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Russia's top diplomat to discuss Ukraine in China visit
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) April 13, 2014


NATO chief sees Russian hand in east Ukraine escalation
Brussels (AFP) April 13, 2014 - NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Sunday he was "extremely concerned" about the escalation of tensions in east Ukraine, saying actions by uniformed, pro-Russian gunmen with military weapons pointed to an organised campaign to destabilise the region.

Drawing parallels with Crimea, the Ukrainian region Russia annexed last month after deploying forces there, he warned Moscow against further military interference.

"We see a concerted campaign of violence by pro-Russian separatists, aiming to destabilise Ukraine as a sovereign state," Fogh Rasmussen said in a statement.

"The reappearance of men with specialised Russian weapons and identical uniforms without insignia, as previously worn by Russian troops during Russia's illegal and illegitimate seizure of Crimea, is a grave development.

"I call on Russia to de-escalate the crisis and pull back its large number of troops, including special forces, from the area around Ukraine's border," he said.

"Any further Russian military interference, under any pretext, will only deepen Russia's international isolation," he warned.

The government in Ukraine launched a special forces operation early on Sunday to oust pro-Russian gunmen who had taken control of a police station in the eastern city of Slavyansk the day before.

Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said one Ukrainian special forces officer was killed and five were wounded in a firefight. He asserted that there were also dead and wounded on the other side but could not give figures.

Russia 'more and more' isolated over Ukraine says NATO
Sofia (AFP) April 11, 2014 - Russia is "more and more" isolated over its actions in Ukraine, NATO said on Thursday, while calling for beefed up alliance deployments to defend its eastern members.

"Nobody wants to isolate Russia but Russia is isolating itself internationally more and more every day," the alliance's chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Friday, as tensions remain high over the annexation of Crimea.

The warning shot came a day after NATO released satellite pictures showing up to 40,000 Russian troops massed along the Ukraine border.

"I call on Russia to take concrete steps to regain the trust of the international community, pull back its troops from Ukraine's borders and enter a sincere dialogue respecting Ukraine's sovereignty," the NATO chief said during a visit to Sofia.

The alliance described the troop movements Thursday as a "real threat" to Kiev.

Amid fears that the crisis could spread to NATO's eastern European members, the alliance has enhanced air policing over the Baltic states, deployed reconnaissance planes over Poland and Romania and overseen an increased naval presence in the Black Sea, Rasmussen said.

"But I think we need to take more steps and we will -- based on recommendations from our military authorities -- discuss this in the coming days and weeks.

"These considerations might include an update and development of our defence plans, enhanced exercises and also appropriate deployments," he said.

"We are not discussing military options but NATO is focused on ensuring defence and protection of all our allies and we will take all steps necessary to make sure that this collective defence is effective," Rasmussen went on.

"Let there be no mistake -- those steps are entirely in line with our international commitments and with our agreements with Russia, which Russia itself continues to blatantly breach," he added, condemning Moscow's "illegitimate actions".

After Moscow's takeover of Crimea last month, tensions have now spread to eastern Ukraine, where militants have stormed a series of strategic government buildings and demanded that Moscow send its troops for support.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing next week and will discuss with him the situation in Ukraine, the Russian foreign ministry said Sunday.

Lavrov will visit China on Tuesday, ahead of four-way talks between diplomats from the European Union, United States, Ukraine and Russia planned in Geneva on Thursday. Those talks are now in doubt amid violent clashes between supporters of Kiev and pro-Russian protesters in eastern Ukraine.

In meetings with the Chinese leader and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Lavrov plans to "devote special attention to the situation in Ukraine," the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement on its website.

"As is known, China in its approach sticks to a balanced and objective position, demonstrating understanding of the entire totality of factors, including historical ones, leading to new realities in this region," Moscow said.

China on March 27 abstained from voting as the United Nations General Assembly adopted a Ukraine-backed resolution condemning Crimea's referendum on joining Russia and refusing to recognise Russia's annexation of the peninsula.

Ukraine, Russia neighbours press NATO for backup
Warsaw (AFP) April 12, 2014 - Ex-Soviet countries fearing spillover from the Ukraine crisis have asked NATO for land forces and other backup, potentially moving the region one step closer to a new Cold War.

The nail-biting drama has already led the Western military alliance to step up defence measures in eastern and central Europe, but the region's leaders are seeking more.

The calls from Baltic states Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania -- which all border Russia and have sizeable ethnic Russian populations -- and Ukraine's neighbours Poland and Romania come as the United States accuses Russia of wanting to "create chaos" to have a pretext for more military intervention.

"We hope NATO's increased presence in the Baltic region is not just temporary and limited to reinforced air patrols," Estonian Defence Minister Sven Mikser said on state radio this week.

Mikser, who is to meet with NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen in Brussels on Monday, added that talks are ongoing "about having NATO rotating land units in our region".

His Lithuanian counterpart Juozas Olekas said Friday he was also in talks with the alliance on beefed-up security, with some decisions already made and others to be taken next week.

"The presence of NATO member forces in Lithuania may take various forms -- from instructors to permanently deployed land, naval, special operation or air forces," he told AFP.

NATO has already enhanced air policing over the Baltic states, deployed AWACS reconnaissance planes over Poland and Romania and overseen an increased naval presence in the Black Sea.

But Rasmussen himself said "we need to take more steps."

"These considerations might include an update and development of our defence plans, enhanced exercises and also appropriate deployments," he told reporters in Sofia on Friday.

- 'Concrete expectations' -

Poland's Jaroslaw Kaczynski, leader of the right-wing opposition, says he believes installing US military bases in his country would be the only way to counter Russian President Vladimir Putin's "expansionist ambitions".

The move would be highly controversial for Moscow, reversing an informal agreement made when NATO expanded east to include former Warsaw Pact countries that were eager to break away from years of Soviet domination.

"It's time to put an end to the restrictions on NATO troop presence in Poland," Kaczynski told reporters on Friday.

A senior Pentagon official had said Tuesday that Russia's takeover of Crimea could prompt a review of the US military presence in Europe, which has declined steadily since the end of the Cold War.

"While we do not seek confrontation with Russia, its actions in Europe and Eurasia may require the United States to re-examine our force posture in Europe and our requirement for future deployments, exercises and training in the region," said Assistant Secretary of Defence Derek Chollet.

Speaking ahead of a NATO foreign ministers' meeting in Brussels earlier this month, Poland's top diplomat, Radoslaw Sikorski, said the country "would welcome any forces" on its territory.

"All members should enjoy the same level of security," he told reporters, after earlier saying he would be happy with two heavy NATO brigades at home.

His counterpart in Romania, which along with the Baltics joined the alliance in 2004, voiced concern Thursday over the developments in Ukraine, stressing that his country is "on the frontline".

"Romania has concrete expectations of a redeployment and an eastward repositioning of NATO's naval, air and ground forces," Foreign Minister Titus Corlatean told AFP.

"The Black Sea region must be a top priority for NATO and the EU," he said, calling on the alliance to take a firm stand to prevent a contagion of the Ukraine crisis.

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