 22nd Brigade are in
Ukraine, and we should expect staged attacks on Russian soldiers and
citizens."
No attacks on Russian forces materialized, and Crimea was annexed by Russia with hardly any bloodshed.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 12:00 PM ET
Pay no attention to the 'little green men'
While
TIME's piece explained how Ukraine's army was under-equipped, out of practice, and overly reliant on Russia for intelligence,
The Economist pointed to the "little green men" — Russian special ops who may have infiltrated Ukraine.
"In the past week [Russia] has engineered a situation in
which the Ukrainian government must either appear entirely ineffectual
or risk attacking some of its own citizens and, in so doing, provide a
pretext for further Russian action—even, perhaps, invasion,"
wrote The Economist.
It pointed out that Russia's defense ministry boasted just
last year about the creation of a special unit who could act as
"illegals" in neighboring countries.
Ukraine's Security Service released a video purportedly
showing communication between Russian military intelligence and
"subversion members" in Slovyansk. (You can find an excerpt
at The Kyiv Post.)
Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the US House Intelligence committee also echoed the claim that Russians are already in Ukraine.
"There are Russian citizens who are, again, military and intelligence operatives in eastern Ukraine fomenting this trouble,"
Rogers told CNN on Tuesday. "They are recruiting, and there’s some level of training."
Here are some mentions of "green men" from reporters on the ground in Ukraine:
GlobalPost's own Dan Peleschuk got a friendly escort away
from the scene of protests in Slovyansk yesterday when he told them he
was an American journalist:
As many media outlets have
pointed out, the men wear uniforms without insignia, as was seen in Crimea last month.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 11:35 AM ET
Ukraine's army is not ready to confront Russia
As evidenced by the events in Kramatorsk and Slovyansk so
far today, Ukraine's army doesn't seem to be in full readiness to tackle
the might of the Russian military.
TIME's Simon Shuster took a closer look at the weaknesses in Ukraine's troops:
Like many of the leading men in Ukraine’s new military
pecking order, Petr Mekhed wasn’t exactly ripe for the task of fending
off a Russian invasion when he assumed the post of Deputy Defense
Minister in February. His last tour of combat duty was about 30 years
ago, during the Soviet war in Afghanistan, after which he reached the
rank of colonel in the Red Army. When revolution in Ukraine broke out
this winter, his wartime experience made him better equipped than most
at defending the barricades of the Maidan protest camp in the center of
Kiev. But it was not as useful in preparing him to lead his country into
war. “For some issues I’ve had to sit down with a book and study up,”
he says.
“We’ll never get anywhere through the use of military force,” he tells TIME.
Read the full story at TIME.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 11:25 AM ET
Ukraine's PM calls on Russia to stop 'exporting terrorism'
Reuters — Ukraine's prime minister on Wednesday accused
Russia of "exporting terrorism" to Ukraine by using covert forces to
organize armed separatists who he said had attacked Ukrainian forces and
occupied state buildings.
"The Russian government must immediately call off its
intelligence-diversionary groups, condemn the terrorists and demand that
they free the buildings," Arseniy Yatsenyuk told a government meeting.
"That is, if the Russian Federation is interested in
stabilizing the situation, which I have significant doubts about," he
added.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 11:00 AM ET
NATO steps up its involvement in eastern states
From Senior Correspondent Paul Ames:
NATO agreed on Wednesday to boost the defenses of its
eastern members worried about the risk of spillover from the Ukraine
conflict.
The decision will do little to calm the fears of Ukrainians
who face the threat of civil war and Russian invasion, but it offers a
modicum of comfort to Poland, Romania and the Baltic States.
"You will see deployments at sea, in the air, on land to
take place immediately," NATO's Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen
told reporters at alliance headquarters in Brussels. "That means within
days ... we have decided to implement immediately."
NATO officials said the moves would include increased air
patrols over the eastern states, and dispatching warships to the Baltic
and eastern Mediterranean seas. NATO is also expected to enhance
command-and-control capabilities for eastern members, and the deployment
of ground units for training and exercises with eastern allies.
Officials stressed the moves would be compliant with
agreements struck with Russia at the end of the Cold War, even though
many at NATO believe Russia's actions in Ukraine are in gross violation
of those accords.
"Our decisions today are about defense, deterrence and
de-escalation," Fogh Rasmussen said. "They are entirely in line with our
international commitments."
The planned deployments fall short of Polish and Baltic
demands for permanent NATO bases. Sources in Brussels said that would be
a step too far for several allies who remain wary of further provoking
Russia. They stressed however, that further defense moves could be
adopted as the situation evolves.
Supreme Allied Commander in Europe Gen. Philip Breedlove
said the new deployment would be sustainable until the end of this year
and would be extended as needed. He told reporters several allied
nations had come forward to offer forces.
Breedlove said Russia's moves in Ukraine marked a "paradigm
shift" on the situation in Europe. The build up of 40,000 combat ready
Russian troops along Ukraine's borders showed NATO had to reassess its
capabilities, the US Air Force general told reporters.
Officials said there is a deeply somber mood within NATO's
policy setting North Atlantic Council as the latest clashes in eastern
Ukraine feed fears of imminent war. Breedlove said there was no sign
Russia had pulled any of its troops back from the border in response to
Western appeals.
In a further sign of allied concern, Breedlove said he was
in contact with Washington to discuss levels of US troops that need to
be based in Europe given the increased tension with Russia.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 10:25 AM ET
The clusterf*** in eastern Ukraine
The Ukrainian defense ministry finally
confirmed that six armored vehicles were captured by pro-Russian militia near the city of Kramatorsk.
