Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Invade. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Invade. Mostrar todas las entradas

China has rejected a report that said its officials told their Russian counterparts to delay an invasion of Ukraine until after the Beijing Winter Olympics. Experts say the flap indicates Chinese leaders could have known an attack was coming and that such a discovery would taint China’s reputation in the West.

Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin called the March 3 New York Times report “pure fake news.” The newspaper cited a Western intelligence report saying senior Chinese officials told senior Russian officials in early February not to invade Ukraine before the end of the Feb. 4-20 Games. The war began a week ago.

“Such practice of diverting attention and blame-shifting is despicable,” Wang told a regular news conference Thursday.

“The ins and outs of the developments of the Ukraine issue are very clear. The crux of the issue is known to all,” he said.

In Washington, Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said the report’s “claims are speculation without any basis and are intended to blame-shift and smear China.”

National leaders seldom tell one another in advance about upcoming wars, so information between Russia and China would point to a special relationship, said Yun Sun, director of the China program at the Stimson Center in Washington.

“It is important, because it shows the nature and the depth of the China-Russia relations,” Sun said. “If China identifies with Russian invasions, then China is an accomplice. We cannot expect China to respond in a constructive way.”

In the United States, which has harshly criticized Russia’s invasion, State Department spokesperson Jalina Porter said Thursday that supporters of Moscow will land on the “wrong side of history” and that “the world has been watching to see which nations stand up for Ukraine.”

Sino-Russian ties have grown closer over the past year, but China positioned itself this week as a mediator between war-divided Russia and Ukraine rather than a backer of Moscow.

China’s ties with Russia still rank as an “extremely high priority,” said Andrew Small, a senior fellow with the trans-Atlantic cooperation advocacy group German Marshall Fund. The two competed with Washington during the Cold War and have again realigned themselves against the West in recent years.

China probably expected Russia to win quickly in Ukraine, as it has in its past wars, Small said.

“I think the sense that China acted as an enabler for Russia in the runup to this is not something that’s going to go away, and that’s one of the areas where there will be a lot of collateral damage in different ways economically for China and in their relations with other countries in Europe in particular,” he said.

China probably had at least an inkling of Russia’s designs for Ukraine before the Olympics and urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to delay the attack as not to distract from the Games, said Alexander Vuving, a professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, in Hawaii.

Leaders in Beijing could not easily have influenced Putin’s overall decision whether to invade Ukraine, Vuving added.

“What China could do was to persuade Putin to delay the attack [until] after the Olympics, which Putin did, so I think that was realistic and it indicated a very high level of cooperation between China and Russia,” he said.

U.S. President Joe Biden has accepted a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, “in principle,” and only if Russia “does not proceed with military action,” the White House announced late Sunday.

A statement from press secretary Jen Psaki said U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov would first hold talks this week in Europe.

The diplomatic engagements come as the United States warns of the potential for a Russian invasion of Ukraine, with officials making clear that the U.S. and its Western allies are prepared to impose punishing sanctions while still prioritizing a peaceful resolution to the crisis that has built for months.

“We are always ready for diplomacy,” Psaki said. “We are also ready to impose swift and severe consequences should Russia instead choose war. And currently, Russia appears to be continuing preparations for a full-scale assault on Ukraine very soon.”

Biden discussed the situation in a phone call Sunday with French President Emmanuel Macron, and during a meeting of his National Security Council.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he also spoke with Macron about the situation in eastern Ukraine where in recent days there has been sustained shelling between Russian separatists and Ukrainian forces. Zelenskyy tweeted a call for a “regime of silence” and said he supports convening talks with the Trilateral Contact Group that includes Russia, Ukraine and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

FILE - In this handout photo provided by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, right, speaks at a press conference in Kherson, Ukraine, Feb. 12, 2022.

FILE – In this handout photo provided by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, right, speaks at a press conference in Kherson, Ukraine, Feb. 12, 2022.

Despite Russian leaders denying any plans to invade Ukraine, fears that Putin in set to order such a move have increased in recent weeks as Russia massed more troops and equipment along the border with Ukraine, and the announcement that military drills in Belarus, Ukraine’s northern neighbor, would not end Sunday as planned.

In all, Russia has an estimated 150,000 troops in the region.

Blinken told CNN’s “State of the Union” show Sunday that the Russian deployments, cyber attacks on the Ukrainian defense ministry and major banks last week and the new outbreak of fighting in eastern Ukraine signal that Russia is “following its playbook” ahead of large-scale warfare.

