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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Saturday visited a welcome center set up by Polish authorities in what once was a shopping mall in Korczowa, close to the border with Ukraine, where roughly 3,000 refugees are taking shelter after the Russian invasion of their homeland.

While at the border later, Blinken stepped briefly onto Ukrainian soil to meet Foreign Minister Dymtro Kuleba, who predicted Russia would be defeated but appealed for more military assistance to lower the cost in lives that he said victory will require.

At the refugee center, America’s top diplomat heard harrowing tales from mothers and their children who described long and perilous journeys — and the shock of the sudden disruption and the fear for their lives — after fleeing the devastation of the war.

“Near our home we heard bombs,” said Venera Ahmadi, 12, who said she came with her brother and sister, six dogs and seven cats from Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, more than 600 kilometers (372 miles) away. “We walked to the border, I don’t know how many hours. We crossed the border on foot.”

Her 16-year-old sister, Jasmine, said: “I was scared I would die.”

Natalia Kadygrob, 48, reached the center with her four adopted children from Kropyvnytskyi, almost 800 kilometers (about 500 miles) by bus on their way to her brother’s home in Germany. Her husband stayed behind.

“There they bombed planes at the airport,” she said. “Of course we were afraid.”

Tatyana, 58, who wouldn’t give her last name, came with her daughter, Anna, 37, and her 6- and 1-year-old daughters, Katya and Kira, from Kharkiv, about 1,000 kilometers (621 miles) away. “They were shooting on the street,” Tatyana said. Anna said her home had been destroyed by a shell or a rocket.

She was in the basement with her daughters when the explosion happened. “They should be in school,” Anna said. “They are children, they don’t understand.”

Blinken then met with Kuleba on a visit to the Korczowa border crossing where Polish authorities escorted small groups of refugees — about 20 at a time — across the frontier from the Ukrainian town of Krakovets as sporadic snow flakes fell from a gray sky.

Groups mainly of women, children and elderly men — grimly rolling their possessions in luggage and carrying infants and the occasional family pet — made their way into makeshift processing centers set up in tents on Polish territory.

The foreign minister said he wanted to convey a simple message: “Ukraine will win this war because this is the people’s war for their land and we defend the right course.” He added, “The question is the price, the price of our victory.”

Kubela said that if Ukraine’s allies “continue to take bold, systemic decisions to step up economic and political pressure on (Russia), if they continue to provide us with necessary weapons, the price will be lower” and “this will save many lives in Ukraine.”

Blinken praised Kuleba, President Volodmyr Zelenskyy and other officials for their courage and “inspiring” leadership during the crisis. He said support for Ukraine and pressure on Russia to end the war would increase “until this war of choice is brought to an end.”

Kuleba thanked Blinken for the support so far but said Ukraine needed even more if his country’s predicted victory was not to come at too high a cost. He lamented that NATO on Friday had rejected appeals from nonmember Ukraine and others to set up a no-fly zone over the country.

“We are now in the phase where maybe saying ‘No, we’re not going to do that’, but the time will come,” Kuleba said. “It’s again the issue of price. It is the people of Ukraine who will pay the price for the reluctance of NATO to act.”

Blinken earlier was in the city of Rzeszow for talks with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau a day after attending a NATO foreign ministers’ meeting in Brussels. The alliance pledged to step up support for eastern flank members such as Poland to counter the Russian invasion. Poland is seeking more U.S. forces on its territory, where there are currently more than 10,000 American troops.

Rau said Poland had already taken in more than 700,000 refugees from Ukraine and that he expected hundreds of thousands more in the coming weeks unless Russia backs down.

“Poland will never recognize territorial changes brought about by unprovoked, unlawful aggression,” he said, adding that his country will demand that alleged Russian war crimes committed in Ukraine will be prosecuted.

Morawiecki and Blinken discussed stepping up sanctions and freezes of assets on Russia, which Morawiecki said should be “crushing” for Russia’s economy. No Russian banks should be exempted from the exclusions from the SWIFT system, he said. Currently, all but the largest Russian banks have been kicked off the financial messaging service.


