West, Russia square off over Ukraine

KIEV – Western powers and Russia squared off over crisis-hit Ukraine as a top EU envoy prepared to fly to Kiev yesterday to buttress its new leaders’ tilt away from Moscow.

Russia’s fury at the breakneck pace of change in the ex-Soviet nation that saw president Viktor Yanukovych ousted following a week of carnage was on full display with Moscow’s recall of its Kiev ambassador and freeze of its US$15 billion Ukrainian bailout loan.

Both the United States and Britain warned Russian President Vladimir Putin not to even consider using force to regain sway over a neighbour he views as vital to his efforts to build an economic – and possibly even military – counterweight to the West.

Resurgent opposition leaders in parliament meanwhile prepared yesterday to cobble together a new cabinet after dismantling the last vestiges of a Yanukovych government that many in the nation of 46 million viewed as both inept and corrupt.

The heart of Kiev was a site of deep mourning late on Sunday as thousands streamed in clutching candles and flowers to pay their respects to those who fell in defence of Ukraine’s aspirations to be rejoined with the West.

Some people shook their heads in disbelief while inspecting lamp posts studded with bullet holes. Others joined priest in requiems as songs of mourning rose over the ancient city.

Russia’s vocal displeasure at the changes hitting its neighbour has translated into Western anxiety about Putin actually ordering tanks into Ukraine in an echo of what the Soviets did in former Czechoslovakia and Hungary during the Cold War.

US National Security Adviser Susan Rice said bluntly that sending troops to restore a Kremlin-friendly leadership in Kiev “would be a grave mistake”.

Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague also stressed that “any external duress on Ukraine any more than we’ve seen in recent weeks… it really would not be in the interests of Russia to do any such thing”.

But Hague, when asked about the possibility of Putin ordering tanks into Ukraine, said: “We don’t know, of course, what Russia’s next reaction will be”.

Russia’s anxiety was underscored late on Sunday when the foreign ministry recalled ambassador Mikhail Zurabov “due to the escalation of the situation in Ukraine”.

The foreign ministry also said Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had flatly told US Secretary of State John Kerry that Russia strongly condemned “the seizure of power” by the opposition in Kiev.

Yet the diplomatic sparring was likely to only intensify yesterday with the arrival in Kiev of EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton – a prime Russian target of charges that the West was meddling in Ukraine’s internal affairs.

Ashton’s office said the two-day visit would focus on finding “a lasting solution to the political crisis and measures to stabilise the economic situation”.

– Nampa-AFP

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