“Everything leading up to the invasion is already taking place,” Blinken said.

The separatists in eastern Ukraine have claimed that Kyiv’s forces are planning an attack there, which Ukraine denies.

At the Munich Security Conference over the weekend, Zelenskyy questioned why the United States and its Western allies, who have vowed to impose swift and tough economic sanctions on Russia if it invades Ukraine, are not already doing so.

Blinken said, “As soon as you impose them, you lose the deterrence” to try to prevent an invasion, and if the West were to announce specific sanctions it would impose, Russia “could plan against them.”

The top U.S. diplomat said, however, “Until the tanks are moving” and missiles launched, Western leaders will “try to do everything to reverse” Putin’s mind, “to get him off the course he’s decided.”

Reuters reported late Sunday that an initial package of sanctions could include measures to bar U.S. financial institutions from processing transactions for major Russian banks, and placing certain Russians and companies on the Specially Designated Nationals list that would prevent them from using the U.S. banking system, ban them from trade with Americans and freeze their U.S. assets.

On CBS News’ “Face the Nation” show Sunday, Russia’s ambassador to the U.S., Anatoly Antonov, said, “There [are] no such plans” for an invasion.

He said Russia has “our legitimate right to have our troops where we want on Russian territory.”

Antonov said Russia has withdrawn some troops from near Ukraine “and nobody even said to us, ‘thank you.’” The West says its monitoring of the terrain near Ukraine shows that Russia has not begun to send its troops back to their bases.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Sunday the United Kingdom will use the “toughest possible” economic sanctions against Russia if it invades Ukraine.

Johnson told the BBC the sanctions would not only target Putin and his associates, “but also all companies and organizations with strategic importance to Russia.”

The British leader said, “We are going to stop Russian companies raising money on U.K. markets, and we are even with our American friends going to stop them trading in pounds and dollars.”

French President Emmanuel Macron had a telephone conversation with Putin Sunday, with Macron’s office saying afterward that the two leaders agreed on the need to find a diplomatic solution.

Western allies say they are willing to discuss their missile positioning and military exercises in Europe but have balked at Putin’s demand to rule out possible NATO membership for Ukraine and other former Soviet states.

Also Sunday, the U.S. Embassy in Moscow released a statement, urging Americans in Russia to have an evacuation plan.

“There have been threats of attacks against shopping centers, railway and metro stations, and other public gathering places in major urban areas, including Moscow and St. Petersburg as well as in areas of heightened tension along the Russian border with Ukraine,” the embassy said. “Have evacuation plans that do not rely on U.S. government assistance.”

Some information for this report came from Reuters.

Russia on Sunday extended its military drills in Belarus, along Ukraine’s northern border, after two days of sustained shelling in eastern Ukraine between Russian separatists and Ukrainian forces. This comes amid U.S. warnings of a Russian invasion of Ukraine, with more than 100,000 Russian troops massed at the border. VOA’s Arash Arabasadi has more

President Joe Biden says he is “convinced” that Russian President Vladimir Putin has decided to invade Ukraine, but that diplomacy is still on the table until that happens.  VOA’s Senior Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine reports.
Producer: Bakhtiyar Zamanov

U.S. President Joe Biden says Russian President Vladimir Putin has made up his mind to invade Ukraine.

“I’m convinced he’s made the decision. We have reason to believe that,” Biden said during remarks from the White House on Friday afternoon.

Earlier in the day, the Russian military announced that Saturday it will hold massive drills of its strategic nuclear forces, which Putin will personally oversee. However, Biden said he doesn’t believe Putin is seriously contemplating the use of nuclear weapons.

Biden called out the shelling of a kindergarten by Russian-backed fighters in the Donbas region, which Moscow said was carried out by Ukraine. He pointed out other disinformation he said Moscow was peddling to the public, including claims of a genocide in Donbas and a Ukrainian attack on Russia.

“All these are consistent with the playbook the Russians have used before to set up a false justification to act against Ukraine,” Biden said. For weeks his administration has warned of such pretext scenarios and “false flag operations.”

Should Moscow invade Ukraine, it will be critical for the United States to convince the world that Russia is the aggressor and that it did so unprovoked, Max Bergmann, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, told VOA.

“This was a master class from the Biden administration in how to win an information war with Russia,” Bergmann said. “The Biden administration has read the Kremlin playbook and they are exposing Russian disinformation as they come across it.”

