Pentagon is preparing options to bolster US military presence in eastern Europe
Pentagon is preparing options to bolster US military presence in eastern Europe
From CNN’s Barbara Starr
The US Defense Department is working on a series of military options for President Biden’s approval that could be activated to beef up US military presence in eastern Europe to provide reassurance to allies and a deterrence factor if Russian invades Ukraine, according to two defense officials.
The options could include “movement of assets and forces already in Europe and also assets and forces available outside of Europe,” the first official said. A Russian invasion “certainly would be one trigger,” for US troops and assets to move. But some forces might be used in exercises and other training scenarios as well. And any arms sales would be considered somewhat a separate matter from troop movements.
These options would also likely be supported by sanctions.
Broadly, the US military goal would be to “meet the capability” that NATO allies in the region are asking for, the official said.
US forces could operate, as they already do, unilaterally in Europe, but could also operate under existing NATO command structures.
Additionally, US special forces continue to assist in the training of Ukrainian Special Operations Forces inside Ukraine.
“Our ongoing training mission in Ukraine plays a large role in the development of Ukrainian Special Operations Forces through regular validation training exercises,” a spokesperson for US Special Operations Command Europe told CNN.
Biden discusses Ukraine with Japan’s prime minister
From CNN’s Kyle Blaine and Kevin Liptak
President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida discussed a range of issues, including Ukraine, during their virtual meeting on Friday, according to the White House.
“The leaders committed to work closely together to deter Russian aggression against Ukraine, and Prime Minister Kishida pledged to continue close coordination with the United States, other allies and partners, and the international community on taking strong action in response to any attack.”
The prime minister indicated Japan was behind the United States in working to deter a Russian invasion of Ukraine — though a senior administration official said the matter of sanctions, and whether Japan was prepared to issue them in response to a potential incursion, did not arise.
In addition to discussing Ukraine, Biden accepted an invitation to visit Japan in the late spring.
Biden will meet his national security team this weekend to discuss Ukraine, White House press secretary says
President Biden will meet with his national security team at Camp David this weekend to discuss the situation so far on tensions at the Ukraine-Russia border and whether it might be useful to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, said White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki.
“It may or may not be the next step. I can’t give you a prediction on if and when it will happen. But if that is a step that is recommended, and that we think would be effective, at this point in the discussion, of course, the President is always open to leader-to-leader engagement,” Psaki told reporters at the press briefing on Friday.
Some participants at the meeting at Camp David will be virtual and some will be there in-person, Psaki added.
A look back at the US diplomats Lavrov has met with during his 18-year tenure as Russia’s foreign minister
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov today to discuss escalating tensions on the Ukraine-Russia border.
Blinken is the latest in a long line of US diplomats to meet with Lavrov, a highly experienced diplomat who has served as Russian foreign minister since 2004. Before that, he was Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations in New York from 1994 to 2004.
Here’s a look back some of the US secretaries of State Lavrov has met with over the past 18 years:
Here is a timeline of notable developments that led to escalated Ukraine border tensions
While tensions on the Ukraine-Russia border have been simmering for a long time, here’s a timeline of notable developments over the last decade that culminated into the current escalation in tensions at the Ukraine-Russia border.
2013: Ukraine’s former President Viktor Yanukovych was under severe economic pressure from Russia to not join the European Union. And he pulled out of talks with the EU last minute, after a year of insisting that it was intent on signing a historic political and trade agreement that was aimed at creating closer political and economic ties and fostering economic growth among the nations of Eastern Europe and the Caucasus, including Ukraine. This sparked weeks of violent protests in Kyiv.
2014: In March 2014, Russia annexed Crimea, an autonomous peninsula in southern Ukraine with strong Russian loyalties, on the pretext that it was defending its interests and those of Russian-speaking citizens.
2015: Shortly afterwards, pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions declared their independence from Kyiv, prompting months of heavy fighting. Despite Kyiv and Moscow signing a peace deal in Minsk in 2015, brokered by France and Germany, there have been repeated ceasefire violations.
According to UN figures, there have been more than 3,000 conflict-related civilian deaths in eastern Ukraine since March 2014.
The European Union and US have imposed a series of measures in response to Russia’s actions in Crimea and eastern Ukraine, including economic sanctions targeting individuals, entities and specific sectors of the Russian economy.
The Kremlin accuses Ukraine of stirring up tensions in the country’s east and of violating the Minsk ceasefire agreement.
What’s happening now: The US and NATO have described the movements and concentrations of troops in and around Ukraine as “unusual.”
As many as 100,000 Russian troops have remained amassed at the Ukrainian border. US intelligence findings in December estimated that Russia could begin a military offensive in Ukraine “as soon as early 2022.”
Blinken will brief EU foreign ministers on Lavrov meeting
From CNN’s James Frater
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will brief European Union foreign ministers on Monday about his meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
A senior EU official said in a briefing with journalists on Friday:
“The aim of this connection is to share with the European Union Foreign Ministers the latest on the dialogue between Russia and the United States. And, on the side of the EU, to share with Secretary Blinken, how we are advancing in our internal reflections.”
