Saturday, 13 September 2014

Ukraine PM: Putin wants to restore the USSR

Ukraine PM: Putin wants to restore the USSR

Russia is accused of backing rebels in Ukraine with heavy arms, vehicles and troops [AP]
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk has accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of trying to destroy Ukraine as an independent country and said only NATO could defend the ex-Soviet republic from external aggression.
Kiev and its Western backers accuse Moscow of sending troops and tanks into eastern Ukraine in support of pro-Russian separatists battling Ukrainian forces in a conflict that has killed more than 3,000 people.
"Let me put it bluntly, we are still in the state of war, and the key aggressor is the Russian Federation. And until we get the peace it would be really difficult to have real changes, " Arseny Yatseniuk told a conference attended by European and Ukrainian lawmakers and business leaders on Saturday.
Talking about Vladimir Putin, Yatseniuk said that "his goal is to take the entire Ukraine. He cannot cope with an idea that Ukraine would be a part of big EU family. He wants to restore the Soviet Union."
Yatseniuk said Putin would not be content only with Crimea - annexed by Moscow in March - and with Ukraine's mainly Russian-speaking eastern region.
 
"Russia is a threat to the global order and to the security and stability in the entire Europe. At the first stage he decided to annex Crimea, at the second one he want to build up a frozen conflict in Donetsk and Luhansk, at the third one he wants to facilitate the corridor from Donetsk and Luhansk to Kherson, Odessa and Transdniestria, and at the fourth one he wants to eliminate Ukraine as an independent country, this is my take on this," the Ukrainian prime minister said.
A fragile ceasefire negotiated by envoys from Ukraine, Russia, the separatists and Europe's OSCE security watchdog, has been in place in eastern Ukraine for more than a week and is broadly holding despite sporadic violations.
However, Yatseniuk said that it was too early to talk about it as a peace deal.
"It is too premature to say that we already hammered out the deal. This is the first step to pave the way to a probable or suggested future peaceful solution," Yatseniuk said.
NATO protection
Asked about future NATO membership, a red line for Russia, Yatseniuk said he realised the alliance was not ready now to admit Kiev, but still advocated for the NATO membership for Ukraine saying that was the only defence Kiev might have.
"So the idea is to say it bluntly and clearly that NATO in these particular circumstances is the only vehicle how to protect and defend Ukraine. I do understand that not all NATO members were happy with this kind of statement. But my job is to make happy the people of Ukraine," Yatseniuk said.
There is no prospect of the Atlantic alliance admitting Ukraine, a sprawling country of 45 million people between central Europe and Russia, but Kiev has stepped up cooperation with NATO in a range of areas and has pressed member states to sell it weapons to help defeat the separatists.
"I do understand that in a short-term perspective NATO is not ready to accept Ukraine. But you know, ask and you will be given. Well, it's about Bible. And knock, and the door will be opened. So we decided to knock," Yatseniuk said.

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