Tag: tensions
Deal To Ease Ukraine Tension Threatened By New Violence

Deal To Ease Ukraine Tension Threatened By New Violence

By Neela Banerjee, Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The fragile diplomatic accord to resolve the Ukraine crisis frayed Sunday as an armed clash erupted in eastern Ukraine and top Russian and Ukrainian officials, appearing on television talk shows, each demanded the other side lay down its weapons.

Russia’s ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak, said a gunfight early Easter morning that left at least three people dead at a checkpoint outside the eastern Ukrainian city of Slovyansk showed the need for all sides to disarm.

On “Fox News Sunday,” Kislyak declined to say whether Russian President Vladimir Putin would tell the pro-Russian separatists to end their armed occupation of government buildings in eastern Ukraine. Militants have seized government and communications facilities in more than a dozen cities.

Kislyak said Russia was committed to using its influence “to try to de-escalate and defuse the situation.”

Kislyak did not appear optimistic that the diplomatic agreement signed Thursday in Geneva by the U.S., Russia, Ukraine and the European Union would solve the standoff between the new government in Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, and Russia, which already has annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea.

“Ukrainian colleagues have suggested that (the agreement is) not applicable to what is happening in Kiev, that the far-right groupings are not going to be disarmed,” he said. “Under such circumstances, you shouldn’t expect that the other part of the political spectrum will be willing to rush in implementing the agreement.”

On NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk placed the blame for Sunday’s clash in Slovyansk on Russia.

“Russia triggered this violence and Russia supported these terrorists and Russia was obliged to … condemn terrorists and to condemn those so-called peaceful protesters with AK-47s in their hands, shooting into civilians and shooting into Ukrainian riot police,” Yatsenyuk said.

“And if Russia pulls back its security forces and former KGB agents, this would definitely calm down the situation and stabilize the situation in southern and eastern Ukraine.”

Yatsenyuk accused Putin of seeking to restore the Soviet Union. Kislyak dismissed that idea “as a false notion.”

“We just want the Ukrainians to find a way of a dialogue, a new constitution, that would help them to live in a country that is democratic, that supports the rights of all the ethnic groups, including certainly Russians,” Kislyak said. “We want to have a friendly neighbor, because for us all, irrespective of what is happening, Ukrainians are just our brothers.”

Two members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN), and Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT), said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the standoff in Ukraine proved the need for the Obama administration and European allies to increase pressure on Russia through harsher economic sanctions.

“I think the time is now to rapidly ratchet up our sanctions, whether it’s on Russian petrochemical companies or on Russian banks,” Murphy said.

The White House has prepared another list of Russian individuals and institutions to sanction if Moscow does not meet its commitments under the Geneva accord. But the administration is not expected to slap sanctions on whole sectors of the Russian economy unless tensions escalate sharply.

©afp.com / Anatoliy Stepanov

Turkey To Challenge Gaza Blockade

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Turkey is preparing to challenge Israel’s blockade on Gaza at the International Court of Justice, the foreign minister said Saturday, ratcheting up tensions between the once close allies.

Ahmet Davutoglu’s comments came a day after Turkey expelled the Israel’s ambassador and severed military ties with the country, angered over its refusal to apologize for last year’s deadly raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla that killed nine pro-Palestinian activists.

In an interview with Turkey’s state-run TRT television, Davutoglu dismissed a U.N. report into the raid that said Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza was a legal security measure. Davutoglu said the report — prepared by former New Zealand Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer and former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, and presented to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon — was not endorsed by the United Nations and was therefore not binding.

“What is binding is the International Court of Justice,” Davutoglu said. “This is what we are saying: let the International Court of Justice decide.”

“We are starting the necessary legal procedures this coming week,” he said.

But Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said his country has nothing to apologize for and that it has done all it could to avoid a crisis with Turkey. He said the Turks apparently intended to raise tensions with Israel for its own reasons.

“The problem here is on the Turkish side. … They were not ready for a compromise and kept raising the threshold,” Ayalon said on Israeli TV Saturday. “I think we need to say to the Turks: as far as we are concerned, this saga is behind us. Now we need to cooperate. Lack of cooperation harms not only us, but Turkey as well.”

Davutoglu said the U.N. report released Friday contradicted an earlier report on the Gaza flotilla incident which found that Israeli forces violated international law when they raided the flotilla. That report was prepared in September by three human rights experts appointed by the U.N.’s top human rights body.

He also warned Israel that it risks alienation among Arab nations by resisting an apology.

“If Israel persists with its current position, the Arab spring will give rise to a strong Israel opposition as well as the debate on the authoritarian regimes,” Davutoglu said.

On Friday, Turkey downgraded its diplomatic ties with Israel to the level of second secretary and gave the ambassador and other high-level diplomats until Wednesday to leave the country. In other measures against Israel, Turkey suspended military agreements, promised to back legal actions against Israel by the raid victims’ families, and vowed to take steps to ensure freedom to navigate in the eastern Mediterranean.

Turkish officials refused to elaborate on their government’s latest move, but some analysts suggested Turkey could send navy vessels to escort aid ships in the future.

Turkey’s main opposition party on Friday warned that such a step could lead to confrontation between Turkish and Israeli forces. “The probability that (Turkey’s ruling) party has carried Turkey to the brink of a hot conflict is saddening and unacceptable,” said Faruk Logoglu, a deputy chairman of the opposition Republican People’s Party.

On Saturday, Ban urged Turkey and Israel to mend ties for the good of the Middle East peace process. “I sincerely hope that Israel and Turkey will improve their relationship,” Ban told reporters during a visit to Australia.

“Both countries are very important countries in the region and their improved relationship — normal relationship — will be very important in addressing all the situations in the Middle East, including the Middle East peace process,” he said, referring to a negotiated Palestinian-Israeli peace pact.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s spokesman said the U.N. committee’s report concluded that Israel had acted within its rights and said he hoped it would help “put the relationship between Jerusalem and Ankara back on the right track.”

“The U.N. commission clearly states that Israel acted legally in imposing the naval blockade to protect our people from the smuggling of rockets and weapons that are fired at our civilians,” the spokesman, Mark Regev, said.

The U.N. report released Friday called the May 31, 2010 Israeli raid “excessive and unreasonable.” The U.N. panel also blamed Turkey and flotilla organizers for contributing to the deaths.

Israel insists its forces acted in self-defense and says there will be no apology. Israeli officials pointed out that the report does not demand an apology. Rather, it says “an appropriate statement of regret should be made by Israel in respect of the incident in light of its consequences.”

(This version CORRECTS the spelling of “ratcheting.”)