Putin: Russia wants guarantees 'now', seeks no conflict over Ukraine
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[December 23, 2021]
By Vladimir Soldatkin
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia wants to avoid
conflict with Ukraine and the West, President Vladimir Putin said on
Thursday, but needs an "immediate" response from the United States and
its allies to its demands for security guarantees.
Ukraine is at the centre of soaring East-West tensions after the United
States and Kyiv accused Russia of weighing a new attack on its southern
neighbour, an allegation Moscow denies.
"This is not our (preferred) choice, we do not want this," Putin said at
his annual news conference when asked about the possibility of conflict
with Ukraine.
He said Russia had received a generally positive initial response to
security proposals it handed to the United States this month designed to
defuse the current crisis and that he was hopeful about the prospect for
negotiations, which he said would start early next year in Geneva.
But in a separate reply, Putin grew more heated when recalling how NATO
had "brazenly tricked" Russia with successive waves of expansion since
the Cold War, and said Moscow needed an answer urgently.
"You must give us guarantees, and immediately - now," he said.
Russia rejects Ukrainian and U.S. accusations that it may bepreparing an
invasion of Ukraine as early as next month by tensof thousands of
Russian troops deployed within reach of theborder of the fellow former
Soviet republic. It says it needs pledges from the West - including a
promisenot to conduct NATO military activity in Eastern Europe -because
its security is threatened by Ukraine's growing tieswith the Western
alliance as well as the possibility of NATO missiles being deployed
against it on Ukrainian territory.
"We just directly posed the question that there should be no further
NATO movement to the east. The ball is in their court, they should
answer us with something," Putin said.
LOW POINT
Tensions over Ukraine have pushed East-West relations to their lowest
point in the three decades since the collapse of the Soviet Union. The
United States, European Union and Group of Seven have all warned Putin
he will face "massive consequences" including tough economic sanctions
in the event of any new Russian aggression.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks as he attends his annual
end-of-year news conference in Moscow, Russia, December 23, 2021.
REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina
The topic surfaced repeatedly at Putin's marathon
question-and-answer session, with the Russian leader seated alone in
front of an audience of masked reporters on a giant stage at the
cavernous Manezh Exhibition Centre near the Kremlin.
While looking forward to the upcoming talks with Washington, Putin
was damning in his criticism of Ukraine.
He accused it of breaking its commitments under a 2015 deal meant to
halt fighting in Ukraine's eastern Donbass area between Ukrainian
and pro-Russian forces, and refusing to talk to representatives of
two breakaway regions there.
Ukraine rejects Putin's stance that Moscow is just a mediator in the
conflict, accusing it of providing direct backing to the separatist
side. It has repeatedly offered direct talks with Russia, which
Moscow has so far rejected.
Putin made clear he did not see President Volodymr Zelenskiy as a
negotiating partner, accusing him of falling under the influence of
"radical nationalist forces".
"How can I build a relationship with the current leadership, given
what they are doing? It's practically impossible," he said.
(Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, Olesya Astakhova, Darya
Korsunskaya, Anastasia Lyrchikova, Olzhas Auyezov, Oksana Kobzeva,
Alexander Marrow, Maria Kiselyova, Andrew Osborn; Writing by Mark
TrevelyanEditing by Mark Heinrich)
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