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Obama And Putin Spar As Rebels Battle In Ukraine

Obama And Putin Spar As Rebels Battle In Ukraine

Warsaw (AFP) – President Barack Obama Wednesday condemned Russia’s “dark tactics” and bullying in Ukraine and President Vladimir Putin hit back at American “aggression,” as new venom deepened the worst U.S.-Russia clash in decades.

Obama met Ukraine’s president-elect Petro Poroshenko in Warsaw and promised years of U.S. support, then blasted Russia and vowed to protect ex-Soviet states in NATO in a hawkish speech marking 25 years of Polish democracy.

“How can we allow the dark tactics of the 20th century to define this new century?” Obama asked, as he adopted the mantle of ‘leader of the West’ worn by previous presidents during the Cold War.

“As we’ve been reminded by Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, our free nations cannot be complacent in pursuit of the vision we share — a Europe that is whole and free and at peace.” said Obama who spoke behind bullet proof glass in front of the Royal Castle in Warsaw — a rebuilt symbol of Polish triumph over the destruction and tyranny of the 20th century.

Obama will come face-to-face with Putin on Friday in France. Though several European leaders are meeting the Russian leader and hope to pursue dialogue to ease the Ukraine crisis — which saw hundreds of rebels battle government forces Wednesday — Washington remains to be convinced.

“We will not accept Russia’s occupation of Crimea or its violations of Ukraine’s sovereignty,” Obama said.

“Our free nations will stand united so that further Russian provocations will only mean more isolation and costs for Russia,” Obama said, before heading to Belgium and a G7 summit dedicated to coordinating policy towards Moscow.

In a clear reference to Russia’s action in Crimea and wider Ukraine, Obama warned that “the days of empires and spheres of influence are over.”

“Bigger nations must not be allowed to bully the small, or impose their will at the barrel of a gun or with masked men taking over buildings.”

Putin said that he could not understand why Obama, who has spent months trying to isolate him over Ukraine, would not hold a formal meeting with him during 70th anniversary commemorations in Normandy.

“It is his choice, I am ready for dialogue,” Putin said in an interview with French broadcasters Europe1 and TF1 conducted at his dacha in the Black Sea resort of Sochi.

The Russian leader accused the United States of hypocrisy in its “aggressive” attempts to punish Russia over Ukraine.

“We have almost no military forces abroad yet look: everywhere in the world there are American military bases, American troops thousands of kilometers from their borders.

“They interfere in the interior affairs of this or that country. So it is difficult to accuse us of abuses.”

Unlike Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and British Prime Minister David Cameron will meet one-on-one with Putin in France — reflecting their nations’ greater exposure to Russian economic power.

Obama met Poroshenko days before his inauguration and declared himself “deeply impressed” by the chocolate tycoon Ukrainians chose on May 25 to lead them back from a political and economic precipice.

“The United States is absolutely committed to standing behind the Ukrainian people not just in the coming days, weeks, but in the coming years,” Obama told reporters.

In Ukraine, three government soldiers were injured in a massive all-night attack carried out by hundreds of pro-Russian insurgents in the nation’s restive east, authorities in Kiev said Wednesday.

The assault on a position held by the Ukrainian National Guard in the Lugansk region began Tuesday evening and lasted 10 hours, the interior ministry said, adding that six rebels were also killed in the fighting.

The 300 rebels who took part in the attack were armed with automatic weapons, rocket launchers and mortars, and the Ukrainian forces fought “to the last bullet,” according to the ministry.

Washington accuses Moscow of coordinating and directing the rebels, and says continued fighting should merit tough new economic sanctions.

NATO defense ministers Tuesday agreed a series of steps to bolster protection in eastern Europe after the Ukraine crisis, but insisted they were acting within the limits of a key post-Cold War treaty with Moscow.

Obama meanwhile proposed a one-billion-dollar fund to finance new U.S. air, naval and troop rotations through Eastern Europe, launching his regional tour designed to bolster NATO resolve and capacity against Moscow.

Obama also took the opportunity in Poland to strikingly renew U.S. guarantees of security for states which escaped the Warsaw pact after the eclipse of the Soviet Union and have been discomforted by Putin’s action in Ukraine.

He reaffirmed that Article Five of the NATO charter would oblige the alliance to come to the defense of any state that was attacked.

“Poland will never stand alone,” Obama said, to cheers from a big crowd in Warsaw’s Town Square. “Estonia will never stand alone.

Latvia will never stand alone. Lithuania will never stand alone. Romania will never stand alone.”

Photo: Jewel Samad via AFP

Obama Unveils $1 Billion Security Plan For Eastern Europe

Obama Unveils $1 Billion Security Plan For Eastern Europe

Warsaw (AFP) – President Barack Obama on Tuesday unveiled a $1 billion U.S. security plan for eastern Europe aimed at allaying fears over a resurgent Kremlin and the escalating pro-Russian uprising in ex-Soviet Ukraine.

