US, Russia promise to work to ease Ukraine tensions
World
US and Russia's top diplomats on Friday agreed to keep working to ease tensions over Ukraine.
GENEVA (AFP) - Washington and Moscow s top diplomats on Friday agreed to keep working to ease tensions over Ukraine, with the United States promising a written response to Russian security requirements next week and not ruling out a presidential meeting.
As fears grew that Russia could invade its pro-Western neighbour, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken renewed warnings of severe Western reprisals as he met for 90 minutes with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Geneva.
The Russian foreign ministry said later that, in his talks with Blinken, Lavrov had warned of "the most serious consequences" if Washington kept ignoring Moscow s security demands.
Russia has massed tens of thousands of troops on the Ukrainian border, denying it plans to invade but demanding security guarantees, including a permanent ban on the country joining NATO.
Blinken told reporters no major breakthroughs had been expected but he believed the two sides were "now on a clear path" to understanding each other s concerns and positions.
He expected "to share with Russia our concerns and ideas in more detail in writing next week," followed by "further discussions."
Speaking separately, Lavrov told reporters "Blinken agreed that we need to have a reasonable dialogue, and I hope emotions will decrease."
He added that another meeting could be held between the two, but that it was "premature" to start talking about another summit between Presidents Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin, who met in Geneva last June.
Blinken did not rule out fresh talks between the presidents after Biden twice warned Putin by telephone of consequences for any Ukraine invasion.
- A disaster for Russia -
Biden bluntly assessed on Wednesday that Putin is likely to "move in" on Ukraine and warned of a "disaster for Russia".
And broader moves were afoot when the United States announced large-scale NATO naval exercises in the Mediterranean beginning on Monday and with the participation of the aircraft carrier USS Harry Truman.
US officials said the maneuvers had nothing to do with Ukraine, already reminiscent of a Cold War era stand-off.
But the announcement came a day after Russia announced its own all-out naval exercises, with more than 140 warships and about 10,000 soldiers taking part in January and February in maneuvers that will take place in the Atlantic, the Arctic, the Pacific and the Mediterranean.
In Kyiv, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted that he welcomed the fact that diplomacy "remains active."
He added that he and Blinken had discussed further strengthening Ukraine s defences.
Canada, meanwhile, has offered a loan of Can$120 million (US$95 million) to Ukraine to support the country s "economic resilience" in the face of Russian efforts to destabilise it, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday.
Russia, which already fuels a deadly insurgency in eastern Ukraine that has killed more than 13,000 people since 2014, has demanded guarantees that NATO never admit the former Soviet republic or expand otherwise in Moscow s old sphere.
The United States has declared the idea a "non-starter".
- Unacceptable demand -
Earlier on Friday Russia reiterated demands for the "withdrawal of foreign forces, hardware and arms" from countries that were not NATO members before 1997, this time singling out Bulgaria and Romania, two former Warsaw Pact countries that joined NATO in 2004.
Romania s foreign ministry quickly hit back, calling the demand "unacceptable".
NATO rejected the demand saying it would "not renounce our ability to protect and defend each other, including with the presence of troops in the eastern part of the Alliance".
Even while rejecting the core Russian demands, the Biden administration has said it is willing to speak to Moscow about its security concerns.
One proposal by Washington is to revive restrictions on missiles in Europe that had been set by the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a Cold War accord trashed by Donald Trump s administration as it accused Moscow of violations.
- US says clock is ticking -
The Biden administration has also offered more transparency on military exercises.
Russia has not rejected the proposals but says that its core concern is Ukraine and on Thursday announced massive naval drills as a show of force.
The United States has warned that the clock is ticking, putting forward intelligence alleging that an invasion could come shortly and be preceded by a "false-flag" operation as Russia tries to trigger a pretext against Ukraine.
Blinken said he asked Lavrov to prove Russia has no intention to invade, suggesting Moscow start "by de-escalating, by bringing back -- removing -- those forces on Ukraine s border."
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Friday that a Russian invasion of Ukraine would be against international law.
"I m convinced it will not happen and I strongly hope to be right," Guterres added.
Lawmakers in Russia s parliament have presented a bill that would ask Putin to recognise the independence of two pro-Moscow separatist territories in Ukraine, Donetsk and Lugansk.
Ukraine s military intelligence service on Friday accused Russia of sending fresh arms and equipment to the separatists since the start of this month.
Blinken travelled to Geneva after a trip to Kyiv and talks with Britain, France and Germany in Berlin.