However, Biden is still offering Putin a de-escalation off-ramp, saying that diplomacy is “always a possibility.” He said, based on the “significant intelligence capability” of the U.S., he has reason to believe Putin will still consider the diplomatic option.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is scheduled to meet in person with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Feb. 24.

Meanwhile Washington and its allies are analyzing a document that the Kremlin delivered to U.S. Ambassador John Sullivan in Moscow. It is Russia’s written response to the recent U.S. and NATO offer to negotiate over their missile deployment and troop exercises in Europe while rejecting Russia’s demands related to possible Ukrainian membership in NATO.

Russian cyberattacks

During a White House briefing Friday, Anne Neuberger, deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology, said for the first time that the U.S. believes Moscow was responsible for recent so-called DDoS cyberattacks on Ukraine.

“We believe that the Russian government is responsible for widescale cyberattacks on Ukrainian banks this week,” Neuberger said. “We have technical information that links the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate, or GRU, as known GRU infrastructure was seen transmitting high volumes of communication to Ukraine-based IP addresses and domains.

“This recent spate of cyberattacks in Ukraine are consistent with what a Russian effort would look like and laying the groundwork for more disruptive cyberattacks accompanying a potential further invasion of Ukraine sovereign territory,” she added.

While noting there are no specific threats on the U.S. homeland at this point, Neuberger warned that administration officials are bracing for any Russian cyberattacks on American targets following the imposition of sanctions on Moscow.

The U.S. is “taking the necessary actions to prepare and harden potential U.S. targets against what might come next,” said Nina Jankowicz, a global fellow who studies disinformation and cybersecurity at the Wilson Center. She spoke to VOA.

Talks with European allies

Biden delivered his remarks after his latest round of urgent talks with European leaders and a call with a bipartisan group of members of Congress who are representing the United States, along with Vice President Kamala Harris, at the Munich Security Conference on the Ukraine crisis.

“Despite Russia’s efforts to divide us at home and abroad, I can affirm that has not happened,” Biden said. “The overwhelming message on both calls was one of determination and resolve.”

However, there are differences among allies on the timing and severity of sanctions against Moscow. For example, the initial package will likely not include banning Russia from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) system used by 200 countries to handle international financial transfers.

“We have other severe measures we can take that our allies and partners are ready to take in lockstep with us, and that don’t have the same spillover effects,” said Daleep Singh, the deputy national security adviser for international economics, who spoke to reporters during the same White House briefing Friday. “But we always will monitor these options and we’ll revise our judgments as time goes on.”

Singh said U.S. measures are not designed to reduce Russia’s ability to supply energy to the world but that it would be “a strategic mistake” for Putin to retaliate against Western sanctions by cutting back energy supplies to Europe.

“Two-thirds of Russia’s exports and half of its budget revenues come from oil and gas, and if Putin were to weaponize his energy supply, it will only accelerate the diversification of the world away from Russian energy consumption,” he said.

Singh added Moscow would be unable to replace technology imports from other countries, including China, if Washington also imposes tough export controls that it has threatened.

Call for de-escalation

Meanwhile U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin called for a de-escalation of the Ukraine crisis in a telephone conversation Friday with his Russian counterpart, according to the Pentagon.

“Austin called for de-escalation, the return of Russian forces surrounding Ukraine to their home bases, and a diplomatic resolution,” Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said in a statement.

Putin said Friday the situation in eastern Ukraine was getting worse a day after Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed rebels traded accusations of firing across a cease-fire line.

“Right now, we are seeing deterioration of the situation” in eastern Ukraine, Putin said at a Moscow news conference with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, after discussing their joint military drills in Belarus near Ukraine.

Also Friday the leaders of Russian-backed separatists in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions of eastern Ukraine announced the evacuation of civilians to Russia to “avoid civilian casualties.”

Putin has ordered his emergencies minister to travel to the region to help plan for the arrival of the evacuees.


El presidente de EE UU, Joe Biden (derecha), y su homólogo ucranio, Volodimir Zelenski, en septiembre en la Casa Blanca.
El presidente de EE UU, Joe Biden (derecha), y su homólogo ucranio, Volodimir Zelenski, en septiembre en la Casa Blanca.Pool/ABACA (GTRES)

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Joe Biden, se ha comprometido con el líder ucranio, Volodímir Zelenski, a que Washington y sus socios defenderán a Kiev en el caso de que el conflicto con Rusia se recrudezca. Ambos mandatarios sostuvieron a última hora del domingo una conversación telefónica apenas tres días después de que el presidente estadounidense y Vladímir Putin marcaran las líneas rojas para las negociaciones clave que tendrán lugar en enero sobre Ucrania y la estabilidad internacional en general.