Obama launched a major tour of Europe in Warsaw where he will attend celebrations of the 25th anniversary of Poland’s first free elections that put both the country and the rest of eastern Europe on a path out of Moscow’s orbit and toward democracy and economic prosperity.

But the poignant ceremony has been haunted by those very countries’ fears of the Kremlin reasserting its Cold War-era grip over a large swathe of Europe following its seizure of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula in March.

“Our commitment to Poland’s security as well as the security of our allies in central and eastern Europe is a cornerstone of our own security and it is sacrosanct,” Obama said after inspecting a joint unit of U.S. and Polish F-16 pilots.

Obama proposed an initiative of up to $1 billion to finance extra U.S. troop and military deployments to “new allies” in eastern Europe.

The “European Reassurance Initiative” — a historic plan that must be approved by Congress — would also build the capacity of non-NATO states such as Ukraine and Georgia to work with the United States and the Western alliance and build their own defenses.

Obama’s first pivotal encounter will come Wednesday when he meets Ukraine’s embattled president-elect Petro Poroshenko, with his country threatened by civil war and its new pro-Western leadership grasping for protection from Washington.

The seven-week pro-Russian insurgency in Ukraine’s eastern rust belt grew only more violent after Poroshenko swept to power in a May 25 presidential ballot on a promise to quickly end fighting and save the nation of 46 million from economic collapse.

Hundreds of separatist gunmen staged one of their biggest offensives to date on Monday by attacking a Ukrainian border guard service camp in the region of Lugansk on the border with Russia.

Ukraine’s military reported suffering no fatalities and killing five rebels in a day-long battle that saw insurgents pelt the camp with mortar fire and deploy snipers on rooftops surrounding the base.

But Lugansk’s self-declared “prime minister” Vasyl Nikitin told AFP that at least three civilians and the separatist administration’s top health official had died in the violence.

A spokesman for Ukraine’s “anti-terrorist operation” in the east said one federal soldier was killed and another 13 wounded Tuesday in a new bout of fighting in the neighboring coal mining province of Donetsk.

Washington’s commitment to Ukraine will be reinforced when U.S. Vice President Joe Biden travels to Kiev on Saturday to attend Poroshenko’s swearing in as the country’s fifth post-Soviet president.

The visit is meant to underscore the U.S. position that the people of Ukraine — and not Moscow — should decide their destiny and overcome the cultural differences now tearing apart the vast country’s Russified east and more nationalist west.

Kiev has not yet invited any Moscow official to the inauguration and Russian President Vladimir Putin is yet to formally recognize the result of an election that saw rebels disrupt voting across swathes of the east.

Ukraine and its eastern European allies such as Poland have been pushing Washington and EU leaders to unleash painful economic sanctions against entire sectors of Russia’s economy for the Kremlin’s perceived support of the rebels.

Obama addressed those calls directly by telling a joint press conference with his Polish counterpart Bronislaw Komorowski that Russia faced further punitive measures unless it put more pressure on Ukrainian rebels to halt their insurgency.

“Further Russian provocation will be met with further costs for Russia including, if necessary, additional sanctions,” Obama said.

The U.S. president’s tour also takes in the Group of Seven summit in Brussels on Thursday that symbolically replaces a Group of Eight meeting that Putin was due to host in Sochi but which world leaders decided to boycott.

But the most sensitive part of Obama’s swing will come on Friday when he attends the 70th anniversary commemoration of D-Day in Normandy to which Putin was invited as well.

The U.S. leader has spent months trying to isolate his rival and punish the Kremlin inner circle with sanctions over Ukraine.

Both the Kremlin and White House say no one-on-one meeting between Obama and Putin is being planned.

But senior White House aides have not ruled out an informal encounter — which would be the first for the rivals since Ukraine mushroomed into Europe’s worst security crisis in decades.

Obama also called on Putin to accept Poroshenko’s invitation to hold in Normandy his first talks with a Ukrainian leader since the February ouster of Kremlin-backed president Viktor Yanukovych set Kiev on its new westward course.

Ukraine’s Poroshenko — a 48-year-old chocolate baron who once enjoyed good working relations with Moscow while serving as foreign minister — won a surprise reprieve on Monday when Russia’s state gas firm Gazprom delayed a threatened cut in fuel shipments that would also impact large portions of Europe.

Kiev now has until June 9 to start covering its debts — a period that Russia has promised to use to help reach a long-term price compromise.

But Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk warned on Tuesday that a cut in Russian gas “remains a possibility”.

Photo: Saul Loeb via AFP