Russia, Ukraine agree pullback line for heavy arms,
separatist have a military advance
Ukrainian
President Petro Poroshenko shows a piece of a bus that was attacked recently
during the panel "The Future of Ukraine" in Davos,
Switzerland, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015. The meeting runs Jan. 21 through 24
under the overarching theme "The New Global Context". (AP
Photo/Michel Euler)
.
BERLIN (AP) — Diplomats from Russia and Ukraine agreed
Wednesday on a dividing line from where both sides should pull back their heavy
weapons, just hours after separatist forces deployed more arms and manpower to
an emerging flashpoint in eastern Ukraine.
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Germany's Foreign Minister, who hosted a meeting of his
counterparts from Russia, Ukraine and France, said the four parties had agreed
that the demarcation line defined in the Minsk agreement of last year should
form the basis for the withdrawal. Under the plan, Ukraine and the pro-Russian
separatists would pull back their heavy arms 15 kilometers (9 miles) on either
side of the line, though there was no agreement on a withdrawal of all troops.
"Today we have finally agreed that the demarcation
line mentioned in the Minsk agreement is the line from where the withdrawal of
heavy weapons needs to take place now," German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier told reporters after the meeting in Berlin.
Steinmeier said the agreement had been "difficult
work" and the talks, which follow a fruitless round of negotiations last
week, were "testing the patience of all involved." The parties also
agreed that the contact group of Ukraine, Russia, and the OSCE should meet as
soon as possible with the aim of laying further groundwork for a high-level
meeting in Kazakhstan's capital Astana aimed at reaching a long-lasting
settlement.
Separately, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said
the "strong support" for the pullback was the meeting's most
important result. He said the foreign ministers did not discuss the sanctions
that the West has imposed on Russia over the Ukraine crisis, saying: "The
sanctions are not our problem, it is the problem of those who introduced them
and now do not know how to extricate themselves ..."
Earlier Wednesday, Lavrov had urged measures to contain
the unfolding unrest, but said nothing about the rebels surrendering territory
they acquired in violation of a peace deal concluded in September in Minsk,
Belarus. Ukraine says separatist forces that are backed by Russia have
overstepped agreed-upon front-line boundaries between the warring sides by 500
square kilometers (190 square miles).
View galleryA pro-Russian armored vehicle moves toward
Slovyanoserbsk, …
A pro-Russian armored vehicle moves toward
Slovyanoserbsk, eastern Ukraine, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015 …
A fresh separatist advance is under way in an area
northwest of Luhansk, the second-largest rebel-held city. The fighting is
centered on two checkpoints along a strategic highway.
Ukraine's Defense Ministry said one of those positions,
Checkpoint 31, had been abandoned but that operations were underway to retake
it.
The separatist forces appear well-poised to take the
upper hand, however.
An Associated Press reporter saw nine Gvozdika
self-propelled howitzers and six anti-tank cannons moving near the town of
Perevalsk around midday. A rebel militiaman with the convoy who declined to
give his name said the armament was heading in the direction of Checkpoint 31.
Along the same road, the AP saw four Grad multiple rocket
launchers accompanied by four trucks carrying ammunition and 15
pristine-looking tanks, also heading toward the checkpoint.
View galleryRussian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks
during …
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks during his
annual news conference in Moscow, Russia, W …
Ukraine and the West accuse Russia of providing material
support to the separatists, which Moscow denies. The sheer amount of
sophisticated heavy weaponry in the hands of the insurgents, however, is widely
seen as overwhelming evidence of direct involvement by Russia.
Speaking during a visit to Kiev, U.S. Army Europe
commander Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges said the quantity of Russian equipment being
provided to separatists had doubled between the September cease-fire deal and
December.
"It is very clear from the capabilities that the
proxies (rebels) have used against Ukrainian security forces, the type of
artillery, modern equipment, the amount of ammunition that has been used,"
Hodges said. "It is irrefutable that they are getting direct support from
Russia."
Addressing the World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko held up a piece of a
bullet-riddled bus as evidence of shelling last week by Russian heavy artillery
in his country. He says 9,000 Russian troops are occupying 7 percent of
Ukrainian territory.
He said the metal came from a bus in the town of
Volnovakha, where 13 people were killed by what he described as Russian
shelling.
View galleryA man pays his final respect to the body of
serviceman …
A man pays his final respect to the body of serviceman
Thomas Sukhiashvili, a Georgian national who
…
"For me this is a symbol, a symbol of the
terroristic attack against my country," he said, comparing it to the
downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over rebel-held eastern Ukraine last
summer. He called it a "global problem," extending far beyond just Ukraine's
borders, cutting short his visit to Davos to deal with the crisis in his
country.
The fighting in the Luhansk region follows intense
clashes over the weekend for control of the airport on the fringes of the main
rebel city, Donetsk. The terminal — once the pride of the city but now reduced
to a burned-out shell — is of limited strategic value. Now, however, it has
acquired symbolic value because of the Ukrainian forces' stand against waves of
separatist attacks.
The fierce airport battle shattered the relative
tranquility that had been in place since a new truce was reached in early
December.
Shelling in and around Donetsk has abated since the
weekend, although artillery strikes have continued to claim civilian
casualties. A shell that fell in Donetsk's Kirov district Wednesday left two
dead.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said there
has been an increase in separatist violence, including rocket attacks on the
Donetsk airport in recent days, and separatist seizures of more territory.
View galleryRussia's Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov speaks …
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks at an
annual news conference on Russia's fore …
"We've also seen reports that Russia has moved two
tactical battalions into Ukraine," she said in Washington. "We can
confirm that Russia continues to move tanks, armored vehicles, trucks artillery
pieces and other military equipment to deployment sites near the Russia-Ukraine
border, which serve as staging points before transporting military equipment to
pro-Russia separatists. That is something we're seeing."
Secretary of State John Kerry said the U.S. was concerned
that the separatists were attacking the town of Debaltseve, about 70 kilometers
(45 miles) east of Donetsk.
"This is a very blatant land grab and it is in
direct contravention to the Minsk Agreement that they signed up to," Kerry
said.
Lavrov said the continuing truce violations were rooted
in the failure to abide by the line of contact between the two sides. He said
Russian President Vladimir Putin had written to Poroshenko with a proposal to
use the original boundary for the withdrawal of heavy weapons.
Under the September agreement, Ukrainian and separatist
forces agreed to pull back their artillery by 30 kilometers (19 miles).
View galleryRussian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks
during …
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks during his
annual news conference in Moscow, Russia, W …
Poroshenko said a political dialogue must follow to help
stabilize the situation and called for holding local elections in eastern
Ukraine. Lavrov said Russia would welcome municipal elections there.
Ukraine is trying to cope with a resource-draining
conflict while simultaneously fending off the prospect of total economic
collapse.
International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde said
Poroshenko asked the organization to replace Ukraine's current $17 billion
bailout package with a new one.
"We will consult with the IMF executive board on the
(Ukrainian) authorities' request," Lagarde said.
_____
Isachenov reported from Moscow; Chernov reported from
Perevalsk, Ukraine; Peter Leonard in Kiev, Ukraine; John Heilprin in Davos,
Switzerland; Jim Heintz in Moscow and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to
this report.
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