“El presidente Biden dejó claro que Estados Unidos, sus aliados y sus socios responderán de forma decisiva si Rusia invade aún más Ucrania”, explicó la Casa Blanca en un comunicado donde quiso resaltar con ese “aún más” que no se trataría de un ataque nuevo, sino de la escalada de una invasión que comenzó en 2014 con su despliegue bélico en Donbás y Crimea. Asimismo, Washington también se mostró firme en su respaldo a Kiev al señalar que lo defenderá diplomáticamente a ptravés de las conversaciones que comenzará con Moscú en enero por tres vías: en su diálogo bilateral para la estabilidad estratégica; ante la Organización para la Seguridad y la Cooperación en Europa (OSCE), que actualmente ejerce de mediadora en la guerra de Donbás; y en las negociaciones que mantendrán ambas potencias a través del Consejo Rusia-OTAN, pese a que Putin ha insistido en los últimos meses que Kiev forma parte de su esfera de influencia y no de la Alianza Atlántica.

En su charla con Putin del pasado 30 de diciembre, Biden le advirtió de que Occidente impondrá sanciones sin precedentes a Rusia si hay una escalada con Ucrania. “La primera conversación del año con el presidente de Estados Unidos demuestra la naturaleza especial de nuestra relación”, afirmó Zelenski por Twitter. “Se discutieron las acciones conjuntas de ambos países y sus socios para mantener la paz en Europa, prevenir una escalada futura, hacer reformas y desoligarquizar Ucrania”, agregó el mandatario.

La crisis resurgió en noviembre con el despliegue de más de 100.000 militares rusos en torno a las fronteras de Ucrania. Antes, a principios del año pasado hubo otra escalada similar en la línea de contacto de Donbás, que fue templada por el encuentro de junio entre Biden y Putin en Ginebra. Sin embargo, la inteligencia estadounidense informó en otoño de una nueva presencia masiva de tropas y artillería a lo largo de toda la frontera Ucrania cuyo plan podría ser una invasión por tres frentes: Crimea, el este del país y la zona limítrofe con Bielorrusia, cuyo régimen provocó en paralelo otra crisis con Polonia al enviar a la frontera de miles de inmigrantes traídos de Oriente Medio.

Putin y Biden volvieron a hablar por videoconferencia el pasado 7 de diciembre. En aquellas conversaciones, el mandatario ruso reiteró los puntos innegociables, entre ellos que la OTAN no se expanda más al Este, y propuso negociar unas garantías de seguridad para Rusia. Y el 21 de diciembre, en una reunión con el Ministerio de Defensa, Putin subrayó al alto mando su gran preocupación: según sus informes, Estados Unidos está a punto de desarrollar armas hipersónicas como las rusas y, bajo esta cobertura, “podría armar a los extremistas del país vecino y empujarlos contra Rusia, contra algunas regiones rusas en particular… diremos Crimea”.

Precisamente Zelenski se pronunció en su discurso de año nuevo sobre la península anexionada por Rusia en marzo de 2014 tras el despliegue de soldados sin identificación, los conocidos como “hombres amables”, y sobre Donbás, en guerra contra Kiev desde abril de aquel año con el apoyo militar y financiero de Moscú. “Aquí están nuestros soldados. Creo que se tomarán fotos (en 2022) en unas Donetsk, Lugansk y Crimea pacíficas”, proclamó el mandatario a su población, según recoge el discurso publicado por la presidencia ucrania en su web.

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Unos días antes, en un encuentro con las misiones diplomáticas extranjeras, Zelenski subrayó que espera obtener este año un marco de tiempo específico para la integración de Ucrania en la OTAN. Tanto ese país como Georgia recibieron esa promesa en el encuentro de Bucarest de la Alianza Atlántica de 2008. Sin embargo, las garantías de estabilidad que exige el Kremlin a la Casa Blanca especifican que la organización debe renunciar a su ampliación al Este de Europa, el Cáucaso y Asia Central, territorios que Moscú considera bajo su esfera de influencia, pero que Washington defiende a su vez como Estados soberanos con capacidad de decisión propia. “El presidente Biden remarcó el compromiso estadounidense con la soberanía de Ucrania y su integridad territorial”, subrayó el comunicado de la Casa Blanca sobre su conversación con Zelenski.

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