US will respond to Russian aggression, warns Anthony Blinken

America will respond to ‘reckless or aggressive’ Russian acts, Anthony Blinken warns as he arrives in Kiev after Putin sent thousands of troops to Ukraine border

  • The Secretary of State’s comments came ahead of a visit to Ukraine on Thursday 
  • He said the emphasis is on Russia for a more ‘stable and predictable relationship’
  • Blinken has been in the UK for a two-day meeting of G7 foreign ministers
  • President Biden has made it clear he will take a tougher stance against Putin 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken has warned that the United States will respond to reckless or aggressive acts by Russia.

His comments came ahead of a meeting with Ukraine’s leadership on Thursday in a visible show of support following a massive troop buildup by Russia.

Speaking during a visit to the UK for a G7 meeting of foreign dignitaries, Blinken spoke about President Joe Biden’s approach to foreign policy, putting the emphasis on Russia for a more ‘stable and predictable relationship’.

‘If Russia acts recklessly or aggressively, as it did with the Solar Winds cyber intrusion, as it did with interference in our elections, as it did with what it’s done to Mr Navalny, then we will respond,’ he told the BBC on Wednesday. 

‘But at the same time, we would prefer a more stable and predictable relationship, and if Russia chooses that path there are areas we can cooperate in our mutual interest. But it’s really focused on Russia’s actions.’ 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken has warned that the United States will respond to reckless or aggressive acts by Russia. Pictured: Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, right, and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, greet each other by touching elbows to curb the spread of COVID-19 ahead of their meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, May 6, 2021

A statement issued from the two-day G7 talks criticised Moscow for its ‘irresponsible and destabilising behaviour’, particularly in regard to its actions against Ukraine, and for its cyber attacks. 

The SolarWinds breach – massive Russian hacking campaign – targeted at least nine vital US federal agencies, including the Treasury, Justice, Energy and Homeland Security departments. The scale of the hack is still being determined. 

In February, Biden made it clear to President Vladimir Putin ‘that the days of the United States rolling over in the face of Russia’s aggressive actions… are over,’ after his predecessor Trump was seen at times to avoid criticising his Russian counterpart.

Blinken’s one-day visit is the first to Kiev by a senior US official under President Joe Biden, who has vowed a firmer line on Russia but is also preparing for a summit with his counterpart Vladimir Putin.

He arrived late on Thursday from London where he joined other foreign ministers from the Group of Seven wealthy democracies in condemning Russia’s ‘irresponsible and destabilising behaviour’ in Ukraine and elsewhere.

The G7 renewed its call ‘for Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity within its internationally recognised borders including its territorial waters.’

‘It is critical that Moscow now fully withdraws its forces and takes the necessary steps to help alleviate tensions,’ a G7 statement said.

Speaking during a visit to the UK for a G7 meeting of foreign dignitaries, Blinken spoke about President Joe Biden’s approach to foreign policy, putting the emphasis on Russia for a more ‘stable and predictable relationship’

Russia last month amassed 100,000 troops on Ukraine’s borders, the biggest mobilisation since Moscow seized the majority-Russian peninsula of Crimea in 2014 and war broke out in eastern Ukraine.

Clashes in eastern Ukraine between the government and pro-Russian separatists have been intensifying since January, a bloody new phase in Europe’s only ongoing military conflict which has claimed more than 13,000 lives.

Russia quickly announced a pullback after the latest buildup, leading some experts to believe Putin was testing the will of Biden while seeking to intensify pressure on Ukraine.

Blinken will meet with President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has renewed calls to speed up Ukraine’s entry into the NATO alliance in the face of fears about Russia.

Western European nations, mindful of Russia’s response, have opposed Ukraine’s accession and the idea has met a cool response in Washington.

The United States has, however, earmarked $408 million in security aid for Ukraine this fiscal year.

Blinken will also join Metropolitan Yepifaniy — head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which has split from Russian domination — in laying flowers at a memorial to soldiers killed in the eastern Donbas region

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken disembarks at Boryspil International airport outside Kiev, Ukraine, at the start of a one-day trip on Thursday, May 6

With Biden in the White House, Ukraine will likely enjoy a more sympathetic ear than with his predecessor Donald Trump who was notoriously fixated on conspiracy theories about the country.

Trump held up aid to Ukraine to press Zelensky to dig up dirt on Biden, leading to the former president’s first impeachment.

The scandal returned to the headlines just before Blinken’s trip as US investigators raided the home of Trump’s former lawyer, New York’s ex-mayor Rudy Giuliani, who had aggressively pressed unfounded allegations of impropriety in Ukraine by Biden’s son Hunter.

Blinken is sure to seek to turn the page on Trump’s scandals but the Biden administration has also pressed Ukraine on good governance — long a major concern for Western partners.

Ahead of Blinken’s trip, the State Department criticised Ukraine for removing the head of state energy company Naftogaz, saying the shake-up showed ‘disregard for fair and transparent corporate governance practices’.

Andriy Kobolev had reduced Ukraine’s dependence on Russian gas deliveries and introduced reforms that improved the company’s public image.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky visits army outposts in the Kherson region, on the administrative border with Russia-annexed Crimea, on April 27, 2021

The US must show Kiev that Kobolev’s dismissal has consequences, the independent Ukrainian news website Yevropeiska Pravda said in an editorial this week.

It said his removal negated ‘one of the few successful reforms’ carried out in Ukraine and would put to rest hopes in Kiev that Biden might visit the country later this year.

Kostyantyn Yeliseev, a former ambassador to the EU who founded the New Solutions enter think tank, said that Blinken could lay the foundations for a visit by Zelensky to the White House, where he was shunned under Trump.

Blinken’s visit is ‘a very good signal of support for Ukraine’, Yeliseev said.

Source: Read Full Article