The ministry said locals blocked the path for the vehicles on Wednesday morning,
according to the Kyiv Post.
"As a result of the blocking, extremists seized the vehicles
and the column [of armored vehicles] headed towards [Slovyansk]." They
are now in the hands of men "not related to the Armed Forces of
Ukraine."
This is the scene near Kramatorsk:
And BuzzFeed's Max Seddon is in Slovyansk:
UPDATE: 4/16/14 8:40 AM ET
Would this be defined as defection in military terms or...
Reuters — Armored personal carriers driven into the eastern
Ukrainian city of Slovyansk had been under the control of Ukrainian
armed forces earlier on Wednesday, pictures taken by Reuters
photographers showed.
A soldier guarding one of six troop carriers now under the
control of pro-Russian separatists told Reuters he was a member of
Ukraine's 25th paratrooper division from Dnipropetrovsk.
"All the soldiers and the officers are here. We are all boys
who won't shoot our own people," said the soldier, whose uniform did
not have any identifying markings on it.
"They haven't fed us for three days on our base. They're feeding us here. Who do you think we are going to fight for?" he said.
Armored personnel carriers marked with the numbers 815, 842
and 847 were among six under Ukrainian control in the center of
Kramatorsk early on Wednesday. They were seen under the control of
pro-Russian separatists in the center of Slovyansk later.
Ukrainian soldiers with the vehicles in Kramatorsk on
Wednesday morning identified themselves as members of the 25th
paratrooper division.
Some Kramatorsk locals gave tea and food to the Ukrainian
soldiers, who appeared dirty and tired and said they had been on
"exercises" for four days.
A civilian in Kramatorsk who identified himself as Felix
told Reuters he had seen Ukrainian forces give up their vehicles to
armed pro-Russian separatists.
A YouTube video showing vehicles with the same markings
appeared to show Ukrainian troops peacefully abandoning their vehicles
to heavily armed pro-Russian separatists.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 7:35 AM ET
Ukrainian army stops for civilians
One thing is clear about the events in Ukraine on Wednesday
so far: Ukrainian troops headed toward the towns of Kramatorsk and
Slovyansk in the eastern Donetsk region, after capturing the former's
airfield on Tuesday.
The BBC said, "They were blocked by civilians and it is unclear whether they have any control of the town" of Kramatorsk.
The Kyiv Post reported this about the troops in Kramatorsk:
The Kyiv Post's journalists on the ground are reporting that
Ukrainian troops, surrounded by civilians and pro-Russian insurgents in
Kramatorsk, began flying a Russian flag after speaking with the
self-proclaimed mayor of Sloviansk.
After defecting, the troops traveled in armored personnel
carriers together with Kremlin-backed soldiers with no military insignia
to Sloviansk, which is 15 kilometers north of Kramatorsk. A video shows
a tank also in the city of Kramatorsk together with the APCs.
The Kyiv Post noted that the Ukrainian defense ministry denied the defection.
However, this is what Reuters reported about the tanks in Slovyansk:
The 20 tanks and armored personnel carriers sent to
Slovyansk were the most forceful response yet by the Western-backed
government in Kyiv to the pro-Kremlin militants' occupation of state
buildings in nearly 10 cities across Ukraine's rust belt.
"They must be warned that if they do not lay down their
arms, they will be destroyed," Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) General
Vasyl Krutov told a group of reporters tracking the sudden tank
movements.
He insisted that the militants were receiving support
from several hundred soldiers from the Russian army's Main Intelligence
Directorate (GRU) that had been dispatched to Slovyansk and surrounding
villages.
In short, there is no confirmation of defections and the
Ukrainian defense ministry denies seizure as well... we'll be following
the mystery of the Ukrainian APCs with Russian flags, as well as the
movement of Ukrainian troops today.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 7:20 AM ET
Putin warns of civil war
Agence France-Presse
— Russian leader Vladimir Putin warned that Ukraine is on the verge of
civil war, the Kremlin said Wednesday, after the Kyiv government sent in
troops against pro-Moscow separatists in the east of the country.
"The Russian president remarked that the sharp escalation of
the conflict has placed the country, in effect, on the verge of civil
war," the Kremlin said in a statement on telephone talks between Putin
and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
But the leaders both "emphasized the importance" of planned
four-way talks on Ukraine on Thursday between top diplomats of Russia,
the European Union, the United States and Ukraine.
UPDATE: 4/16/14 7:00 AM ET
Not quite the Crimea playbook
There are significant differences in how Russia intervened in Crimea and how it is now influencing eastern Ukraine.
Reuters reports:
Unlike the Black Sea peninsula, where thousands of Russian
troops were already based at ex-Soviet naval facilities leased from
Ukraine, there is little clear evidence of Moscow deploying significant
forces on the ground in the east of the country.
In eastern towns where armed, pro-Russian rebels have seized
public buildings and raised the Russian flag, some gunmen identify
themselves to journalists as "Russians" — but that says little about
citizenship in Russian-speaking parts of Ukraine.
They appear to be irregulars. If adept at barricading town
halls, they lack the elite kit and well-drilled bearing of forces in
Crimea — some of whom identified themselves to Ukrainian soldiers as
Russian troops, despite Moscow's denials.
If Russia is playing a role on the ground in eastern Ukraine
— something the Kremlin has again strenuously denied in the face of
accusations from Kiev and the West — it is more arm's length than it was
in Crimea, and annexation may not be its objective.
Read the
full piece here for more key differences in each scenario.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 4:00 PM ET
UPDATE: 4/15/14 3:25 PM ET
Oh Europe, where art thou?
