Niles Williamson
Presaging a further escalation of the conflict in Ukraine, Prime
Minster Arseniy Yatsenyuk on Monday declared an official state of
emergency in the eastern provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk. He also
announced that the rest of the country would be placed on high alert.
The eastern Donbass strongholds of separatists opposed to the regime in
Kiev that came to power last year after a US- and EU-supported coup have
seen renewed hostilities in recent weeks.
Speaking to reporters in New Delhi, India on Sunday, US President
Barack Obama blamed Russia for the renewed fighting in eastern Ukraine
and vowed to use all options short of war to escalate political and
economic pressure on Moscow.
Obama glibly told reporters that the United States has no interest in
weakening Russia or devastating its economy. “We have a profound
interest, as I believe every country does, in promoting a core
principle, which is, large countries don’t bully smaller countries. They
don’t encroach on their territorial integrity. They don’t encroach on
their sovereignty. And that’s what’s at stake in Ukraine,” he said.
Obama expressed concern over the collapse of a ceasefire agreement
signed in Minsk in September, accusing the pro-Russia separatists of
fighting “with Russian backing, Russian equipment, Russian financing,
Russian training and Russian troops.” To date neither the US government
nor the regime in Kiev has provided any solid evidence backing up their
repeated claims of direct Russian involvement in eastern Ukraine.
President Obama vowed to “ratchet up” the pressure on Russia and
ominously promised that the US government would consider all options
“available to us short of a military confrontation” to resolve the
ongoing conflict.
At the same time that Obama denounced supposed Russian interference
in Ukraine, he reiterated that Washington would continue to give
economic support to the Kiev regime, as well as provide equipment and
training for its armed forces.
It was announced last week that the United States Army would be
sending a contingent of advisers to western Ukraine in the spring to
train four companies of the National Guard of Ukraine. At the end of
last year, Obama signed the Ukraine Freedom Support Act, which
authorizes the president to deliver a large cache of lethal military
equipment to the Ukrainian government and implement a new raft of
sanctions against Russia at his discretion. (See: US announces plans to
deploy military advisers to Ukraine).
Obama’s remarks were part of a coordinated response to a deadly
artillery attack in the city of Mariupol on Saturday that struck a
residential area, killing 30 civilians and injuring approximately 100
others. An investigation by members of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) concluded that Grad and Uragan rockets
were fired into the city from rebel-held territory.
After an emergency meeting of NATO and Ukrainian ambassadors on
Monday, NATO General Secretary Jens Stoltenberg blamed Russia for the
escalating violence in eastern Ukraine. “We condemn the sharp escalation
of violence along the cease-fire line in eastern Ukraine by
Russia-backed separatists. This comes at great human cost to civilians,”
he told reporters.
After the shelling in Mariupol, the president of the European
Council, Donald Tusk, called for new sanctions against Russia after an
“urgent” phone call with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko. The
former Polish prime minister bellicosely tweeted, “Once again,
appeasement encourages the aggressor to greater acts of violence. Time
to step up our policy based on cold facts, not illusions.”
Responding to the new allegations of support for the anti-Kiev forces
in eastern Ukraine and threats of escalating sanctions by European and
American leaders, Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the Ukrainian
army of operating as a foreign legion for NATO. Speaking to students in
Moscow on Monday, he stated that the operations of the Ukrainian army
were tied to the “geopolitical containment of Russia” rather than the
“national interests of the Ukrainian people.”
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the EU and US of using
the attack on Mariupol to “whip up anti-Russian hysteria.” He defended
the actions of the separatists, saying they were fighting to defend
themselves from the Kiev regime’s new offensive. “They started to
act...with the goal of destroying Ukrainian army positions being used to
shell populated areas,” he told reporters in Moscow.
Alexander Zakharchenko, prime minster of the rebel Donetsk People’s
Republic, denied that the separatists were responsible for the attack on
Mariupol. “Kiev decided to shift the blame on us for its erroneous fire
from Grad multiple rocket launchers at residential areas,” he told
reporters.
The effort by the US and EU to maintain economic sanctions against
Russia has been showing signs of strain in recent weeks, with some
countries, such as France and Italy, pressing for the improvement of
diplomatic and economic relations with Russia. Last week, EU foreign
policy chief Federica Mogherini published a paper that outlined possible
ways to begin improving diplomatic relations with Moscow.
In the wake of the Mariupol attack, Mogherini has called for an
extraordinary session of the EU Foreign Affairs Council. The foreign
ministers of the 28 EU member countries will convene in Brussels on
Thursday to discuss possible new sanctions against Russia.
Fighting has flared up in the east in the last two weeks in the wake
of an assault launched by the Kiev regime on separatist-held areas. The
pretext for the new attack was the shelling of a commuter bus that
killed 13 people in Volnovakha, a small town on the main highway between
Donetsk and Mariupol.
Speaking at a rally in Kiev on January 19, President Petro Poroshenko
denounced the attack, which he blamed on the separatists, and vowed
that his government would “not give away one scrap of Ukrainian land.”
That same day the Ukrainian military was authorized by Poroshenko to
launch a “massive assault” on separatist-held positions in the east.
The Kiev regime launched an offensive in an attempt to solidify its
control over the Donetsk International Airport. In an embarrassing turn
of events, pro-Russian separatists succeeded at the end of last week in
repelling the attack and dislodging Ukrainian troops and right-wing
militia fighters from the airport’s main terminal. The symbolically and
strategically important airport, the site of intense fighting between
both sides for the last several months, has been nearly completely
destroyed by relentless artillery bombardment.
Shelling in Donetsk on Monday damaged a power station at the Zasyadko
mine, temporarily trapping 496 miners underground. Temporary power
generators were used to bring the mine’s elevators back online and the
miners were gradually evacuated.
Pro-Russian separatists have moved to surround the
government-controlled town of Debaltseve, where hundreds of Ukrainian
soldiers taking part in the renewed offensive have encamped. The town is
located on the main highway and rail line connecting the separatist
strongholds of Donetsk and Luhansk. At least seven Ukrainian soldiers
have been reported killed and 24 wounded in the last day of fighting in
the Luhansk region.
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