Ukraine hints at concessions to Russia as Scholz heads to region
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[February 14, 2022]
By Dmitry Antonov and Pavel Polityuk
MOSCOW/KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine's
ambassador to Britain on Monday backtracked on remarks suggesting that
Kyiv would reconsider its attempt to join NATO as Russia masses a huge
force within striking distance of its neighbour, but said other
concessions could be on offer.
The Kremlin said that if Ukraine renounced its aspiration to join the
U.S.-European military alliance, that would significantly help address
Russia's concerns, and that President Vladimir Putin would meet his
foreign and defence ministers on Monday.
A day after Washington said Russia could now invade Ukraine at any time
on a surprise pretext, the Group of Seven large Western economies (G7)
warned Russia of "massive" economic consequences if it did so, and
promised Ukraine swift support.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz flew to Kyiv for talks, to be followed on
Tuesday by a meeting with Putin in Moscow, but a German official said
Berlin did not expect concrete results.
A senior Russian military officer was quoted by the news agency Interfax
as saying Russia was ready to open fire on foreign vessels that entered
its waters illegally, though such a decision would have to be approved
at the "highest level".
Moscow denies planning to invade Ukraine and has accused the West of
hysteria, but has made clear that it sees Kyiv's quest for closer ties
with the West, notably over NATO, as a threat.
Ukrainian Ambassador Vadym Prystaiko was initially quoted by the BBC as
saying Ukraine might be "flexible" over this aim, "especially being
threatened like that, blackmailed by that."
Later, he said he had been misunderstood on NATO - although Ukraine was
prepared to make other concessions.
'READY FOR CONCESSIONS'
"We are not a member of NATO right now and to avoid war we are ready for
many concessions and that is what we are doing in conversations with the
Russians," Prystaiko told the BBC.
"It has nothing to do with NATO, which (membership application) is
enshrined in the constitution."
The G7 finance ministers said that military aggression by Russia against
Ukraine would trigger "economic and financial sanctions which will have
massive and immediate consequences on the Russian economy".
Oil prices climbed to fresh seven-year highs amid concerns that
sanctions would disrupt exports from Russia, a major oil producer, in an
already tight market. [O/R]
Russia's stock index slumped to its lowest level in almost three weeks,
and the tension reverberated around major European markets, whose
indices fell by between 1.6% and 3%. [MKTS/GLOB]
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Ukraine's ambassador to Britain, Vadym Prystaiko, arrives at the
Ukraine embassy in London, Britain, February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Peter
Nicholls
[EMRG/FRX] [RU/RUB]
The dollar hit a two-week high as investors sought a safe haven.
Russian and Ukrainian bond pieces fell sharply.
Sanctions could rebound on Western powers, which rely heavily on
Russia for energy supplies, notably gas, as well as other raw
materials.
European banks in particular fear that Russia could
be excluded from the SWIFT global payment system, which would
prevent the repayment of Russian debts.
U.S. aircraft maker Boeing Co buys much of its titanium for
airframes from Russia's VSMPO-AVISMA - but said it was confident
that other suppliers would enable it to work through any supply
chain disruption.
Scholz may receive a cool reception in Kyiv, which has long resented
the German-Russian Nord Stream 2 project - a pipeline that will
allow Russia to circumvent Ukraine for its gas exports to Germany -
and has bristled at Germany's refusal to join other NATO partners in
selling it weapons.
'ANY DAY NOW'
The Kremlin said it expected Putin's talks with Scholz on Tuesday to
address Ukraine, security guarantees for Russia, and Nord Stream 2,
which is awaiting European Union approval.
U.S. President Joe Biden's National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan
said on Sunday that an invasion could begin "any day now", but U.S.
officials said they could not confirm reports that U.S. intelligence
indicated it would start on Wednesday.
Sullivan said the United States would also "defend every inch of
NATO territory ... and Russia, we think, fully understands that
message". Biden told Putin in a phone call on Saturday that any
attack would harm and isolate Moscow.
The Kremlin said Putin told Biden that Washington had failed to take
Russia's main concerns into account, and that it had received no
substantial answer on key elements of its security demands.
Washington regards many of the proposals as non-starters but has
pushed the Kremlin to discuss them jointly with Washington and its
European allies.
Washington and some European nations have been scaling back or
evacuating embassy staff and urging citizens to leave Ukraine. Dutch
airline KLM has suspended flights to Ukraine.
Ukraine on Sunday invoked a treaty to demand talks with Russia and
members of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
OSCE within 48 hours to discuss Russia's military build-up.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux worldwide; Writing by Kevin Liffey;
Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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