Senior Correspondent Paul Ames writes about
Europe's feeble response to the Ukraine crisis:
As tension mounts in eastern Ukraine, Europe's declarations
of a strong and united response are starting to sound as credible as
Russia's claims not to be involved in fomenting the unrest.
Stefan Meister, an expert in EU-Russia relations at the
European Council on Foreign Relations, says the group’s reaction to the
latest escalation is consistent with its response throughout the crisis.
“It's just not sufficient. It's the minimum,” he says.
"EU member states can’t agree on serious sanctions on
Russia," he said in a telephone interview from his office in Berlin.
"They have economic interests in Russia and they can agree on neither
energy sanctions nor financial sanctions, that's the problem."
Read the full story here.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 3:00 PM ET
Where is Horlivka? And what about Kramatorsk?
For all your geographical needs, The Wall Street Journal
created a map of which eastern Ukrainian cities have been hit with
unrest in recent weeks:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 2:05 PM ET
UN chief expressed his alarm to Putin
This is what the UN had to say about Ban's phone call with Putin (via Reuters):
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spoke with Russian
President Vladimir Putin in a phone conversation on Tuesday and
expressed his alarm at the highly volatile situation in eastern Ukraine,
Ban's press office said in a statement.
"The Secretary-General ... underlined that any deepening of
the crisis would be profoundly detrimental for all concerned; hence the
need for everyone to work to de-escalate the situation," the statement
said.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 1:45 PM ET
Putin calls on international community to condemn Ukraine's use of force
Putin has asked the international community, via UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, to condemn the Ukrainian authorities' use
of force in the east of the country.
Reuters reported:
In a telephone conversation with Ban, Putin "underscored
that the Russian side expects a clear condemnation from the United
Nations and the international community of these anti-constitutional
actions," a Kremlin statement said.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 1:40 PM ET
The White House throws its support behind Kyiv
Reuters — Ukraine's actions against pro-Russian militiamen
in the country's eastern region are called for because of the threat to
law and order in the country, the White House said on Tuesday.
"The Ukrainian government has the responsibility to provide
law and order and these provocations in eastern Ukraine are creating a
situation in which the government has to respond," White House spokesman
Jay Carney said at a briefing.
The United States is "seriously considering" new sanctions
against Russia, but is not considering providing lethal aid to Ukraine,
he said.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Carney prefaced his statement with praise for Ukraine's "measured response,"
according to the Guardian:
“We understand the government of Ukraine is
working to try to calm the situation in the east and note the measured
approach of the Ukrainian security forces thus far,” said White House
press secretary Jay Carney.
He said the Ukrainians had repeatedly sought to negotiate a
peaceful resolution with armed groups occupying the building in eastern
cities and made clear that use of force was not its “preferred action.”
UPDATE: 4/15/14 1:20 PM ET
Conflicting reports on casualties
This is Reuters' report on Russia's version of events:
Russia said it was deeply concerned on Tuesday
over reports of casualties in eastern Ukraine, where Kyiv has launched
an operation against pro-Russian separatists.
"The reports we are getting cause deep concern. To all
appearances, events are beginning to develop under the worst case
scenario," Konstantin Dolgov, the Russian foreign ministry's human
rights representative, was quoted by state news agency RIA as saying.
Russian media has exaggerated the extent of clashes, with Russia Today earlier apparently claiming 11 deaths at the airfield.
The UN released a report today saying propaganda had added
fuel to the conflict in Ukraine, though it did not explicitly lay the
blame at the Russian media's door.
Ukraine's defense ministry, in the meantime, said no Ukrainian troops were injured in the takeover of Kramatorsk's airfield,
according to Kyiv Post.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 1:05 PM ET
Anger and paranoia simmer among Slovyansk residents
More from Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk in Slovyansk:
Following the seizure of this eastern city in Ukraine's
industrial heartland by pro-Russian forces, an outpouring of anger and
paranoia appears to have colored the local atmosphere.
As local anti-Kyiv protesters demonstrated outside the
occupied police headquarters on Tuesday, a group of angry, middle-aged
women seized another local woman, slamming her as a "provocateur" after a
disagreement during a debate.
They demanded to see the woman's passport, ostensibly to
prove she was in fact a local and eventually chased her away with
threats of physical violence.
Residents here and in other parts of Ukraine's pro-Russian
east have denounced what they say is a propaganda campaign waged by the
new authorities aimed at discrediting them.
There are also strong anti-Western sentiments.
After introducing himself as an American reporter, a
GlobalPost reporter was forcefully led away from the occupied city
council building by an armed rebel, directed toward a nearby church and
told to "go talk to a priest if you want to know about our Slavic
character because you're not welcome here."
This was Slovyansk 9 hours ago:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 12:55 PM ET
'I will not leave here'
From Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk in Slovyansk:
Local residents of this crumbling, former industrial city
remained defiant on Tuesday afternoon even as fears grew of an imminent
Ukrainian military incursion into Slovyansk.
"Those soldiers who have a conscience won't shoot at us,"
said 48-year-old Irina Viktorovna, who was standing near the barricades
erected by pro-Russian activists.
"But I will not leave here," she added.
By early evening, pro-Russian rebels had restricted access through several roadblocks around town.
This was the crowd Slovyansk two days ago, as captured by
photojournalist Maxim Dondyuk on his Instagram feed:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 12:25 PM ET
'I am here to protect you'
Reuters — Ukrainian airborne troops landed in a town in the
east of the country on Tuesday after the defense ministry announced it
was launching a "special operation" there against pro-Russian
separatists.
