Biden-Putin call is inconclusive as Ukraine tensions deepen

Bloomberg

US President Joe Biden tried to send Vladimir Putin an ultimatum about the consequences of any invasion of Ukraine in an hour-long conversation that left both sides at an impasse and Russia’s intentions unclear.
Biden warned his counterpart in Moscow that Russia would face “severe costs.” For his part, the Russian leader accused the US of failing to provide him with security assurances he needs to back down.
The Kremlin characterised the talks as businesslike and balanced. Briefings by both sides afterward stuck to familiar talking points, providing few clues on where things go from here.
Biden told Putin during the conversation — their first direct exchange since late December — that the US remains ready to find a diplomatic solution to the tensions over Russia’s military buildup near the Ukrainian border. The US has ratcheted up its rhetoric, asking Americans to leave Ukraine while making clear it won’t send in troops.
US officials continue to say they do not know Putin’s final intentions. Still, a senior administration official, speaking after the call, said there was a distinct possibility that Russia may proceed with military action and there had been no fundamental change in that view.
The talks took place in an atmosphere of “unprecedented hysteria by American officials about Russia’s allegedly imminent invasion of Ukraine,” Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov told reporters. Putin told Biden that US responses to his demands for
security guarantees don’t address the Kremlin’s key concerns about preventing further Nato expansion, Ushakov said.
The White House and the Kremlin said Putin and Biden agreed their officials would stay in contact in the coming days. The Pentagon denied Russia’s claim that a US submarine was intercepted in Russian waters near the Kuril Islands. “There is no truth to the Russian claims of our operations
in their territorial waters,” Navy Captain Kyle Raines, a spokesman for the US Indo-Pacific command, said by email.
The US and UK say Russia has massed about 130,000 troops close to Ukraine, raising fears of a potential three-pronged assault including from Crimea and via Belarus in the north.
Nato has moved to reinforce defenses in eastern European member states. Russian officials accuse the West of undermining the country’s security by drawing Ukraine closer to Nato and say troop movements on Russian territory are an internal matter.
Putin spoke separately with the leaders of France and Belarus prior to his call with Biden. Russia and Belarus on Feb. 10 started their largest joint military drills in Belarus for years, including near the Ukrainian border, while six Russian landing craft have been moved to the Black Sea for naval exercises that began.
The land exercises are due to end on February 20. Both countries have said the drills are purely defensive and that forces will return to base once they are finished. Ukraine has also begun military exercises in parallel.
Potential actions by Russia could include causing a provocation in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region, where Ukrainian forces have been fighting for years against separatists backed by Moscow, or attacking the country’s capital, Kyiv, Western officials familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified speaking about such a sensitive topic. They stressed that Putin’s final intentions were not known.
The US has also been working with European countries on a package of potential sanctions to be imposed on Russia in the event of an attack on Ukraine. There have been some differences though on how hard to hit Russia and in what areas, especially for European nations like Germany highly dependent on Russian gas.
US “hysteria has reached a peak” over Ukraine and the Kremlin believes American officials are spreading false information in the media about Russia’s intentions, Ushakov said.
Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron discussed what the Kremlin in a statement called “provocative speculations” that Russia plans an invasion of Ukraine.
The Kremlin also said that “prerequisites are being created for possible aggressive actions of the Ukrainian security forces” in Donbas. Ukraine has repeatedly denied it intends to seek to regain control of Donbas militarily.
Putin told Macron he had no offensive intention, an official from France’s Elysee told reporters after their call. “We have no sign that he will go on the offensive.

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