Qué ha pasado en las últimas horas tras la invasión de las tropas rusas en Ucrania

En el décimo día de la guerra, estos son los datos clave a las 14.00 de este sábado:

Ucrania acusa a Rusia de incumplir el alto el fuego y paraliza la evacuación de civiles en Mariupol. La alcaldía de Mariupol ha denunciado que el ejército ruso no está cumpliendo con el alto el fuego anunciado horas antes por Moscú. Rusia ha ofrecido un cese de las hostilidades de cinco horas para que los civiles pudieran huir de la urbe asediada, así como de la ciudad sureña de Volnovaja. El presidente ucranio, Volodímir Zelenski, ha asegurado que se está haciendo “todo lo posible para que el acuerdo [sobre los corredores humanitarios] funcione”.

1,3 millones de refugiados. Naciones Unidas ha elevado este sábado a 1,3 millones el número de personas que huyen del conflicto en Ucrania y alerta de que este fin de semana podrían llegar a ser 1,5 millones. Las autoridades de Polonia han informado de un nuevo récord de entrada de refugiados en el país en un solo día, después de que 106.000 personas cruzaran la frontera desde Ucrania. 

Tres grandes centros de acogida de ucranios en España. Uno de los centros estará en Alicante, donde residen 21.000 personas originarias de ese país, han anunciado el ministro de la Presidencia, Félix Bolaños, y el presidente del Gobierno valenciano, Ximo Puig.

El secretario de Estado de EE UU: “La libertad, democracia, paz y seguridad están amenazadas como nunca desde la Segunda Guerra Mundial”. El secretario de Estado de Estados Unidos, Antony Blinken, ha asegurado que “libertad, democracia, paz, seguridad, están amenazados como nunca antes desde la Segunda Guerra Mundial”. “Defenderemos cada centímetro de territorio OTAN”, ha reiterado Blinken durante una visita en una unidad de la OTAN en Polonia.

Inditex suspende temporalmente la actividad en sus 502 tiendas en Rusia. La multinacional comunica que también ha cesado las ventas en el canal online del país. Rusia constituye el 8,5% del resultado de explotación global del grupo.

Foto: Salida de ciudadanos de Irpín, cerca de Kiev. (Luis de Vega)



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Qué ha pasado en las últimas horas tras la invasión de las tropas rusas en Ucrania

El noveno día de la invasión rusa en Ucrania ha comenzado con el ataque a la central nuclear de Zaporiyia, que ha causado un incendio ya apagado por los bomberos. El complejo está bajo control de las tropas rusas.

Ataque e incendio en la mayor central nuclear de Europa. Las tropas rusas han atacado esta madrugada la central nuclear de Zaporiyia, la de mayor tamaño del continente europeo, y han provocado un incendio que ya ha sido apagado. Según las autoridades ucranias, no hay víctimas ni daños a los «equipos esenciales», aunque la fuerza militar rusa se ha hecho con el complejo.

Johnson advierte de que el ataque a la central es «una amenaza directa a la seguridad de Europa”. El primer ministro británico, Boris Johnson, ha advertido esta madrugada, tras una llamada telefónica con el presidente de Ucrania, Volodímir Zelenski, de que el incendio provocado por un ataque ruso en la central nuclear de Zaporiyia «amenaza directamente la seguridad de toda Europa».

Zelenski acusa a Rusia de «querer repetir Chernóbil». El presidente de Ucrania, Volodímir Zelenski, ha acusado a Rusia de «querer repetir Chernóbil» tras el ataque a la central nuclear de Zaporiyia. «Alertamos a todos sobre el hecho de que ningún otro país, excepto Rusia, ha disparado contra plantas de energía nuclear. Este Estado terrorista ahora está recurriendo al terrorismo nuclear”, ha advertido.

Airbnb suspende operaciones en Rusia. El servicio de hospedaje Airbnb ha anunciado la suspensión de sus operaciones en Rusia, de acuerdo con un mensaje en las redes sociales de su cofundador, Brian Chesky. La compañía estadounidense también dejará de ofrecer sus servicios en Bielorrusia, cuyas autoridades se han alineado con el Gobierno de Vladímir Putin.

Google suspende la venta de publicidad en línea en Rusia. La división de anuncios de Google ha decidido poner en pausa la venta de publicidad en Rusia. Las nuevas restricciones de la empresa incluyen el buscador web, YouTube y proveedores externos. Se trata del principal servicio de publicidad en línea del mundo por el monto de sus ganancias.