The town of Kramatorsk is one of 10 localities in Ukraine's
Russian-speaking east where separatist rebellions have broken out and
the move suggested Ukraine's authorities were going ahead with a plan
for a broad military crackdown to end the unrest which began 10 days
ago.
Separately, the state security service announced a similar
operation had got underway in the town of Slovyansk, about 20 km away
where pro-Russia militants are occupying state buildings to push their
demands for referendums on the status of Ukraine's eastern regions.
In Slovyansk, a Reuters correspondent said there was no sign of any forces loyal to Kyiv, and no evidence of fighting.
The troops disembarked in Kramatorsk from two military
helicopters after an air force plane made what appeared to be an
unsuccessful attempt to land at the airfield where separatists had set
up barricades at the entrance.
This correspondent heard several shots fired from inside the
base as a crowd of separatist sympathizers moved towards the gates, but
these appeared to be warning shots.
There were no clashes.
A Ukrainian general, Gennady Krutov, who identified himself
as the commander of the anti-terrorist operation, told the crowd: "We
have information that there is shooting going on in here. I came here to
clarify that.
"There is an anti-terrorist operation going on in here. I am
here to protect you. I address you as citizens of our common country,"
he said.
But he was met by abusive chants and cries of "Hands off the
Donbass," a name for the surrounding region of eastern Ukraine, which
is mainly Russian-speaking.
As talks grew heated, the crowd numbering several hundred jostled the general who at one point lost his hat in the commotion.
_________________________________________________________________________________
BuzzFeed's Max Seddon is at Slovyansk's airfield:
GlobalPost's Dan Peleschuk was in Slovyansk earlier today and said that while tense, it appeared to be calm:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 11:55 AM ET
Ukraine retakes an airfield
Reuters — Ukraine retook the airfield in the Ukrainian town
of Kramatorsk from pro-Russian militants, acting President Oleksander
Turchynov said on Tuesday in a statement from his office.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 11:50 AM ET
Ukraine's 'anti-terrorist operation' commander wants to destroy the 'foreign invader'
The Guardian's Alec Luhn earlier spoke
to the Ukrainian commander who was outside Kramatorsk airfield. The
commander, identified as Krutov, told Luhn that more than 300 Russian
forces had entered the Luhansk region on Monday.
"We need to destroy this foreign invader,"
Krutov said. "We have among these spies Russian military, professionals
with long experience in all sorts of conflicts."
Asked if another ultimatum would be given to those who had
seized buildings, Krutov said that would be "too humanitarian." He said
civilian casualties were possible but his forces would try to "make sure
not one innocent person suffers."
Read more at the Guardian's live blog.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 11:35 AM ET
Heavy gunfire reported at Kramatorsk
The Associated Press released this breaking update:
An Associated Press reporter has heard heavy
gunfire at an airport in eastern Ukraine after the government sent in
army troops to retake control from pro-Russian militiamen.
The mayor of Kramatorsk said Ukrainian troops have now occupied the military airport and are blocking its entrance.
Read
the rest of AP's report here.
And from Kyiv Post:
The shooting has ended in Kramatorsk where an anti-terrorist operation is underway, reports Interfax Ukraine.
It's unclear how serious the shooting was, and whether there were any injuries. Olaf Koens is there:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 11:25 AM ET
NATO tells Russia to stop being part of the problem
On Monday, when Obama talked to Putin, the Russian leader dismissed reports of Russian involvement in Ukraine as "unreliable."
Ukraine, the United States, many member states of the European Union — and now NATO — disagree.
Reuters reports:
Russia is deeply involved in the crisis in eastern Ukraine,
where pro-Moscow separatists have seized control of a number of
government buildings, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said
on Tuesday.
The remarks from the head of the western military alliance
underline rising tensions with Moscow, which says it is not involved in
the armed pro-Russian protests in eastern Ukraine.
Asked if he had seen evidence of Russian involvement in
events in eastern Ukraine, Rasmussen told reporters: "We never...comment
on intelligence, but I think from what is visible, it is very clear
that Russia's hand is deeply engaged in this."
Relations between NATO and Russia have turned icy since
Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region last month. NATO, accusing Russia
of massing forces on Ukraine's border, has also suspended cooperation
with Moscow.
Rasmussen, in Luxembourg for talks with European Union
defense ministers, called on Russia to "de-escalate the crisis, to pull
back its troops from Ukraine's borders, to stop destabilizing the
situation in Ukraine and make clear that it doesn't support the violent
actions of pro-Russian separatists."
"Russia should stop being part of the problem and start being part of the solution."
Military action by NATO, which is focused on protecting its own 28 members from Poland to Canada, is not on the agenda.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 11:15 AM ET
Propaganda has made the situation in Ukraine more volatile
Reuters on the United Nations' report on propaganda in Ukraine:
Ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine have falsely claimed to
be under assault to justify Russian intervention, the UN human rights
office said on Tuesday in a report that warned of an impact on the May
25 election if propaganda persisted.
Russia declared Ukraine on the brink of civil war on Tuesday
as Kyiv said an "anti-terrorist operation" against pro-Moscow
separatists was under way, with troops and armored personnel carriers
seen near a flashpoint eastern town.
The crisis began after protesters seeking closer Ukrainian
ties with the West toppled its Moscow-backed president in February.
Russia then seized and annexed Ukraine's Crimea region after its ethnic
Russian majority backed the move in a referendum, which the West
condemned as an illegal sham.
"Although there were some attacks against the ethnic Russian
community, these were neither systematic nor widespread," the UN human
rights office said in its report issued after two visits to the former
Soviet republic last month by UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human
Rights Ivan Simonovic.
