Ukraine urges NATO to be ready with sanctions in case of Russian
invasion
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[December 01, 2021]
By Sabine Siebold and Humeyra Pamuk
RIGA (Reuters) - Ukraine urged NATO on
Wednesday to prepare economic sanctions on Russia to deter a possible
invasion by tens of thousands of Russian troops concentrated within
reach of its border.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he would make the request
to NATO foreign ministers meeting for the second day in Latvia to
discuss how to respond to the Russian build-up and avert potentially the
most dangerous crisis in relations with Moscow since the Cold War.
"We will call on the allies to join Ukraine in putting together a
deterrence package," Kuleba told reporters as he arrived for the talks
in Riga.
This should include preparing economic sanctions against Russia, in case
it "decides to chose the worst-case scenario", Kuleba said, adding that
NATO should also boost military and defence cooperation with Ukraine.
Ukraine is not a member of NATO but the U.S.-led alliance has said it is
committed to preserving the sovereignty of the former Soviet republic,
which has tilted towards the West since 2014 and aspires to join both
NATO and the European Union.
That has enraged Russia, drawing a warning from President Vladimir Putin
on Tuesday that Russia was ready with a newly tested hypersonic weapon
in case NATO crossed its "red lines" and deployed missiles in Ukraine.
Putin said on Wednesday that Moscow wanted serious negotiations with the
United States and its allies to extract legal guarantees that would rule
out "any further NATO moves to the east and the deployment of weapons
systems that threaten us in close proximity to Russian territory".
That is unlikely to be acceptable to the United States, which has said
no country has the right to veto Ukraine's NATO ambitions. U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is due to meet Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov in Stockholm on Thursday.
SEPARATIST CONFLICT
Russia also backs separatists in a long-running war in the Donbass
region of eastern Ukraine and accused Kyiv on Wednesday of mobilising
125,000 troops, or half its army, in the conflict zone. Kyiv declined to
comment.
The Kremlin said it feared Ukraine was gearing up to try to take back
the rebel areas by force - something Kyiv denies - and accused it of
"very dangerous adventurism".
It said Russia could not take any steps to de-escalate because of a
large concentration of Ukrainian forces close to the border.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said direct talks with Moscow
were needed to end the war in the east, which Kyiv says has killed more
than 14,000 people.
"We must tell the truth that we will not be able to stop the war without
direct negotiations with Russia, and today this has already been
recognised by all, all external partners," Zelenskiy told parliament.
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Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks at the NATO Foreign
Ministers summit in Riga, Latvia December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Ints
Kalnins
Russia said it had started regular winter military
drills in its southern military district, parts of which border
Ukraine, and that 10,000 troops had relocated to training grounds
across the huge area. Its ally Belarus has also announced joint
military drills with Russia on the Ukrainian border.
DETERRING PUTIN
The West has maintained economic sanctions on Russia's energy,
banking and defence sectors since 2014 after it seized the Black Sea
peninsula of Crimea from Ukraine. It has also targeted a growing
list of senior Russian officials with asset freezes and travel bans.
But Russia has also blunted the impact of sanctions by reducing its
borrowings on foreign financial markets and maintaining large
currency and gold reserves.
"We are confident that if we join efforts, if we act in a
coordinated fashion, we will be able to deter President Putin and to
demotivate him from choosing the worst-case scenario, which is a
military operation," Ukraine's Kuleba said.
Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod told reporters any military
operation that would violate the sovereignty of Ukraine would be met
with "severe consequences" and that Denmark was ready to engage with
heavy sanctions.
His comments echoed those of NATO and the United States, who on
Tuesday issued stark warnings to Russia that it would pay a high
price for any new military aggression against Ukraine.
The EU's top diplomat, Josep Borrell, told reporters: "For the
European Union, the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine
is above anything. And we will be standing firmly and decisively
with Ukraine in front of any attempt to undermine its territorial
integrity and sovereignty."
(Additional reporting by Robin Emmott in Brussels, Natalia Zinets,
Pavel Polityuk and Matthias Williams in Kyiv, Gabrielle Tetrault-Farber
and Dmitry Antonov in Moscow; writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by
Angus MacSwan)
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