Selective
support: US set to punish Russia for Ukraine elections, referendums
results
The
United States and EU have denounced the referendums planned by
anti-coup protesters in Eastern Ukraine as illegal, at the same time
demanding that the country-wide presidential elections take place
despite the military operation in the East.
2 + 2 = 5
5
May, 2014
Should
presidential elections in Ukraine fail to take place on May 25, the
US and EU are ready to blame Russia, slapping new ‘powerful’
economic sanctions on Moscow, US Secretary of State John Kerry hinted
on Tuesday.
“There's
no question about our ability, when we want to, to be able to put
sanctions in place that are even more biting than what we have
today,” Kerry
said in a joint news conference with EU foreign policy chief
Catherine Ashton.
Washington
officials were sending a message that any recognition of the
scheduled referendums in the east of Ukraine by Russia will have dire
economic consequences, at the same time accusing Moscow of trying to
disrupt the presidential elections.
“What
we're doing this week,” Assistant
Secretary of State Victoria Nuland told a Senate Foreign Relations
Committee hearing, “…is
trying to develop this strong sectoral package on both sides of the
Atlantic so that the Russians can see it, understand it, and
understand its impact if they take further action to prevent these
elections from happening.”
In
imposing new sanctions the US administration will have to coordinate
its actions with the European Union, Nuland added. “Keeping
the cats herded is a challenge for the Europeans,” she
said.
Russians
are “doing
everything they can” to
disrupt Ukraine's elections. “It
seems to me there needs to be a consequence for that up front so that
that disruption doesn't continue to take place,” Senator
Robert Menendez, the panel's chairman said at the hearing.
Currently
over 20 Republican senators co-sponsored a bill seeking to impose
tougher sanctions on Russia, in particular on major banks and energy
companies.
At
the same time – as Kiev continues what
it calls an ‘anti-terrorist operation’ against protesters in the
East – the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Ukraine,
Evelyn Farkas, announced the US is sending $18 million of
‘non-lethal’ military aid to Ukraine, adding that Kiev has asked
for more assistance.
A Ukrainian flag flies on a armored
military vehicle at a checkpoint near the eastern Ukrainian city of
Slavyansk .(AFP Photo / Sergey Bobok )
“Elections
and referendums must be free, fair, and take place in an environment
that excludes violence, and be held under objective and impartial
international monitoring," Russia’s
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said. "Depending
on how all these criteria are met, we will determine our attitude
toward events."
For
Kiev to de-escalate the conflict, it must cancel the order deploying
the army and National Guard against the population of southeast
Ukraine, he said.
Following
the Crimean referendum on self-determination in March, US President
Barack Obama has ordered that sanctions be applied against a number
of Russian officials.
At
the time, the White House stated that "the actions and policies"
of the Russian government with respect to Ukraine "undermine
democratic processes and institutions in Ukraine" and "threaten
its peace, security, stability, sovereignty, and territorial
integrity."
Obama’s
executive order applies to several top Russian officials, including
presidential aide Vladislav Surkov, presidential adviser Sergey
Glazyev, State Duma deputy Leonid Slutsky, head of the upper chamber
of the Russian parliament Valentina Matvienko and Deputy Prime
Minister Dmitry Rogozin.
The
latest round of Russia sanctions, announced April 28, show that the
Obama administration is willing to target the energy sector. “Russia
is already feeling the impact of our measures,” Daniel
Glaser, the US Treasury assistant secretary for terrorist financing,
told the Congress hearing.
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