"Photographs of the Maidan protests greatly exaggerated
stories of harassment of ethnic Russians by Ukrainian nationalist
extremists," it said, "and misinformed reports of them coming armed to
persecute ethnic Russians in Crimea were systematically used to create a
climate of fear and insecurity that reflected on support to integration
of Crimea into the Russian Federation."
_________________________________________________________________________________
Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk wrote about
what the average Russian citizen heard about Ukraine in March:
Ukraine’s new authorities are an
ultranationalist, neo-fascist gang who’ve seized power with covert
Western support and are bent on marauding Russian-speaking southeastern
Ukraine and forcing its peaceful citizens into submission at gunpoint.
That’s probably what you’d believe if you relied on Russian
state television for news about Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine’s Crimean
peninsula last week.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 11:00 AM ET
The scene at Kramatorsk airfield
From Alec Luhn, who writes for the Guardian:
And more from the airfield:
Kyiv Post's Christopher J. Miller tweeted these videos which
purportedly show jets flying over Kramatorsk. They have not been
independently verified:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 10:40 AM ET
Ukrainian forces have launched a 'special operation'
More from Reuters:
Ukrainian armed forces on Tuesday launched a "special
operation" against separatists in the town of Kramatorsk in the east of
the country, the defense ministry was quoted as saying by Interfax.
Local journalists quoted by Interfax said automatic firing
could be heard from the direction of Kramatorsk's military airfield and
said a fighter jet had swooped low over the area.
A correspondent of Espresso TV meanwhile said the Ukrainian
plane had been trying to land but had not been able to do so because
separatists had opened fire on it.
Earlier, pro-Russian militants who had been holed up in the
police headquarters since Saturday had quit the building — but a state
security official in Kyiv said separatists had then taken over the
agency's offices in the town.
A Reuters correspondent in the town reported seeing first a
fighter jet over the town and then four military helicopters over the
airport.
Two of these landed and when troops stepped out and walked
across the field, locals manning a barricade shouted "Shame! Go back
home!"
The correspondent, Gabriela Baczynska, said locals with
Russian flags had set up barricade of sand and tires outside the gates
to the airport. Some of them appeared to be preparing petrol bombs.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 10:30 AM ET
It begins...
Kyiv Post cited
Ukrainian channel Espresso TV's correspondent on the ground who said
Ukrainian troops have taken control of Kramatorsk airfield.
Interfax reported armored personnel carriers had stormed the
airfield, located between the cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk,
citing the Ukrainian defense ministry.
This is the chatter from reporters on the ground in or near the area:
UPDATE: 4/15/14 10:00 AM ET
This is what it looks like in Slovyansk
From Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk, who is in eastern Ukraine:
The situation in Slovyansk, seized by pro-Russia activists last weekend, remains tense.
Local media reports indicate that Ukrainian military troops
are posted along a road leading from Kharkiv to Slovyansk, in the city
of Izyum, about 25 miles to the north.
Pro-Russia rebels spent Tuesday afternoon reinforcing
barricades inside the city council building, where they removed
Ukraine's national coat of arms — the trident — from the building's
facade.
Heavily armed and masked troops, who claim they're locals, stand guard in front of the hulking Soviet-era structure.
Meanwhile, around 150 locals are milling nearby, in front of the barricade that's blocking off the local police headquarters.
There, the crowd — made up mostly of pensioners and young
women — break out sporadically into chants of 'federalization' and 'Good
job,' aimed at the ragtag group of crudely armed and outfitted
self-defense forces manning the barricades.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 8:30 AM ET
An 'anti-terrorist operation' begins
Ukraine's acting President Oleksander Turchynov told
parliament, "Russia had and continues to have brutal plans" for his
country.
"They want to set fire not only to the Donetsk region but to
the entire south and east — from Kharkiv to the Odessa region," he
said,
according to Agence France-Presse.
He also told parliament that an "anti-terrorist operation" had begun in the north of the Donetsk region on Tuesday morning,
as per the BBC. He said it was being conducted "stage by stage, in a responsible and weighed manner."
The BBC's Daniel Sandford tweeted this from Kharkiv, another region in eastern Ukraine that has seen separatist unrest:
GlobalPost Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk is in Slovyansk, in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk region.
UPDATE: 4/15/14 7:00 AM ET
Obama and Putin talk
President Barack Obama talked to President Vladimir Putin on Monday, after Moscow requested a phone call.
According to
a statement from the White House,
Obama "emphasized that all irregular forces in the country need to lay
down their arms, and he urged President Putin to use his influence with
these armed, pro-Russian groups to convince them to depart the buildings
they have seized."
Putin rejected insinuations of Russian involvement, calling the reports "unreliable,"
according to the BBC.
The Kremlin said the unrest in eastern Ukraine was "the
result of the unwillingness and inability of the leadership in Kyiv to
take into account the interests of Russia and the Russian-speaking
population."
Putin, for his part,
urged Obama to "use the resources at the disposal of the American side" to prevent any further violence.
US officials are
worried
about separatists in eastern Ukraine following the "playbook" of
Crimea, which voted in a referendum to secede from Ukraine and join
Russia last month after a period of protests and unrest.
More sanctions against Russia are expected from both the United States and the European Union.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 5:00 PM ET
UPDATE: 4/14/14 4:50 PM ET
Unrest in Kyiv
UPDATE: 4/14/14 4:05 PM ET
White House: Yes, the CIA's director is in Ukraine. No, we're not thinking of arming Ukraine.
Reuters — The White House on Monday warned that Russia would
face more "costs" for its interventions in Ukraine and confirmed that
the director of the US Central Intelligence Agency, John Brennan, was in
Kyiv over the weekend.