The EU foreign ministers will be meeting in Brussels in person and Blinken will join them virtually.
When asked about the EU and its member states’ reaction should Russia further invade Ukraine, the official was adamant:
“Reaction will be very quick. The reaction will be extremely clear.”
“The implementation of the sanctions depends on what kind of sanctions we agree. Some of them take more attention, some of them can be implemented instantly,” the senior EU official added. “Normally, most of the sanctions are enforced the very day of the publication. But again, we are talking about contingency planning. We are talking about something – that cross our fingers – will not be necessary to take.”
The official reiterated the bloc’s call for Russia to de-escalate.
Biden admitted that western allies are not entirely united on response to Russian aggression in Ukraine
Analysis by CNN’s Luke McGee
President Biden’s admission that Western allies are not entirely united on how they would respond to a “minor” Russian incursion into Ukraine has sparked an uproar in Kiev.
They were also met with concern in Europe, where officials and observers said Biden’s candid remarks had turned a spotlight on an uncomfortable truth at a dangerous moment.
Foreign diplomats and experts said Biden’s comments were also an acknowledgment of a harsh reality: as tensions rise on the Ukrainian border, NATO allies are not all on the same page.
There is “some truth there, which didn’t need to be said out loud,” one NATO diplomat told CNN Thursday. “It’s not like the Russians didn’t know that, say, a cyber-attack against Ukraine wouldn’t trigger a full-scale response.”
This sentiment was echoed by a senior EU diplomat who said, “I think he was actually quite truthful in what he said. Whether it was politically OK, I don’t know.”
The fear is that Biden saying this publicly will give Russian President Vladimir Putin the green light to escalate what is already a very dangerous situation. Biden said in the same answer that he predicts Russia will “move in” to Ukraine, which warned earlier this week that the build-up of Russian troops near the border between the two nations was “almost completed.”
The NATO diplomat who spoke to CNN said that there is a “lack of clarity” over what the specific response would be from NATO allies to specific Russian actions.
“There aren’t yet staked out positions,” the diplomat explained, but said it would probably “break out on the lines you would expect — US, UK, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Easterners would have a low-trigger threshold, everyone else a higher one.”
Read the full analysis here.
US-Russia talks indicate “diplomacy has a chance to continue,” CNN editor says
The takeaway from US-Russia meeting on Friday is that “diplomacy has a chance to continue,” CNN international diplomatic editor Nic Robertson said after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov held their respective news conferences.
“I think it gives Russia what it’s been asking for, which is the written response. It’s been saying that’s the sort of entry to the next round of negotiations, which Sergey Lavrov indicated was there,” Robertson said Friday. “For all involved, it means the diplomacy has a chance to continue, both sides indicating that.”
The difficulty, he pointed out, is that Russia already knows what the written answers are going to be — no giving into Russia’s demands.
Some background: Russia has opposed increased NATO support for Ukraine and demands that foreign forces should withdraw from NATO member states Bulgaria and Romania.
Largely, the meeting has not provided much further clarity on the Ukraine tensions, Robertson said.
“It’s very hard not to see” Russia’s demand for written answers “as a clock-ticking exercise,” he added. “Yet, it is also a path to potential diplomacy.”
Blinken says Russia’s aggressions are at odds with their security interests
From CNN’s Kylie Atwood and Ellie Kaufman
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken raised Russia’s sinking favorability ratings in eastern Ukraine when he met with his Russian counterpart in Geneva on Friday in an effort to point out that Russia’s aggressions have not been useful in advancing their security interests in the region.
“I said, ‘Mr. Lavrov, so many of the things you’ve done in recent years have precipitated virtually everything you say you want to prevent,’” Blinken said during a press conference on Friday. “Before Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014, seizing Crimea, going into the Donbass, Russia’s favorability ratings in Ukraine were 70%, now they’re 25 or 30%.”
CNN has asked the US State Department about which specific polling the secretary was referring to.
Blinken also pointed to the increased support for Ukraine joining NATO – which Russia adamantly opposes — that has largely been the result of Russia’s aggressions.
“Before 2014, before they went and seized Crimea and went into the Donbass, support for Ukraine joining NATO was 25 or 30%, now it’s 60 %,” Blinken said.
Blinken also claimed that when Russia seized Crimea in 2014, it changed NATO’s position on security in Europe.
“Based on Russia’s stated strategic interests and concerns, how have their actions advanced those concerns? On the contrary, it’s gone in the opposite of what Russia purports to want, and now if Russia renews its aggression against Ukraine, the outcome will simply be to reinforce the very things, the very trends that Russia expresses a concern about,” he added.
Source: https://www.cnn.com/politics/live-news/ukraine-russia-news-01-21-22/h_76035b7205a6735bc11418c4bf21fe65