Putin’s ‘peacekeepers’ in tanks roll into Ukraine separatist regions
Putin’s ‘peacekeepers’ in tanks roll into Ukraine separatist regions: Biden fears Europe will not impose crippling sanctions on Russia as former US ambassador to Ukraine says ‘this needs to happen now’
Russian tank have rolled into Makiivka, in the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic, as Putin promised to send ‘peacekeepers’ into the breakaway regionPro-Russia residents were jubilant on Monday night after Putin in a press conference officially recognized two areas of Ukraine – Donetsk and Luhansk – as independent regions Biden imposed sanctions Monday against the two breakaway regions of Eastern Ukraine as Putin made his moveThe Russian president declared the two areas ‘independent republics’ and ordered in ‘peacekeeping’ troopsIt triggered an evening of frantic diplomacy as the US and its allies tried to head off a full-blown invasion, and an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council was held on Monday night Earlier Biden spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to ‘discuss the events of the last hours’ A senior administration official later said more sanctions were expected to follow on Tuesday He also said Putin was preparing his country for war, following a clear playbook of false pretexts
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New videos show the Russian army’s so-called ‘peacekeeping’ force on the ground inside Ukraine, as the United States was trying to convince European allies to follow their lead and impose tough sanctions.
Military vehicles were seen after night fell on Monday in Makiivka, in the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), recognized hours earlier as an independent state by Vladimir Putin.
Other footage showed Russian army vehicles at other locations in the DPR and neighboring Luhansk People’s Republic (LPR), also recognized by the Kremlin.
Videos also highlighted celebratory fireworks let into the sky and the waving of Russian flags in Donetsk city following Putin’s announcement.
The celebrations came as President Joe Biden issued an executive order banning US investment or trade with the two regions, while the State Department ordered its remaining staff to leave Ukraine for the safety of Poland.
Biden was on Monday night trying to get European allies to follow him in imposing sanctions.
‘Clearly, the White House is talking to the Europeans,’ said Bill Taylor, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, on CNN – suggesting the administration is holding off on tougher sanctions on Russia for the moment in order to get European partners on board.
Britain on Monday announced that they were following the U.S. in imposing sanctions.
A senior US official earlier declined to characterize whether Putin’s order for Russian armed forces to conduct ‘peacekeeping’ there counted as an actual invasion, which would trigger much wider and more severe Western sanctions against Moscow.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the sanctions were designed to prevent Russia ‘profiting off of this blatant violation of international law.’
A tank is seen on Monday night driving through Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine
A military truck drives along a street in Donetsk after Putin ordered the deployment of Russian troops to two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine
Military vehicles are seen on the move on Monday night in Donetsk
A tank drives along a street in Donetsk on Monday night
Russian troops are seen entering Donetsk in the early hours of Tuesday morning, after Vladimir Putin said he was sending in ‘peacekeepers’
Joe Biden on Monday signed an executive order prohibiting trade and investment between U.S. businesses and citizens and two breakaway regions of eastern Ukraine
Putin gave a televised address on Monday and explained he would sign a decree recognizing the Donetsk and Luhansk rebel regions in Eastern Ukraine as independent ‘republics’
The United Nations Security Council held an emergency meeting in New York at 9pm on Monday evening – chaired by Russia, which is currently president of the Security Council.
‘President Putin is testing our international system’ and ‘seeing how far he can push us all,’ said Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N.
The flurry of diplomatic activity came after Putin signed decrees declaring the so-called DPR and LPR as sovereign states.
He justified his decision in a history-laden, grievance-ridden, pre-recorded speech that blamed NATO for the current crisis and railed against the way the West had triggered collapse of the Soviet Union.
‘I consider it necessary to take a long-overdue decision: To immediately recognize the independence and sovereignty of Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic,’ he said.
He said America was ‘pumping’ in weapons to Ukraine and said accused Kiev of creating ‘weapons of mass destruction’.
Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte said Putin’s move puts ‘Kafka & Orwell to shame’.