"We don't normally comment on the CIA director's travel but
given the extraordinary circumstances in this case and the false claims
being leveled by the Russians at the CIA we can confirm that the
director was in Kyiv as part of a trip to Europe," White House spokesman
Jay Carney told reporters.
According to media reports, Russia has urged Washington to explain what Brennan was doing in Ukraine.
"Senior level visits of intelligence officials are a
standard means of fostering mutually beneficial security cooperation
including US-Russian intelligence collaboration going back to the
beginnings of the post-Cold War era," Carney said.
"US and Russian intelligence officials have met over the
years. To imply that US officials meeting with their counterparts is
anything other than in the same spirit is absurd," he said.
Carney also said President Barack Obama would speak to
Russian President Vladimir Putin soon, perhaps later in the day, and
made clear the United States was not considering lethal aid for Ukraine.
"We are looking at a variety of ways to demonstrate our
strong support for Ukraine including diplomatically and economically,"
White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters.
"We're not actively considering lethal aid but we are reviewing the kinds of assistance we can provide," he said.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 3:50 PM ET
Sound and fury at the EU
And Senior Correspondent Paul Ames weighs in on the goings on at the EU:
It's hard to see Monday's decision by EU foreign ministers making Vladimir Putin quake in his marching boots.
One after another, the ministers emerged from their day of
talks in Luxembourg asserting that they had reached a "strong" and
"clear" position.
However, beyond the usual declarations, the only concrete
action the EU took against Russia's latest drive to destabilize Ukraine
was to expand the list of Russian officials who will have their assets
in Europe frozen, and be banned from entering the EU.
No names were mentioned, nor did the EU statement indicate
how many Russian officials would be added. "At this stage, we are
putting together such a list," said EU Foreign Policy Chief Catherine
Ashton.
Russia laughed off such measures when the EU placed 33 mostly low level Russians and Ukrainians on such a blacklist last month.
The reality is that beyond the declarations of unity and
threats to impose real economic sanctions, the EU countries are divided
between those — like the Netherlands and Bulgaria — who are wary of a
wider confrontation with Russia, and others such as Poland, Lithuania
and Sweden who want a tougher line.
Lithuania's Foreign Minister Linas Linkevivius suggested EU
sanctions could hit Russia's financial sector and arms industry. His
Swedish counterpart Carl Bildt said Thursday's meeting in Geneva between
foreign ministers from the EU, US, Russia and Ukraine could be
instrumental in deciding if economic sanctions will be launched.
The EU's headquarters is drawing up a list of possible
targets for sanctions, which could be sent to capitals this week, but it
is by no means certain that anything short of a full scale invasion by
Russian forces would convince all 28 EU nations to act.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 3:15 PM ET
Separatists in Donetsk want to control everything from the railways to the sewers
Reuters — Pro-Russian separatists occupying the regional
government building in Ukraine's eastern city of Donetsk vowed on Monday
to fan out and take control of strategic infrastructure across the
province they have declared an independent "people's republic."
Defying an ultimatum from Kyiv to surrender, some two dozen
separatist leaders gathered for a strategy meeting in a dark top-floor
room of the 11-storey building they have held for eight days.
"Everything from city cleaning to the sewage system, the
airport, railway stations, military ... should all be under your
control," Vladimir Makovich, one of the senior separatist leaders, told
the group.
Donetsk, a province with 4.3 million people — 10 percent of
Ukraine's population — and much of its heavy industry, is the biggest
prize of the eastern regions where pro-Russian separatists have captured
government buildings in the past week.
Kyiv has threatened military action against separatists and
accuses Moscow of organizing the unrest its mainly Russian-speaking
provinces to repeat the scenario in Crimea, a Black Sea peninsula
Russian forces seized and annexed last month.
Makovich said public officials who wished to continue their work must switch allegiance.
"Not a single serious decision can be made without you," said Makovich, who wore a beard and denim jacket.
Not all of the rag-tag civilian militia of mostly masked men
holding the building in Donetsk agree precisely on their demands, with
some calling for broader autonomy within Ukraine and others wanting to
join Russia right away.
But — clad in mismatched protective gear and armed with
hunting rifles, knives, batons and steel rods — they are united in their
disdain for Kiev and determination to stand their ground.
"One thing is clear, there will be no May 25 presidential
elections for us," Denis Pushilin, the self-styled head of the "Donetsk
People's Republic," declared, referring to plans for a vote Kyiv hopes
will finally restore normalcy to the country after months of unrest.
_________________________________________________________________________________
GlobalPost's Ronny Roman Rozenberg was in Donetsk last week
and captured these images of the pro-Russian separatists occupying a
regional administration building.
Find more
here and
here.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 2:15 PM ET
In Slovyansk...
Photojournalist Maxim Dondyuk captured some arresting scenes in the Ukrainian city of Slovyansk:
Find more on
his Instagram feed here [h/t
@maxseddon].
UPDATE: 4/14/14 2:00 PM ET
All quiet in eastern Ukraine’s largest city — for now
From Senior Correspondent Dan Peleschuk:
Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine’s largest city, settled into an
uneasy calm on Monday, a day after around 50 people were injured during
vicious clashes between pro-Ukraine and pro-Russia protesters.
The vast majority occurred after the pro-Russia activists
allegedly chased down their counterparts following opposing rallies
downtown and beat them, local media reported.
Amateur photos from the scene showed bloodied pro-Ukraine
protesters huddled near the entrance to the subway after having
allegedly been followed by pro-Russian activists, who some witnesses
said were armed with crude weapons.
