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KIEV, Ukraine â Vowing that the United States would never recognize Russiaâs âillegal occupationâ of Crimea last month, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Tuesday reiterated Americaâs support of Ukraine, declaring that âno nation has the right to simply grab land from anotherâ and calling on Russia to stop supporting masked gunmen who have seized government buildings across the east of the country.
Mr. Bidenâs remarks, made during a meeting with Ukraineâs interim prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, signaled strong American backing for the shaky new government in Kiev that Moscow does not recognize and condemns as the illegitimate fruit of a putsch engineered by the West.
In recent weeks, officials in Washington, including President Obama, have issued a string of warnings to Russia threatening increasingly harsh economic sanctions if the Kremlin does not help to de-escalate the crisis in eastern Ukraine. But those seem to have gone largely unheeded.
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Mr. Bidenâs stern words, accompanied by a pledge of a further $50 million in American aid and help to break Ukraineâs dependency on Russian energy supplies, underscored how little trust now exists between Washington and Moscow, despite their joint role in brokering an international accord last Thursday in Geneva that sought, so far with little effect, to defuse the crisis.
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Times Minute | Biden Wraps Up Kiev Visit
Times Minute | Biden Wraps Up Kiev Visit
As Biden wraps up his visit to Ukraine offering advice and aid, concerns over Russian intentions and whatâs next for the embattled country.
Credit By Carrie Halperin on Publish Date April 22, 2014
Credit Sergei Supinsky/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Illustrating the volatility of the standoff in eastern Ukraine, the countryâs acting president on Tuesday called for trying again to force the pro-Russian militants from the buildings they are holding after a failed attempt last week. In that effort, a column of 21 armored vehicles was commandeered by pro-Russian forces with the aid, the West says, of Russian special forces operatives.
âI call on the security agencies to relaunch and carry out effective anti-terrorist measures,â the acting president, Oleksander Turchinov, said in a statement, âwith the aim of protecting Ukrainian citizens living in eastern Ukraine from terrorists.â
Mr. Turchinov was reacting to a statement Tuesday by the self-proclaimed mayor of Slovyansk, which said that one of the âbrutally torturedâ bodies found in a river there this week was that of Volodymyr Rybak, a government official from the nearby town of Gorlovka and a member of the presidentâs own political party.
The pro-Russian mayor, Vyacheslav Ponomarev, attributed the killings to Right Sector, a Ukrainian ultranationalist group that many here blame for violent attacks against ethnic Russians in the east, but he did not offer any evidence to back his claim.
Mr. Ponomarev also announced that members of Slovyanskâs pro-Russia militia had detained Simon Ostrovsky, an American video journalist from Vice News, and were holding him in the captured headquarters of the Ukrainian Security Services in Slovyansk.
In an emailed statement, Vice said it âis aware of the situation and is in contact with the United States State Department and other appropriate government authorities to secure the safety and security of our friend and colleague, Simon Ostrovsky.â
Mr. Biden, echoing the view of Ukrainian authorities that the unrest in the east has been instigated and, in some places, directly assisted by Russian military and intelligence personnel, called on Russia âstop supporting men in masks in unmarked uniforms,â the so-called âgreen menâ who have seized government buildings in at least 10 towns and cities.
âItâs time for Russia to stop talking and start acting â act on the commitments they madeâ in Geneva, Mr. Biden said, adding that Ukraine, through an amnesty law and other steps, was trying to live up to its side of the bargain.
Mr. Yatsenyuk, also ratcheting up criticism of Moscow, said, âNo country should be allowed to behave like armed banditsâ and called on the Russians to stick to the commitments made in Geneva and ânot behave as gangsters in this modern century.â
Russia, however, blames Kiev for the slim results of the Geneva agreement, which called for the disarming of gunmen and the freeing of occupied buildings. While Washington and Kiev focus on pro-Russian militants holding buildings in the east, Moscow insists that the main reason for the continuing unrest is the Kiev governmentâs failure to rein in radical Ukrainian groups like Right Sector, which are still occupying City Hall and the central post office in Kiev.
Since the ouster in February of Ukraineâs pro-Moscow president, Viktor F. Yanukovych, Russia has repeatedly denounced Ukraineâs new leadership as dominated by extreme nationalists and neo-Nazis who threaten not only ethnic Russians and Russian-speakers in the east but Jews and other minorities across the country. After meeting in Kiev with Ukrainian leaders and members of the Jewish community, however, David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee, said on Tuesday that âthe government is committed in word and, we believe, in deed to fighting xenophobia and anti-Semitism.â
Russian allegations of anti-Semites on the rampage in Ukraine, Mr. Harris said in an interview, were âa dangerous, Machiavellian gameâ that only endangered Jews. âThis is not the first time in history that the Jewish community has been put in the middle of such a game,â he said.
On Monday, just as Mr. Biden arrived in Kiev, Russiaâs foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, accused the Ukrainian government of flagrantly violating the Geneva deal and said it was doing nothing to stop extremists, an accusation that was taken as a sign that Russia may be further preparing the groundwork for a military intervention. Russia, which has tens of thousands of soldiers massed on Ukraineâs eastern border, has denied any intention of invading or having any hand in stirring separatist unrest.
In a statement to Ukraineâs Parliament after his meetings with Mr.Yatsenyuk and the interim president, Oleksandr V. Turchynov, Mr. Biden spoke of the âhumiliating threatsâ faced by Ukraine and said the United States was âready to assist.â But he also stressed that Ukraine needed to put its own house in order, calling on it to âfight the cancer of corruption that is endemic in your system right nowâ and to reduce its crippling dependence on Russia for supplies of natural gas.
âImagine where youâd be today if you were able to tell Russia: Keep your gas. It would be a very different world youâd be facing today,â Mr. Biden told Ukrainian legislators. âIt takes some difficult decisions, but itâs collectively within your power and the power of Europe and the United States. And we stand ready to assist you in reaching that.â
He applauded Parliament for moving to change Ukraineâs Constitution to devolve more power to its diverse regions, including the mainly Russian-speaking east.
In an effort to calm pro-Russian separatists, the government in Kiev has promised to grant more autonomy to local authorities to run their own affairs. It has also begun preparing an amnesty law to cover pro-Russian militants who voluntarily give up their weapons and vacate seized buildings.
But Kiev has balked at Russian demands for so-called âfederalization,â a wholesale reworking of Ukraineâs state structure, viewing as a ruse to divide the country and place big chunks of territory in the south and east, an area that President Vladimir V. Putin last week called âNew Russia,â under Moscowâs control.
Speaking in Moscow on Tuesday, Prime Minister Dmitri A. Medvedev of Russia was quoted as saying in Parliament that Russia could minimize the impact of any sanctions imposed over the Ukraine crisis and would insist on fair access to foreign markets for its energy exports.
âWe will not give up on cooperation with foreign companies, including from Western countries, but we will be ready for unfriendly steps,â Mr. Medvedev said.
âI am sure we can minimize their impact,â he said in a clear reference to sanctions. âWe will not allow our citizens to become hostages of political games.â
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