She added: ‘What we witnessed tonight might seem surreal for democratic world. But the way we respond will define us for the generations to come.’
A senior Biden administration official said the speech was not just about Russia’s security. It was a speech that laid out a greater plan.
‘He made clear that he views Ukraine historically as part of Russia,’ he told reporters.
‘And he made a number of false claims about Ukraine’s intention that seems designed to excuse possible military action. This was a speech to the Russian people to justify war.’
The official said more sanctions will follow on Tuesday.
Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the United Nations, is pictured on Monday night at an emergency session of the Security Council
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addresses the nation on a live TV broadcast in Kiev on Monday night
The increased level of threat led the State Department to temporarily move its remaining diplomats out of Ukraine to Poland, Bloomberg reported.
They are expected to return on Tuesday if an invasion is not launched.
Biden spent 35 minutes on a call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, promising a ‘swift and decisive’ response.
He also spoke to French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz as the allies coordinated their response.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said more measures will be taken if Russia further invades Ukraine.
‘We are continuing to closely consult with Allies and partners, including Ukraine, on next steps and on Russia’s ongoing escalation along the border with Ukraine,’ she wrote.
Putin’s recognition of the Donetsk and Luhansk rebel regions’ independence paves the way for the long-feared Russian invasion and effectively shatters the Minsk peace agreements. It also opens the door for Russia to sign treaties with the ‘states’ and openly send troops and weapons there to defend them against Ukrainian ‘threats’.
U.S. intelligence has warned for weeks that this would be the way Putin would go about trying to disguise his invasion of Ukraine.
‘We have anticipated a move like this from Russia and are ready to respond immediately,’ Psaki wrote in her Monday statement following Putin’s remarks.
In other major developments in the Ukrainian standoff on Monday…
Reports from US intelligence has suggested that Russia has a ‘kill list’ of Ukrainians to target if they invade and an attack could form two weeks of ‘terror’, with constant rocket attacks and street fighting British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Putin’s call to recognize the independence of the breakaway regions was a ‘very ill omen and a very dark sign’Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg also condemned Putin, accusing Russia of ‘trying to stage a pretext to invade Ukraine yet again’Fresh explosions were heard in Ukraine’s eastern regions with separatist leaders claiming a Ukrainian citizen was killed and that Kiev’s troops had crossed the border in armoured vehiclesRussia claimed that a Ukrainian shell hit its territory in the Rostov-on-Don region, destroying an unoccupied guard postKiev has strongly denied shelling separatist or Russian positions Pro-Russian separatists said 60,000 people have now been evacuated from rebel-held areas to Russia Air France announced it is halting all flights to and from Kiev, following similar move by Germany’s Lufthansa
Pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine celebrated on Monday evening as fireworks went off following Russian President Vladimir Putin signing a decree recognizing two Eastern Ukrainian regions as ‘independent republics’
Waving Russian flags, people celebrated the latest announcement in the streets in Donetsk, Ukraine on Monday, February 21
Putin’s recognition of the Donetsk and Luhansk rebel regions’ independence paves the way for the long-feared Russian invasion. Pro-Russian residents in Donestk celebrated independence with a fireworks show on Monday
British Prime Minister also spoke with Zelensky, promising to pursue a diplomatic solution until the last possible second.
‘The Prime Minister told President Zelensky that he believed an invasion was a real possibility in the coming hours and days,’ Johnson’s office said in a statement afterwards.
Hopes of a diplomatic breakthrough increased a day earlier when the White House said Biden had agreed in principle to a summit with Putin.
That hope all but evaporate after the Russian president’s speech.
‘Our strong sense, based on everything that we are seeing on the ground in the areas around the Ukraine to the north, to the east, to the south, is that Russia is continuing to prepare for military action that could take place in the coming hours or days,’ said the official, adding that administration could not commit to a meeting when invasion now seemed imminent.