Francia denuncia un ciberataque contra varios satélites europeos. Los militares franceses han denunciado que un ciberataque, dirigido contra una red de satélites que da servicio a Europa, ha afectado «a decenas de miles de terminales de uso civil». Francia sospecha de piratas informáticos vinculados a Rusia.

Sánchez convoca una nueva reunión del Consejo de Seguridad Nacional. El presidente del Gobierno, Pedro Sánchez, presidirá este viernes una nueva reunión del Consejo de Seguridad Nacional para analizar la evolución del conflicto en Ucrania y la llegada de refugiados de este país a España.

En la imagen, el incendio de la central nuclear de Zaporiyia. (AFP)





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U.S Secretary of State Antony Blinken left Thursday for eastern Europe to hold meetings with NATO allies and other European leaders in an effort to find a diplomatic solution to the situation in Ukraine.

In a release, State Department spokesman Ned Price said Blinken will first travel to Brussels for a NATO Foreign Ministerial, as well as meet with his European Union counterparts for the G-7 Ministerial Meeting.

Blinken travels to Poland on Saturday for meetings with Polish leaders, including Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau, “to discuss further security assistance in the face of Russia’s continued aggression.”

Price said the secretary of state also will thank Poland for generously welcoming hundreds of thousands of displaced persons from Ukraine and discuss how the United States can augment humanitarian assistance efforts for those fleeing Putin’s war.

Later Saturday, Blinken is scheduled to travel to Moldova to meet with President Maia Sandu, Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilita, and Foreign Minister Nicu Popescu to discuss Moldova’s efforts to receive and assist refugees, and underscore U.S. support for that effort.

From March 6 through March 8, Blinken travels to Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia to meet with leaders in those countries to discuss joint efforts to support Ukraine, strengthen NATO’s deterrence and defense, and promote democracy and human rights.

At a news briefing Wednesday, Blinken said intensive diplomacy with allies and partners continues with the aim of ending the crisis in Ukraine.

He said, “If there are diplomatic steps that we can take that the Ukrainian government believes would be helpful, we’re prepared to take them — even as we continue to support Ukraine’s ability to defend itself.”

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken denounced Wednesday a move by Russian legislators to recognize two Russian-supported breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine as independent.

Russia’s lower house voted Tuesday to ask President Vladimir Putin to recognize the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s republics, which declared independence from Ukraine in 2014 after President Viktor Yanukovych was removed from office in the Ukrainian Revolution.

The European Union urged Moscow not to follow through on the vote by the State Duma. Approval of the vote could further intensify tensions between Russia and Western countries over Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s borders that has fueled fears of a Russian invasion.

“Enactment of this resolution would further undermine Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, constitute a gross violation of international law, call into further question Russia’s stated commitment to continue to engage in diplomacy to achieve a peaceful resolution of this crisis,” Blinken said in a statement.

Blinken warned that such a move would “necessitate a swift and firm response from the United States in full coordination with our allies and partners.”

President Joe Biden speaks about Ukraine in the East Room of the White House, Feb. 15, 2022, in Washington.

President Joe Biden speaks about Ukraine in the East Room of the White House, Feb. 15, 2022, in Washington.

Russia has denied any plans to invade Ukraine and has accused the West of inflaming tensions.

Recognition of the republics could kill the Minsk accords that were reached in 2014 and 2015 after Russian-supported separatists seized territory in Ukraine’s Donbas region. Ukraine has been at war with the breakaway regions since 2014, a conflict that has killed some 15,000 people.

“Kremlin approval of this appeal would amount to “the Russian government’s wholesale rejection of its commitments under the Minsk agreements,” Blinken declared.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin had “taken note” of the request from parliament’s lower house but that it would not be consistent with the Minsk agreements aimed at ending the conflict.

Some information for this report came from Agence France-Presse and The Associated Press.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Friday that Russia could attack Ukraine at “any time” and warned Americans to leave Ukraine immediately.

Blinken issued the warning in Australia after meeting leaders of the Quad countries, the United States, Australia, Japan and India. Blinken cited “troubling signs” regarding Russia, including adding to the more than 100,000 troops it has amassed at the Ukrainian border.

“As we’ve said before, we’re in a window when an invasion could begin at any time. And to be clear, that includes during the Olympics,” Blinken said at a joint news conference in Canberra.

