U.S., Russia set for Jan. 10 security talks amid Ukraine tensions
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[December 28, 2021]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Andrew Osborn
WASHINGTON/
MOSCOW (Reuters) -U.S. and
Russian officials will hold security talks on Jan. 10 to discuss
concerns about their respective military activity and confront rising
tensions over Ukraine, the two countries said.
A spokesperson for the Biden administration announced the date late on
Monday, and said Russia and NATO were also likely to hold talks on Jan.
12, with a broader meeting including Moscow, Washington and other
European countries set for Jan. 13.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov confirmed those dates on
Tuesday and said he hoped the talks with the United States in Geneva
would launch a process that would give Moscow new security guarantees
from the West.
Such guarantees are a longstanding demand of Moscow, which alarmed the
West by massing tens of thousands of troops near Ukraine in the past two
months.
The Jan. 12 NATO meeting would be held in Brussels, Ryabkov said, while
the Jan. 13 talks would involve the Vienna-based Organisation for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, which includes the United States and
its NATO allies, as well as Russia, Ukraine and other ex-Soviet states.
CONCERNS ON THE TABLE
Russia's deployment of troops near Ukraine has raised fears in the West
that Moscow, which seized Ukraine's Crimea peninsula in 2014 and has
since backed separatists fighting in eastern Ukraine, may be poised for
a new attack.
Russia has denied plans for an assault but says it could take
unspecified military action if its security demands are not met.
Moscow, worried by what it says is the West's re-arming of Ukraine, has
said it wants legally-binding guarantees NATO will not expand further
eastwards, and that certain offensive weapons will not be deployed to
Ukraine or other neighbouring countries.
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Russian and U.S. state flags fly near a factory in Vsevolozhsk,
Leningrad Region, Russia March 27, 2019. REUTERS/Anton Vaganov/File
Photo
The U.S. administration has promised
economic sanctions if Russia attacks Ukraine. It says it cannot
promise a sovereign state such as Ukraine would never join NATO.
"When we sit down to talk, Russia can put its concerns on the table,
and we will put our concerns on the table with Russia's activities
as well," said the spokesperson for the White House's National
Security Council, who declined to be identified. The spokesperson
said no decisions would be made about Ukraine without Ukraine.
"There will be areas where we can make progress, and areas where we
will disagree. That's what diplomacy is about."
U.S. President Joe Biden on Monday signed into law a massive
spending bill that, among other things, will provide $300 million
for an initiative supporting Ukraine's armed forces, and billions
more for European defence broadly.
Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region in 2014 and backed a
pro-Russian separatist uprising in the east of the country that
resulted in Kyiv losing control of a swath of territory in a
conflict it says killed 15,000 people.
Major combat ended with a ceasefire in 2015, but deadly clashes
still take place regularly.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Andrew Osborn; Additional
reporting by Maria Kiselyova and Olzhas Auyezov Editing by Himani
Sarkar, Michael Perry, Peter Graff)
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