A bipartisan group of 21 lawmakers pledged on Monday to ‘work toward whatever emergency supplemental legislation will best support our NATO allies and the people of Ukraine.’
‘No matter what happens in the coming days, we must assure that the dictator Putin and his corrupt oligarchs pay a devastating price for their decisions,’ they wrote.
Zelensky said he discussed with Biden on Monday afternoon ‘the events of the last hours’.
‘We begin the meeting of the National Security and Defense Council,’ he posted, adding: ‘A conversation with [UK Prime Minister] Boris Johnson is also planned.’
The White House confirmed that Biden did have a roughly 35-minutes call with Zelensky.
Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff General Mark Milley, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken were all spotted arriving at the White House West Wing on Monday morning.
‘President Biden is meeting with his national security team at the White House today and is being regularly briefed on developments regarding Russia and Ukraine,’ a White House official confirmed.
The site of a car explosion outside a building of the representative office of the Lugansk People’s Republic in the Joint Centre for Control and Coordination (JCCC) on ceasefire
An armed man stands beside the site of the blast after Putin declared the breakaway region of Luhansk ‘independent’
American soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division start a fire in Poland, near the Ukrainian border, after they were deployed to back up NATO allies
Artillery is seen in the foreground to American armored vehicles in a camp in Przemysl, Poland, 3.7 miles from the Ukrainian border during the standoff with Putin
Members of the 82nd Airborne Division, deployed to Poland, walks past a fleet of their vehicles in Eastern Europe
The White House announced Monday President Joe Biden will sign an Executive Order issuing economic sanctions on the two regions Russia just declared it recognizes as independent ‘republics’ in Eastern Ukraine
Servicemen attend joint exercises of the armed forces of Russia and Belarus
The White House is warning of a high scale of ‘brutality’ and ‘extreme violence’ Russians will have on Ukrainians – civilian and military – if they invade. Here U.S. troops load equipment onto vehicles in Rzeszow, Poland on Saturday, February 19
President Joe Biden deployed a few thousand troops from the 82nd and 18th Airborne Corps to assist in Eastern Europe
U.S. troops load equipment onto vehicles in Poland on Saturday
Biden also convened with his National Security Council on Sunday to discuss the latest developments in Eastern Europe as the west was still hoping for a diplomatic path forward at that point.
Putin assembled his inner circle on Monday as his top aides continue to advise him not to meet with Biden.
‘We’ve been negotiating for eight years,’ Putin said during the meeting, adding: ‘We’ve reached a dead end.’
The move fuels further tension with the West and narrows the diplomatic options available to avoid war, since it is an explicit rejection of a seven-year ceasefire mediated by France and Germany, still touted as the framework for any future negotiations on the wider crisis.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned in a statement last week that if Russia did take the very action that it did on Monday, it would ‘necessitate a swift and firm response from the United States in full coordination with our Allies and partners.’
He said it would further undermine the sovereignty of Ukraine, which was formerly a Soviet Bloc nation.
Biden met with his national security team Monday to discuss the situation, having been rebuffed earlier in the day over a summit with Putin.
France claimed to have brokered a meeting between the two leaders next week, which the White House agreed to ‘in principle’, before the Kremlin said talks were ‘premature’ and no ‘concrete’ plans had been made.
It is the second time that French President Emmanuel Macron, who has tried to position himself as Europe’s top security negotiator, has been embarrassed by Moscow – given guarantees which were revoked when he made them public.
Two weeks ago, Macron claimed Putin had agreed to stop military drills on Ukraine’s border, which Russia immediately denied.
The Kremlin said that upon hearing that Putin will sign the order to recognize the independence of eastern Ukraine’s separatist republics, Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz had ‘expressed disappointment’ over the decision in phone calls with the Russian President.
Earlier on Monday, Putin vowed to decide ‘today’ whether to recognize Ukraine’s eastern regions as independent states during remark at the close of an hours-long security council meeting that was broadcast on Russian TV.
