Exclusive: Ukraine welcomes Biden-Putin call as path to deterrence and
de-escalation
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[December 08, 2021]
By Matthias Williams
KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine's Foreign Minister
Dmytro Kuleba told Reuters on Wednesday that talks between U.S.
President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin had enabled
"deterrence and de-escalation".
In the first reaction by a senior Ukrainian official about Tuesday's
video call between Biden and Putin, Kuleba welcomed U.S. efforts to
bring Russia to the negotiating table.
But he added that the priority was drawing up a deterrence package to
ward Moscow off any further military escalation.
Ukraine and its NATO allies have sounded the alarm about Russian troop
movements near Ukraine's borders this year, sparking worries that a
simmering conflict in eastern Ukraine could erupt into open war between
the two neighbours.
"The contact itself serves (as) deterrence and de-escalation," Kuleba
said in written remarks about Tuesday's call. "We appreciate the crucial
diplomatic engagement of the U.S. in efforts to bring Russia back to the
table of negotiations."
Biden warned Putin on Tuesday that the West would impose "strong
economic and other measures" on Russia if Russia launched a new
offensive against Ukraine, while Putin demanded guarantees that NATO
would not expand farther eastward.
STRONG SIGNALS TO PUTIN
Kuleba has led Kyiv's diplomatic efforts to press allies for a package
of measures to deter Russia from launching a new offensive. Russia has
dismissed suggestions of such an attack as false and inflammatory while
blaming Ukraine and the United States for destabilising behaviour.
Kuleba said he was confident "Putin heard some very clear and strong
signals regarding Russia's escalation along the border of Ukraine and in
the region".
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Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks during the NATO
Foreign Ministers summit in Riga, Latvia December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Ints
Kalnins
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy will speak to Biden on
Thursday.
Kuleba said Thursday's talks would allow the two leaders to discuss
further steps to deter Russia and ways to revitalise four-way peace
talks between Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany about the conflict
in eastern Ukraine.
"Currently, as we see a clear lack of constructiveness on the
Russian side, the main priority is to effectively implement the
comprehensive deterrence package to demotivate Russia from further
military escalation," Kuleba said.
"We are working closely with our allies on both sides of the
Atlantic to achieve that."
Ukraine's ties with Russia collapsed in 2014 after Moscow-backed
forces seized territory in eastern Ukraine that Kyiv wants back.
Kyiv says some 14,000 people have been killed in fighting since
then.
Since the latest crisis started, Moscow has set out demands for
legally binding security guarantees from the West that NATO will not
admit Ukraine as a member or deploy missile systems there to target
Russia.
Ukraine says Russia has no say over its ambitions to join the NATO
alliance and dismissed the suggestion of security guarantees as
illegitimate.
(Editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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