“We’re continuing to draw down our embassy, Blinken said. “We will continue that process. And we’ve also been very clear that any American citizens who remain in Ukraine should leave now.”

Russia maintains it has no plans to invade Ukraine but wants the West to keep Ukraine and other former Soviet countries out of NATO.

Blinken is visiting Australia as part of a Biden administration effort to show its long-term strategic focus remains on the Asia-Pacific region and that the Ukraine crisis will not distract it from its main priorities.

Blinken began Friday’s meetings with his Quad counterparts with Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne of Australia, who said the two would discuss China, North Korea and Ukraine.

After the meetings, the Quad ministers vowed in a joint statement to cooperate more closely to ensure the Indo-Pacific region was free of “coercion,” a veiled reference to China’s economic and military expansion.

They also promised to strengthen cooperation on the coronavirus pandemic, cyberthreats and counterterrorism, while condemning North Korea’s “destabilizing ballistic missile launches” in violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions.

Payne, who hosted the Quad meeting, said Wednesday the gathering sends a message to China that security in the region remains a priority for the United States.

Payne said the Quad ministers were “voting with their feet in terms of the priority that they accord to issues” important to the Indo-Pacific.

Blinken’s visit to Australia is his first trip there since an enhanced trilateral security partnership known as AUKUS — Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States — was announced in September. The agreement includes a deal to build nuclear-propelled submarines for Australia as part of enhanced deterrence against China’s military expansion across the Indo-Pacific region.

“The Quad is not a military alliance, but it is not lost on China that you have four democracies, all with a strong maritime presence and advanced military capabilities, concerned by the increasingly aggressive approach China takes with its neighbors,” said Charles Edel, the Australia chair of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Blinken’s visit to Australia comes amid a growing partnership between China and Russia that was on display during Sunday’s meeting in Beijing between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the beginning of the Winter Olympics. The meeting occurred amid Russia’s military buildup along neighboring Ukraine’s borders and China’s increasingly assertive efforts to reunite Taiwan with the mainland.

In Beijing, Chinese officials have expressed wariness over the Quad and AUKUS.

China criticized the U.S. Friday for trying to “discredit, suppress and contain” the country’s development after Blinken said earlier this week there were concerns “that in recent years, China has been acting more aggressively at home and more aggressively in the regions.”

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian rejected the remarks, telling reporters at a daily briefing the U.S. revealed an “ideological bias.”

Zhao described the alliance as “a tool to contain China and maintain U.S. hegemony.”

The top U.S. diplomat’s weeklong trip includes Fiji as well as Honolulu, Hawaii.

Blinken will meet Saturday with Fiji leaders who consider fishing and climate change priority issues.

“We agreed to boost maritime security support for Indo-Pacific partners to strengthen their maritime domain awareness and ability to develop their offshore resources, to ensure freedom of navigation and overflight and to combat challenges such as illegal fishing,” Australian Foreign Minister Payne said after the meeting.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken began meeting with his counterparts in the Quad on Friday, beginning with Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne of Australia, who said the two would discuss China, North Korea and Ukraine.

“More than one authoritarian regime is presenting itself in the current world climate as a challenge. DPRK, China as well, and they will be part of our discussions today. We strongly support U.S. leadership on these challenges,” she said, using the abbreviation for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name.

“We are going to talk today, I’m sure, about the threats to the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Ukraine as well,” she added.

“We do indeed have a lot to cover today,” Blinken said, including “challenges posed far away from here but that have an impact on this region as well.”

Blinken mentioned a “fair bit of ground to cover” in his next meeting, with Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi. They will join Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar later Friday for a wider meeting that is also expected to address climate change and pandemic-related issues.

As he did Wednesday, the U.S. secretary of state stressed the importance of alliances for tackling global and regional issues and reinforced the Biden administration’s commitment to the region.

“What we know is that the issues that are really having an impact on folks back home, people here in Australia, and around the world — whether it’s climate, whether it’s COVID, whether it’s the impact of emerging technologies — not a single one of these issues can be effectively dealt with by any one of us acting alone,” Blinken told U.S. Mission Australia staff Thursday in Melbourne. “More than ever before, we need partnerships, we need alliances, we need coalitions of countries willing to put their efforts, their resources, their minds into tackling these problems.”