During that meeting, the Kremlin’s top security officials were called up one by one and asked to lay out the case for war – seemingly aimed at persuading a skeptical public of the need to attack.
Having spent days staging what are widely believed to be false flag attacks on Ukrainian soil and blaming them on Kyiv, ministers presented the ‘evidence’ to Putin today claiming Russians in Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions are under threat of ‘genocide’, that no peace deal can save them and that he must intervene to save lives.
But in evidence that the entire spectacle was being staged – with the West warning a decision to invade has already been made – eagle-eyed viewers noticed that defense minister Sergei Shoigu’s watch was five hours behind Moscow time, suggesting the hearing was pre-recorded.
Ukraine’s Defense Minister Dymtro Kuleba, said following the Russian council meeting that ‘the entire world’ will watch what Putin does next and claimed ‘everyone realizes the consequences’ of Russia recognizing breakaway regions.
‘We all should calmly focus on de-escalation efforts, [there is] no other way,’ he tweeted.
The U.S. has warned the United Nation’s Security Council that Moscow has prepared a list of targets for assassination and imprisonment in detention camps.
And now NBC News is reporting that two people familiar with discussions have detailed Biden administration officials discussions with the Ukrainian government for President Volodymyr Zelensky to leave Kyiv in the event of a Russian invasion.
Two Ukrainian soldiers died on Monday and three were wounded in a shelling attack in Zaitseve, a village 18 miles north of the rebel stronghold Donetsk, Ukraine’s national police said.
Germany’s Scholz, who had a phone call with Putin Monday, warned him that recognizing the eastern regions would be a ‘one-sided’ breach of peace negotiations and that he has a ‘responsibility’ to deescalate tensions by removing troops from the border.
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Russia plans to ‘crush’ Ukraine should it decide to go forward with a full-scale invasion.
‘We believe that any military operation of the size, scope and magnitude of what we believe the Russians are planning will be extremely violent,’ Sullivan told NBC News’ Today show on Monday morning.
‘It will cost the lives of Ukrainians and Russians, civilians and military personnel alike.
‘But we also have intelligence to suggest that there will be an even greater form of brutality, because this will not simply be some conventional war between two armies,’ he continued.
‘It will be a war waged by Russia on the Ukrainian people to repress them, to crush them, to harm them. And that is what we laid out in detail for the U.N. because we believe that the world must mobilize to counter this kind of Russian aggression should those tanks roll across the border as we anticipate they very well may do in the coming hours or days.’
There are now thought to be 190,000 Russian troops on the border of Ukraine comprising around three quarters of its conventional forces backed by 500 fighter jets, 50 heavy bombers, and dozens of attack helicopters.
Sullivan told Good Morning America earlier on Monday that Moscow is moving forward with plans to invade after snubbing Biden’s offer for a summit on the caveat that Russia stands down.
‘We never give up hope on diplomacy until the missiles fly or the tanks roll,’ he said. ‘But we have been working hard for months with our allies and partners to get Russia to sit down in a serious way at the table – even as recently as yesterday, the president has indicated his readiness to do that. Russia has not shown the same willingness on their side.’
‘The likelihood that there’s a diplomatic solution, given the movements – the troop movements of the Russians, is diminishing hour by hour,’ Sullivan added.
‘Unfortunately, we have called out at every stage of this what the Russians were going to do and they’re doing it.’
Putin convened a meeting with his top security officials Monday where he called them up one by one to lay out the case for recognizing eastern Ukrainian regions as independent republics – seemingly aimed at persuading a skeptical public of the need to attack
U.S. intelligence has long warned that Russia would invade Ukraine by saying it needs to protect the interests of separatist ethnic Russians and Russian-speakers in the country. A handout image shows Russian cruiser Moskva conducting an artillery battle and destroying a mock enemy submarine in the Black Sea near Sevastopol, Crimea on February 18, 2022
Pictured: Biden convened a meeting of the National Security Council on Sunday to discuss the latest developments regarding Russia’s expected invasion of Ukraine
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