Around 10 people were reported hospitalized, and two nearby subway stations were closed over the incident.
ATN, a local television network, called it “Bloody Palm Sunday.”
Pro-Russia protesters had also reportedly attempted to storm the city council building.
Ivan Varchenko, a regional council deputy and a member of
its human rights committee, says separatist sentiments in Kharkiv are
less intense than in the neighboring Donetsk Region, where several
cities have come under attack in recent days by mysterious, armed
fighters.
But he added that the local police –– whom pro-Ukraine
activists accuse of inaction after failing to stem violence during other
recent protests –– are “demoralized” and unwilling to step in.
“In reality, much of the police force we have in Ukraine
today was oriented toward several specific activities: to defend [ousted
President Viktor] Yanukovych's ‘family’ and to protect oligarchs’
businesses,” said Varchenko, a member of former Prime Minister Yulia
Tymoshenko’s Fatherland Party.
“And they understood that they were perfectly suited to that
–– to pressure local businessmen into paying bribes, for instance ––
but now, when they need to be fighting bandits, they’re showing their
inability,” he added.
That raises concerns about the safety of future pro-Ukraine
protests here in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city, which has
traditionally been known as a cultural and intellectual hub.
Although there have been several other attempts in recent
weeks to storm local administration buildings, separatist sentiments
have apparently not yet reached fever pitch.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 1:50 PM ET
Russia's denials don't have one shred of credibility, says UK
Reuters — Ukraine dominated Monday's talks among EU foreign
ministers after Kyiv threatened military action against pro-Russian
separatists occupying government buildings in the east.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague, arriving for the
meeting in Luxembourg, said there could be no doubt that Moscow was
behind the destabilization of eastern Ukraine.
"I don't think denials of Russian involvement have a shred
of credibility," Hague told reporters, adding that the EU now needed to
discuss adding more people to a list of 33 Russian and Ukrainian
officials targeted by EU asset freezes and travel bans over the Ukraine
crisis.
Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said the EU must now agree how the list could be expanded.
"The EU has to make it clear to Russia what are the
consequences of any possible future actions in eastern Ukraine," he
said. "I expect a very specific signal when we can expect sanctions if
Russia takes further steps."
But other governments were more cautious on sanctions,
underscoring concerns in parts of Europe about antagonizing a power with
an energy stranglehold over the bloc, and put their faith in Thursday's
talks.
Germany said the Geneva meeting could help calm tensions even though the option of sanctions remained on the table.
In addition to widening asset freezes and visa bans, the EU
is discussing possible more far-reaching measures, such as restrictions
on trade and finance with Russia, which Hague said should be prepared
quickly.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 1:30 PM ET
Could Russia be headed for more sanctions?
France's foreign minister said the European Union could hold
an emergency summit as soon as next week to impose further sanctions
against Russia, according to Reuters.
Several foreign ministers are meeting in Luxembourg and threatened Russia with new sanctions over its involvement in Ukraine.
As Reuters reported:
France's Laurent Fabius said he hoped "fundamental
questions" about Ukraine would be tackled at Thursday's meeting
involving Russia, Ukraine, the United States and the EU.
"If it is necessary, there may be a meeting of heads of
state and government next week at European level, which may adopt new
sanctions," he told reporters.
"The goal is to show firmness while keeping a dialogue open," he said.
Here is a
helpful list of all the current sanctions in place against Russia, from both Europe and the United States.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 1:05 PM ET
US signs $1 billion loan guarantee for Ukraine
Reuters — The United States on Monday signed a $1 billion
loan guarantee for Ukraine, part of an aid package aimed at supporting
the country's economic recovery.
"The Ukrainian people have demonstrated tremendous courage
as they have charted an independent course for their country and
demanded a government that truly reflects the will of the people," US
Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said in a statement.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Meanwhile, the European Union's Foreign Affairs Council
approved a loan of $1.38 billion and $848 million in micro-finance aid
for Ukraine,
according to the Kyiv Post.
All together, Ukraine is set to receive $3.23 billion.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 12:50 PM ET
Those two ominous words: Civil war
Moscow's envoy to the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe warned on Monday that any use of force against
pro-Russian protesters in eastern Ukraine could spark a civil war.
"The (Ukrainian) acting minister of the interior has said
that armed forces will be used against those who are in the
manifestations and also there are units being organized of paramilitary
people who will be given weapons and who will be under command of the
officers," Andrey Kelin told reporters, according to Reuters. "It will
be, as we heard, nearly 12,000 of these people. This is dangerous."
"In Moscow we strongly believe it might lead to a civil war. We are very worried," Kelin told an OSCE Permanent Council meeting.
It's not the first time those words have cropped up in the past 24 hours.
Ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych
said on Sunday that Ukraine "found itself in a new situation... and [has] begun to enter into civil war."
UPDATE: 4/14/14 12:30 PM ET
Pentagon condemns Russian aircraft's close-range pass with US warship
A response from the United States, reported by Reuters:
A Russian fighter aircraft made repeated low-altitude,
close-range passes near a US ship in the Black Sea over the weekend, the
Pentagon said on Monday, condemning the action at a time of heightened
US-Russian tensions over Ukraine.
"This provocative and unprofessional Russian action is
inconsistent with their national protocols and previous agreements on
the professional interaction between our militaries," said Colonel Steve
Warren, a Pentagon spokesman.
Warren said a Russian Su-24 aircraft, or Fencer, made 12
passes at low altitude near the USS Donald Cook, a destroyer that has
been in the Black Sea since April 10. It appeared to be unarmed, he
said.