Blinken earlier participated in a town hall discussion of biomedical issues at the University of Melbourne’s law school. Representatives from Moderna and Bristol Myers Squibb, both global pharmaceutical companies, also took part in the roundtable.

Blinken discussed global vaccination targets and the need for a “stronger global health security system” so the world is better prepared the “next time around.”

Earlier this week, Australia said it was reopening its borders to vaccinated international travelers on Feb. 21. The move comes almost two years after borders were closed as part of efforts to control the spread of COVID-19.

Australia’s pandemic border closures were among the strictest in the world.

Blinken said Australia and the United States have been “leaders together” in fighting COVID-19.

He later tweeted that the University of Melbourne “held deep meaning to my late stepfather, Samuel Pisar, who was a proud alumnus.”

Payne, who is hosting the Quad meeting, said Wednesday the gathering sends a message to China that security in the region remains a priority for the United States.

Payne said the Quad ministers were “voting with their feet in terms of the priority that they accord to issues” important to the Indo-Pacific. Payne said the ministers would also focus on regional coronavirus vaccine distribution, cyber and other technology issues, and addressing disinformation, counterterrorism and climate change.

Blinken’s visit to Australia is his first trip there since an enhanced trilateral security partnership known as AUKUS — Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States — was announced in September. The agreement includes a deal to build nuclear-propelled submarines for Australia as part of enhanced deterrence against China’s military expansion across the Indo-Pacific region.

Part of the discussions during the fourth Quad foreign ministers’ meetings in Melbourne “will relate to the challenges that China poses,” Daniel Kritenbrink, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, told VOA during a Friday phone briefing.

“The Quad is not a military alliance, but it is not lost on China that you have four democracies, all with a strong maritime presence and advanced military capabilities, concerned by the increasingly aggressive approach China takes with its neighbors,” said Charles Edel, the Australia chair of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Blinken is also expected to discuss threats presented by a growing partnership between China and Russia that was on display during Sunday’s meeting in Beijing between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the beginning of the Winter Olympics. The meeting occurred amid Russia’s military buildup along neighboring Ukraine’s borders and China’s increasingly assertive efforts to reunite Taiwan with the mainland.

In Beijing, Chinese officials have expressed wariness over the Quad and AUKUS.

In response Wednesday to a reporter’s question about the Quad members’ meeting, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian attacked American democracy while portraying Beijing as a peace seeker.

“With its so-called democracy having collapsed long ago, the U.S. is forcing other countries to accept the standards of the American democracy, drawing lines with democratic values and piecing together cliques. That is a complete betrayal of democracy,” Zhao said.

Zhao added that China “seeks peace and development, promotes cooperation, promotes the construction of an equal, open and inclusive security system in the Asia-Pacific region that does not target third countries.”

“We oppose forming exclusive cliques and setting up groups within groups, as well as creating confrontation between camps,” he said.

The top U.S. diplomat’s weeklong trip includes Fiji as well as Honolulu, Hawaii.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in Australia for talks on security and fighting COVID-19. But the massing of Russian troops along Ukraine’s border has also cast a spotlight on the growing partnership between China and Russia. VOA’s senior diplomatic correspondent Cindy Saine reports.
Camera: Nike Ching

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken Wednesday stressed the importance of alliances for tackling global and regional issues ahead of security talks in Australia and reinforced the Biden administration’s commitment to the region.

“What we know is that the issues that are really having an impact on folks back home, people here in Australia, and around the world – whether it’s climate, whether it’s COVID, whether it’s the impact of emerging technologies – not a single one of these issues can be effectively dealt with by any one of us acting alone,” Blinken told U.S. Mission Australia staff Thursday in Melbourne. “More than ever before, we need partnerships, we need alliances, we need coalitions of countries willing to put their efforts, their resources, their minds into tackling these problems.”

Blinken earlier participated in a town hall discussion of biomedical issues at the University of Melbourne’s law school. Officials with Moderna and Bristol-Myers Squibb, global pharmaceutical companies, also took part in the roundtable.

Blinken discussed global vaccination targets and the need for a “stronger global health security system” so the world is better prepared the “next time around.”

Earlier this week, Australia said it was reopening its borders to vaccinated international travelers on February 21. The move comes almost two years after borders were closed as part of efforts to control the spread of COVID-19.

