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		Kremlin says troop pullback takes time, in rebuff of U.S. scepticism
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		 [February 17, 2022] 
		MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin on 
		Thursday rejected what it called "unfounded accusations" by the United 
		States and NATO that it was not withdrawing its forces from near 
		Russia's border with Ukraine, saying it takes time to wind down military 
		exercises. 
 Moscow announced on Tuesday a partial force pullback, easing Western 
		fears of a looming invasion of Ukraine, but the United States and NATO 
		said on Wednesday the Russian military presence there was actually 
		growing, not diminishing.
 
 Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told a news briefing that Russia's 
		defence ministry had a clear timetable for the return of units to their 
		permanent bases.
 
 "It's clear the grouping for the (military) exercises was built up over 
		many weeks, and it is of course impossible to withdraw it in a single 
		day. They can't just take off and fly away... it takes time," Peskov 
		said.
 
 "As always unfounded accusations," he added.
 
		Russia has repeatedly denied any plan to invade Ukraine, despite massing 
		- according to U.S. estimates - some 150,000 troops near the border. 
		Russia is also holding huge military exercises in Belarus that are set 
		to run until Sunday.
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			Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends an annual end-of-year news 
			conference of Russian President Vladimir Putin, in Moscow, Russia, 
			December 23, 2021. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina 
            
			
			
			 Peskov said Moscow was seriously 
			concerned about a flare-up in violence in the Donbass region of 
			eastern Ukraine between Ukrainian government forces and pro-Russian 
			separatists and it was monitoring the situation closely.
 The rebels and Ukrainian forces traded accusations on Thursday that 
			each had fired across the ceasefire line.
 
 The conflict in the Donbass began in 2014 and has simmered since 
			then despite numerous ceasefires.
 
 Russia's military buildup has spurred Western fears that some kind 
			of staged provocation in eastern Ukraine could serve as an excuse 
			for a full-blown offensive.
 
 (Reporting by Dmitry Antonov; Writing by Tom Balmforth; Editing by 
			Gareth Jones)
 
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