Russia says "destructive" sanctions wouldn't hurt Putin personally
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[January 26, 2022]
By Dmitry Antonov and John Irish
MOSCOW/PARIS (Reuters) - Russia warned on
Wednesday that imposing sanctions on President Vladimir Putin personally
would not hurt him but would be "politically destructive", after U.S.
President Joe Biden said he would consider such a move if Russia invaded
Ukraine.
Biden said on Tuesday personal sanctions on Putin, though a rare step,
could be considered as part of a concerted drive by the United States
and its allies to convince Moscow that any new aggression against
Ukraine would bring swift and massive costs.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said U.S. Congressmen and senators
discussing personal sanctions against Russia's top leaders were ignorant
of the fact they were legally barred from holding assets, property and
bank accounts abroad.
Individual sanctions against Putin would be "not painful (but)
politically destructive", said Peskov, who has previously said they
would amount to severing diplomatic relations.
As officials began four-nation talks in Paris, Russia held new military
drills on land and sea and moved more paratroops and fighter jets to
Belarus, north of Ukraine, for what it describes as joint exercises
there next month.
Ukraine said Russia, which has gathered tens of thousands of troops near
its border but denied plans to invade, was trying to sow panic. Foreign
Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Moscow had not yet massed sufficient forces
for a large-scale offensive, but that did not mean it could not do so
later.
Nearly eight years after Russia seized Crimea and backed separatist
fighters in Donbass in eastern Ukraine, the former Soviet republic has
become the flashpoint in potentially the most dangerous East-West
confrontation since the Cold War.
Russia says the crisis is being driven by NATO and U.S. actions, and is
demanding security guarantees from the West, including a promise by NATO
never to admit Ukraine. Moscow sees Ukraine as a buffer between Russia
and NATO countries.
Western allies have threatened economic sanctions against Russia if it
attacks Ukraine, and the United States has been talking to major
energy-producing countries and companies around the world over a
potential diversion of supplies to Europe hif Russia invades Ukraine.
The EU depends on Russia for around a third of its gas supplies. Any
interruptions to its Russian imports would exacerbate an existing energy
crisis caused by shortages.
'NORMANDY' TALKS
In Paris, officials from France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine began talks
on the simmering Donbass war in which some 15,000 people have been
killed since 2014.
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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/File Photo
Andriy Yermak, chief of staff to
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, called the talks "a strong
signal towards achieving peace in eastern Ukraine".
But he said major ceasefire violations were taking place, and ruled
out the prospect of speaking directly to the separatists.
The four-way "Normandy format" talks, which have not been held for
more than six months, are seen by the European powers as vital to
remaining relevant in the broader dialogue with Moscow while the
United States and NATO hold separate crisis negotiations.
French officials said they hoped that some progress could be made
that would help the wider efforts to reduce tensions.
A French presidential official said the aim was to set a date for
talks on humanitarian measures and prisoner releases that would then
lead to negotiations on the future of the Donbass region. However,
he said the reality was that they would use the Paris talks to
determine whether Russia was serious.
"Either President Putin will seek maximum tension with us, which
means it will be very difficult to progress in the Normandy talks,
or he assesses that in this great period of volatility, it's useful
to use this format to reduce tensions."
Interfax news agency quoted the Russian defence ministry as saying
it a paratrooper unit had been deployed to Belarus on Wednesday, a
day after moving in artillery forces and marines ahead of joint
exercises next month.
It said Russia was also moving Su-35 fighter jets to Belarus for the
"Allied Resolve" exercises.
The buildup of Russian forces in Belarus, a close Russian ally and
former Soviet republic north of Ukraine, creates a new front for a
possible attack.
RIA news agency said more than 20 Russian vessels had embarked on
exercises in the Black Sea, south of Ukraine.
Separately, Russian artillery forces in the southern Rostov region
that borders Ukraine were set to practice firing on Wednesday as
part of a combat readiness inspection of the Southern Military
District, the Defence Ministry said.
(Additional reporting by Natalia Zinets, Pavel Polityuk, Matthias
Williams, Tom Balmforth, Vladimir Soldatkin, Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber,
Maria Kiselyova, Andrew Osborn and Alexander Marrow, writing by Mark
Trevelyan, editing by Timothy Heritage)
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