Australia’s pandemic border closures were among the strictest in the world.

Blinken said Australia and the United States have been “leaders together” in fighting COVID-19.

He later tweeted that the University of Melbourne “held deep meaning to my late stepfather, Samuel Pisar, who was a proud alumnus.”

On Friday, Blinken will meet with leaders of the Quad countries, the United States, Australia, Japan and India.

Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne, who will host the meeting, said Wednesday the gathering sends a message to China that security in the region remains a priority for the United States.

Payne said the Quad ministers were “voting with their feet in terms of the priority that they accord to issues” important to the Indo-Pacific. Payne said the ministers would also focus on regional coronavirus vaccine distribution, cyber and other technology issues, and addressing disinformation, counterterrorism and climate change.

Blinken’s visit to Australia is his first trip there after an enhanced trilateral security partnership known as AUKUS — Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States — was announced in September. The agreement includes a deal to build nuclear-propelled submarines for Australia as part of enhanced deterrence against China’s military expansion across the Indo-Pacific region.

Part of the discussions during the fourth Quad foreign ministers’ meetings in Melbourne “will relate to the challenges that China poses,” Daniel Kritenbrink, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, told VOA during a Friday phone briefing.

“The Quad is not a military alliance, but it is not lost on China that you have four democracies, all with a strong maritime presence and advanced military capabilities, concerned by the increasingly aggressive approach China takes with its neighbors,” said Charles Edel, the Australia chair of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Blinken is also expected to discuss threats presented by a growing partnership between China and Russia that was on display during Sunday’s meeting in Beijing between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the beginning of the Winter Olympics. The meeting occurred amid Russia’s military buildup along neighboring Ukraine’s borders and China’s increasingly assertive efforts to reunite Taiwan with the mainland.

In Beijing, Chinese officials have expressed wariness over the Quad and AUKUS.

In response Wednesday to a reporter’s question about the Quad members’ meeting, Chinese Foreign Affairs Minister Zhao Lijian attacked American democracy while portraying Beijing as a peace seeker.

“With its so-called democracy having collapsed long ago, the U.S. is forcing other countries to accept the standards of the American democracy, drawing lines with democratic values and piecing together cliques. That is a complete betrayal of democracy,” Zhao said.

Zhao added that China “seeks peace and development, promotes cooperation, promotes the construction of an equal, open and inclusive security system in the Asia-Pacific region that does not target third countries.”

“We oppose forming exclusive cliques and setting up groups within groups, as well as creating confrontation between camps,” he said.

The top U.S. diplomat’s weeklong trip includes Fiji as well as Honolulu, Hawaii.


El secretario de Estado de EE UU, Antony Blinken, a la derecha; junto al alto representante de la Unión Europea para la Política Exterior y de Seguridad, Josep Borrell, este lunes, en Washington.
El secretario de Estado de EE UU, Antony Blinken, a la derecha; junto al alto representante de la Unión Europea para la Política Exterior y de Seguridad, Josep Borrell, este lunes, en Washington.Ronny Przysucha / Departamento de Estado EE.UU. (Departamento de Estado EE.UU. / EFE)

Washington y Bruselas han cerrado filas este lunes sobre el nivel de riesgo que entraña la presión militar de Rusia sobre Ucrania, pese a la diferencia de tono habitual entre ambos aliados, y han salido al paso de las críticas al alarmismo que las advertencias de Estados Unidos sobre un ataque ruso inminente pueden provocar. El alto representante de la UE para Política Exterior, Josep Borrell, declaró a la prensa, tras reunirse con el secretario de Estado, Antony Blinken, que estos son “los momentos más peligrosos para la seguridad en Europa desde el final de la Guerra Fría”. El jefe de la diplomacia estadounidense, por su parte, defendió: “Esto no es alarmismo, son los hechos”.

Blinken y Borrell se reunieron en la sede del Departamento de Estado en un momento en el que las conversaciones con el Kremlin parecen haber entrado en vía muerta y se redoblan las alertas de Estados Unidos sobre las agresiones que, según información de sus servicios de espionaje, planea Moscú. Este domingo, el consejero de Seguridad Nacional, Jake Sullivan, insistió en que la invasión rusa de la antigua república soviética podría ocurrir “en cualquier momento”. El jueves, la Administración aseguró que el Gobierno de Vladímir Putin estaba preparando un vídeo con un ataque ficticio sobre sus tropas para justificar la intervención. Durante el fin de semana, trascendieron las proyecciones del Pentágono sobre la factura humana de una guerra a gran escala: 50.000 víctimas y cinco millones de refugiados.