At the time the passes took place, Warren said, the US ship
was conducting a patrol in international waters in the western Black
Sea. It is now in a Romanian port.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 12:20 PM ET
A 'people's mayor'
The Kyiv Post reported
that a representative for self-defense forces in the town of Horlivka
was elected as a "people's mayor" in the Donetsk region. The move
followed pro-Russian separatists storming the town's police headquarters
earlier this morning.
A posting on the city's website, Horlivka Mosaic,
claimed that the "deposed" mayor supported the formation of self-defense forces under Alexander Sapunov, now the people's mayor.
There are some scenes from Horlivka this morning:
UPDATE: 4/14/14 12:05 PM ET
The US is considering sending arms to Ukraine
From Reuters:
The United States is considering supplying arms to Ukraine,
where unrest in eastern cities bears the hallmarks of a Russian
destabilization drive, an adviser to Secretary of State John Kerry said
on Monday.
Ukraine's president on Monday threatened military action
after pro-Russian separatists occupying government buildings in the east
ignored an ultimatum to leave and another group of rebels attacked a
police headquarters in the troubled region.
Asked during a trip to Berlin whether the United States
could arm Ukrainian forces, senior diplomat Thomas Shannon said:
"Obviously we are looking at that as an option ... but at this point I
can't anticipate whether or not we are going to do that."
Republican Sen. John McCain has suggested providing weapons
to the Ukraine government, which says the occupations that began on
Sunday are part of a Russian-led plan to dismember the country.
"From our point of view what we are seeing in a series of
cities mimics what we saw in Crimea both in terms of the tactics and in
terms of the people involved," said Shannon, who holds the title of
counselor.
"From our point of view there is a very obvious Russian hand
in all of this and we consider these actions to be destabilizing and
dangerous."
UPDATE: 4/14/14 11:50 AM ET
A close encounter with a warship
The Associated Press reported:
"A U.S. military official says a Russian fighter jet made multiple,
close-range passes near an American warship in the Black Sea for more
than 90 minutes Saturday amid escalating tensions in the region."
The Black Sea is right below Ukraine, as can be seen in this map marked with places of unrest:
Russia's Black Sea Fleet has a base in Sevastopol, Crimea — a
region which until recently belonged to Ukraine. Crimea held a
referendum in March to secede from Ukraine and join Russia — a move that
was widely criticized and not recognized by the international
community.
Find the full report
from the AP here.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 11:40 AM ET
Ukraine asks UN to send peacekeepers to the east
Acting President Oleksander Turchynov called on the United
Nations to deploy peacekeepers to eastern Ukraine to help de-escalate
the situation.
According to the Kyiv Post,
Turchynov spoke to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, suggesting that UN
peacekeepers could aid Ukrainian security forces with "anti-terrorist
operations."
The Kyiv Post
pointed out that such a deployment would need approval from the UN Security Council, of which Russia is a permanent member.
Russia's UN envoy, Vitaly Churkin, called Ukraine's
ultimatum to separatists in the east a "criminal use of force" during an
emergency Security Council meeting on Sunday.
"The authorities (in Ukraine) do not want to listen to those
who do not accept the imposed dominance in Kyiv of national radicals
and chauvinists, Russophobic, anti-Semitic forces," Churkin said,
according to Reuters.
"The grotesque Russophobia and embedded hatred has become the norm in the Verkhovna Rada (parliament) as well," he added.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 11:15 AM ET
Putin, please help
Separatists in eastern Ukraine appealed to Russian President
Vladimir Putin to help defend them against Ukrainian government forces.
A separatist leader speaking at the occupied headquarters of
Slaviansk's city administration asked the Russian leader "to personally
direct your attention to the unfolding situation and help us as much as
you can," according to Reuters.
The town is expected to be the target of an "anti-terrorist
operation" launched by the Kyiv government, though there are no reports
yet of Ukrainian forces there.
UPDATE: 4/14/14 10:30 AM ET
'This will not be another Crimea'
While acting President Turchynov said that Kyiv's leadership was "
not against" a nationwide referendum being held on what type of state Ukraine should be, he
told the nation, "We will not allow Russia to repeat the Crimean scenario in the east of Ukraine," during a televised address on Sunday.
"Blood has been spilt in a war that is being waged against Ukraine by Russia,"
he said.
"The national security and defense council has decided to launch a
full-scale anti-terrorist operation involving the armed forces of
Ukraine."
Meanwhile, Russia's foreign ministry denied any role in the unrest in eastern Ukraine and
accused Kyiv of "waging war against their own people."
This was the scene in the eastern Ukrainian city of
Slovyansk, where local media reported at least four people were killed
in clashes:
UPDATE: 4/14/14 9:45 AM ET
An ultimatum ignored
Here's the latest from Reuters:
Ukraine's president on Monday threatened military action
after pro-Russian separatists occupying government buildings in the east
ignored an ultimatum to leave and another group of rebels attacked
police headquarters in the troubled region.
Acting President Oleksander Turchynov also held out the
possibility of a referendum on the future shape of the Ukrainian state,
partly addressing demands made in the largely Russian-speaking east for
more control over their local affairs.
As the 9 a.m. deadline issued by authorities in Kyiv
expired, a Reuters reporter in the flashpoint city of Slaviansk, where
armed men had seized two government buildings, saw nothing to show the
rebels were obeying the ultimatum.
At least 100 pro-Russian separatists attacked the police
headquarters in the city of Horlivka on Monday, a witness told Reuters,
and video footage on Ukrainian television showed an ambulance treating
people apparently injured in the attack.
In all, separatists have seized government buildings and security facilities in 10 cities.
Source : Globalpost