US says Russia masses more troops near Ukraine, invasion could come at
any time
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[February 11, 2022]
By Tom Balmforth and Humeyra Pamuk
MOSCOW/ADELAIDE (Reuters) - Russia is now
massing yet more troops near Ukraine and an invasion could come at any
time, perhaps before the end of this month's Winter Olympics, U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday.
Commercial satellite images published by a private U.S. company showed
new Russian military deployments at several locations near Ukraine.
In his starkest warning yet to Americans in Ukraine to get out now,
President Joe Biden said he would not send troops to rescue U.S.
citizens in the event of a Russian assault.
"Things could go crazy quickly," Biden told NBC News.
Blinken, visiting Australia, told a news conference: "We're in a window
when an invasion could begin at any time, and to be clear, that includes
during the Olympics."
The Beijing games end on Feb. 20.
"Simply put, we continue to see very troubling signs of Russian
escalation, including new forces arriving at the Ukrainian border,"
Blinken said.
Russia has already massed more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine, and
this week it launched joint military exercises in neighbouring Belarus
and naval drills in the Black Sea.
Moscow denies plans to invade Ukraine, but says it could take
unspecified "military-technical" action unless a series of demands are
met, including promises from NATO never to admit Ukraine and to withdraw
forces from Eastern Europe.
Several Western countries launched diplomatic pushes this week to
persuade Russia to back down, but Moscow brushed them off, yielding no
concessions to French President Emmanuel Macron who visited on Monday
and openly mocking British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss during a visit on
Thursday.
Four-way talks in Berlin between Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France,
part of a longstanding peace process in a conflict between Ukraine and
Russian-backed separatists, also yielded no progress on Thursday.
Paris said the Russian delegation had agreed to hold more talks but
demanded Kyiv negotiate directly with the separatists, a "red line"
which Ukraine has rejected since 2014.
U.S.-based Maxar Technologies, which has been tracking the buildup of
Russian forces, said images taken on Wednesday and Thursday showed new
deployments in several locations in western Russia, Belarus and Crimea,
which Russia annexed in 2014.
The images could not be independently verified by Reuters.
In Crimea Maxar identified 550 troop tents and hundreds of vehicles
newly deployed at Oktyabrskoye airfield north of the city of Simferopol,
as well as deployments near the towns of Novoozernoye and Slavne.
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A satellite image shows a close-up of troops and equipment at
Oktyabrskoye air base, Crimea February 10, 2022. 2022 Maxar
Technologies/Handout via REUTERS
In Belarus it identified a new
deployment of troops, military vehicles and helicopters at Zyabrovka
airfield near Gomel, less than 25 km (15 miles) from the border with
Ukraine. And in western Russia it found a large new deployment of
troops and forces at the Kursk training area, approximately 110 km
(68 miles) to the east of the Ukrainian border.
Russia has not disclosed how many troops it has
deployed and says it has the right to move forces around on its
territory as it sees fit. It insists they pose no external threat.
DIALOGUE OF THE DEAF AND MUTE
Western countries have mostly stood together in threatening economic
sanctions against Russia if it invades Ukraine, but have given
conflicting views on the immediacy of the threat.
The United States and Britain have both warned an invasion could
come within days. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on
Thursday the coming days would be the most dangerous moment in
Europe's biggest security crisis for decades.
France's Macron, by contrast, has said he thinks Russia does not
have designs on Ukraine but wants changes to European security
arrangements, and the existing Franco-German-led peace process for
Ukraine's separatist conflict provides a way out.
Whatever its intentions, Moscow has responded dismissively as
Western countries have tried to turn up diplomatic pressure.
Pictures of Macron, seated far away from Putin at the opposite end
of a huge table in the Kremlin, went viral on the internet this week
and were widely mocked. The Kremlin said on Friday the seating was
necessary because the French president had refused a COVID-19 test
administered by Russian doctors.
French officials said waiting three hours for test results was
impossible given Macron's travel schedule; French sources also said
Macron's office was worried Moscow would sample his DNA.
Britain's Truss was treated to a public upbraiding at a joint Moscow
news conference by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who described
their talks on Thursday as a "conversation between a mute person and
a deaf person".
On Friday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov cited a gaffe by Truss,
who had to be corrected by her ambassador when she mistook two
Russian provinces for parts of Ukraine, as evidence that Western
governments were clueless.
"This is the reality in which we have to defend our position," he
said.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Peter Graff, Editing by
William Maclean)
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