Al otro lado del Atlántico, la Unión Europea ha sido mucho más cauta en todas sus comunicaciones, pero Borrell evitó este lunes mostrar diferencias con Blinken. En su comparecencia conjunta ante los medios, el jefe de la diplomacia europea recalcó: “Nadie concentra 140.000 soldados fuertemente armados en la frontera de un país” sin que esto “represente una fuerte amenaza”. “140.000 soldados en la frontera no están para tomar el té”, remachó. Así, defendió la coordinación que ha habido en todo momento con Washington, desde el principio de la crisis, y aseguró que este conflicto ha reforzado incluso los lazos.

El presidente de Ucrania, Volodímir Zelenski, se ha llegado quejar públicamente de los mensajes de “pánico” transmitidos por la Administración estadounidense. Dos semanas atrás, Borrell se distanció de la medida tomada por Estados Unidos de reducir su personal diplomático en Ucrania.

Blinken negó tremendismo alguno por parte de Estados Unidos. “Esto no es alarmismo, son simplemente hechos y debemos enfrentarnos a los hechos en el contexto de la historia”, dijo. “Hemos visto cómo en los últimos meses se han acumulado fuerzas rusas en la frontera con Ucrania y esto es algo que no ocurre porque sí”, agregó, para recordar la anexión ilegal de la península de Crimea en 2014. El secretario de Estado reiteró que su Gobierno no cree que Putin haya tomado una decisión sobre el ataque, pero destacó que “ha puesto los medios hacerlo muy rápidamente de una manera que tendría terribles consecuencias para Ucrania, Rusia y para todos nosotros”.

Ambos altos cargos coincidieron, pese a todo, en no dar por perdida la solución diplomática, si bien Putin sigue enrocado en unas demandas que han sido rechazadas de plano por los aliados de la OTAN. Entre otras, figura frenar la expansión de la Alianza hacia el Este y negar la incorporación de Ucrania a ella. Dentro de las medidas de respuesta que preparan los aliados si se confirma la agresión rusa a Ucrania, como las sanciones, prima también un plan para evitar problemas energéticos, ya que Rusia es uno de los grandes suministradores de Europa. El encuentro se celebró, de hecho, en el marco del Consejo de Energía EE UU-UE que se desarrolla en Washington y que ha abordado este asunto.

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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is heading to Australia next week for QUAD ministerial meetings to advance cooperation on issues including maritime security and cybersecurity, the State Department announced Friday.

The Quad refers to a security dialogue involving Australia, India, Japan and the United States.

Blinken’s visit to Australia February 9-12 would be his first trip to the country after an enhanced trilateral security partnership known as AUKUS (Australia, U.K., and the U.S.) was signed last September. The agreement includes a deal to build nuclear-propelled submarines for Australia—not a G-7 member—as part of enhanced deterrence against China’s military expansion across the Indo-Pacific region.

“Secretary Blinken will meet with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Foreign Minister Marise Payne, Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs Hayashi Yoshimasa, Indian Minister of External Affairs Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, and other senior officials to discuss a range of bilateral and global priorities,” said the State Department in a statement released Friday.

China has expressed wariness over the QUAD and AUKUS. A spokesperson from China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Zhao Lijian, said any regional cooperation framework “should not target any third party” when U.S. President Joe Biden hosted a QUAD leaders’ summit last September.

The top U.S. diplomat’s weeklong trip also includes Fiji and Honolulu.

In Fiji, Blinken will meet with Pacific Island leaders to discuss the climate crisis and ways to further “shared commitment to democracy, regional solidarity, and prosperity in the Pacific.” This will be the first visit by a U.S. secretary of state to Fiji since1985.

Addressing the threat from North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs is high on the agenda, as Blinken hosts Japanese Foreign Minister Hayashi and Korean Foreign Minister Chung Eui-yong for a U.S.-Japan-Republic of Korea Trilateral Ministerial Meeting in Honolulu, Hawaii on February 12.

In January, North Korea conducted several launches, firing ballistic missiles.

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