Russia accuses U.S. of direct Ukraine war role, but says it's open to
potential talks
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[December 01, 2022]
By Andrew Osborn and Caleb Davis
(Reuters) -Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the United
States and NATO of playing a direct and dangerous role in the Ukraine
war and said Washington had turned Kyiv into an existential threat for
Moscow which it could not ignore.
Russia's top diplomat, speaking on Thursday during his annual news
conference in Moscow, also accused the United States and NATO of trying
to ratchet up tensions in the South China Sea and of trying to subvert
any regional bodies designed to promote dialogue, such as the OSCE in
Europe and ASEAN in Asia.
And he defended a Russian campaign that has used air, drone and missile
strikes to destroy Ukrainian infrastructure, attacks that Kyiv and the
West have called war crimes.
"We disable energy facilities (in Ukraine) that allow you (the West) to
pump lethal weapons into Ukraine to kill Russians," Lavrov said.
"So don't say that the U.S. and NATO are not participants in this war -
you are directly participating. Including not only with the supply of
weapons, but also with the training of personnel - you train the
(Ukrainian) military on your territory."
Lavrov's stance, revisiting familiar Russian talking points, is rejected
by the West which says Moscow, which invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, is the
belligerent one. Western powers say they are arming and training Kyiv to
help it recapture its own land and that Ukraine does not have
territorial designs on Russian land.
Russia, which dominated Ukraine before the Soviet Union broke up in
1991, calls its intervention in its neighbour "a special military
operation" to safeguard Moscow's security.
Lavrov delivered his anti-Western tirade as Russia's invasion of Ukraine
ground through its tenth month with fighting raging in the east and
officials in parts of Ukraine still battling to restore electricity
knocked out by Russian strikes.
Lavrov accused the West of trying to use the conflict to destroy Russia.
"Talk of the West being interested in some kind of peaceful settlement
does not impress us," he said.
"The West has publicly announced that it does not just want Russia to be
defeated on the battlefield. It has said that Russia should be destroyed
as a player altogether. And some are even holding special conferences
speculating on how many parts to divide Russia into and who will lead
which part."
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Ukrainian servicemen fire a mortar on a
front line, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in Donetsk
region, Ukraine, in this handout image released November 20, 2022.
Iryna Rybakova/Press Service of the 93rd Independent Kholodnyi Yar
Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces/Handout via REUTERS
His comments appeared to be a reference to the fact that some
Western politicians have said they want to ensure Russia cannot pose
a threat to neighbouring countries in future, and to remarks by some
Ukrainian politicians who have speculated how long Russia might hold
together as one country.
TALKS?
Although Lavrov devoted most of the event to criticising the West,
he made clear that Russia was open to the possibility of talks, both
with Ukraine and the United States.
Russia is ready to listen to anyone who wanted to hold talks, he
said. It had never shied away from any possible contacts between
U.S. President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin, and
had shown willingness by receiving the German and French leaders
when they wanted to discuss Ukraine.
Ukraine has said it will only be ready to hold talks once Russia had
withdrawn from its territory, including from Crimea, which Moscow
annexed in 2014.
Kyiv has said that Russia would only use talks as a chance to buy
time and rebuild its armed forces.
Lavrov said this was "absurd" and complained about what he called
the "naive" American expectation that Russia would continue talks on
nuclear stability at a time when he said the West was using Ukraine
to destroy Russia. Moscow pulled out of scheduled talks this week on
the New START nuclear treaty between the two countries.
"For now we aren't hearing any meaningful ideas," said Lavrov.
"(But) if there will be proposals from the president (Biden) and
from other members of his administration, we'll never shy away from
contacts."
(Reporting by ReutersWriting by Andrew Osborn Editing by Mark
Trevelyan)
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