Ukraine | Biden keeps the pressure on Russia

(Washington, Kiev, Moscow) Joe Biden maintained pressure on Moscow on Friday by announcing the forthcoming dispatch of a limited number of soldiers to Eastern Europe, at the end of a day of all-out exchanges which left an open way for a diplomatic settlement of the tensions around Ukraine.

Updated yesterday at 7:30 p.m.

Sylvie LANTEAUME, Anna TSOUKANOVA, Maria PANINA
France Media Agency

For his part, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday called on Westerners not to sow “panic” around the risk of a Russian invasion of his country, while Russian President Vladimir Putin and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron agreed on the “need for de-escalation”.

“I will send American troops to Eastern Europe and NATO countries soon, not many,” the American president announced on Friday, without further details. The United States has already placed 8,500 soldiers on alert to reinforce NATO.


PHOTO AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin estimated that with more than 100,000 Russian troops deployed on Ukraine’s borders, Russia had amassed sufficient forces for an invasion, but he stressed that a conflict between Ukraine and Russia was “not inevitable”.

“There is still time and scope for diplomacy,” he added.

In London, Boris Johnson said he was “determined to accelerate diplomatic efforts and strengthen deterrence to avoid bloodshed in Europe”, according to a Downing Street spokeswoman on Friday evening. The British Prime Minister is to meet in the coming days with Vladimir Putin, before traveling to the region.

“Climate conducive to dialogue”

“The likelihood of the attack exists, it has not disappeared and it has not been less severe in 2021”, but “we do not see an escalation higher than that which existed” last year, has of his side said Mr. Zelensky, during a press conference in Kiev.

“We don’t need this panic,” he stressed, while calling on Russia to “take steps to prove” that it is not going to attack.

“The greatest risk for Ukraine” currently is “the destabilization of the situation inside the country”, he estimated.

During a conversation with the French president on Friday, Mr. Zelensky called for “multiplying meetings and negotiations […] while a climate conducive to dialogue exists,” according to a statement from Kyiv. “As long as diplomatic efforts continue, the likelihood of escalation decreases. »

Russia denies any plan of invasion, but considers itself threatened by the expansion of NATO for 20 years and by Western support for Ukraine.


SPUTNIK AGENCY PHOTO, VIA REUTERS

Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday.

She therefore linked the de-escalation to the end of the policy of enlargement of the Atlantic Alliance, in particular to Ukraine, and to the return of Western military deployments to the 1997 borders.

The United States and NATO formally rejected these demands on Wednesday.

“The responses of the United States and NATO did not take into account the fundamental concerns of Russia,” noted the Kremlin in a press release devoted to the interview between MM. Poutine and Macron, Friday morning.

“No offensive intention”

“President Putin has expressed no offensive intentions,” noted the French presidency, adding that the two leaders agreed on the “need for de-escalation” and continued “dialogue.” »

The Europeans and the Americans have promised fierce and unprecedented sanctions in the event of an attack on Ukraine.

Were mentioned the strategic gas pipeline Nord Stream 2 between Russia and Germany, or even the access of Russians to transactions in dollars, the queen currency in international trade.

Washington and the European Union said in a joint statement on Friday that they were working to supply “additional volumes of natural gas” destined for Europe, in order to deal with a possible backlash from a “new invasion”. Russian from Ukraine”.

The United States also seized the UN Security Council on Thursday, calling for a meeting on Monday because of the “clear threat” posed in their eyes by Russia to “international peace and security”.

Russian sanctions against the EU

For his part, the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sergei Lavrov, assured that Russia did not want “no war” and preferred the “path of diplomacy”.

A senior US official, on condition of anonymity, “welcomed” these statements. “But it has to be backed up by actions,” he stressed, insisting on the “withdrawal” of Russian troops from the Ukrainian border.

European countries and the United States must “be very careful” not to make concessions to Russia or offer the Russians “something they did not have before”, said Friday in an interview with AFP Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas. “The only one that can de-escalate is Russia. »

Moscow had warned that a rejection of its demands would result in large-scale reprisals, without further details.

On Friday evening, Russian diplomacy announced that it would ban entry into Russia of representatives of law enforcement, legislative and executive bodies of certain EU countries who are “personally responsible for the spread of anti-Russian policy”.

Prominent Russian MPs have meanwhile proposed that Russia recognize the independence of pro-Russian separatist territories in Ukraine and arm them.

The Kremlin is already considered the instigator of this conflict in eastern Ukrainian territory, which was triggered in 2014 shortly after the Russian annexation of Ukrainian Crimea and in the wake of a pro-Western revolution in Kiev.


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