There is, I am sure, a backstory to this. This headline from RT came out a few hours ago. I could not find any confirmation from western media, and the BBC has only just come to the party.
It is amazing how quickly RT have got this out (along with a video on YouTube), where it takes hours for confirmation from MSM.
Firstly, this was done WITHOUT THE AMERICANS.
And then there are stories from on the ground indicating that some third force may have helped to persuade the Ukrainians to come to the negotiating table.
Everything is in flux, and this is only my supposition, reading between the lines.
Ceasefire in E. Ukraine, OSCE observers at Russian checkpoints agreed at Berlin meeting
It is amazing how quickly RT have got this out (along with a video on YouTube), where it takes hours for confirmation from MSM.
Firstly, this was done WITHOUT THE AMERICANS.
And then there are stories from on the ground indicating that some third force may have helped to persuade the Ukrainians to come to the negotiating table.
Everything is in flux, and this is only my supposition, reading between the lines.
Ceasefire in E. Ukraine, OSCE observers at Russian checkpoints agreed at Berlin meeting
RT,
2
July, 2014
A
roadmap of measures that will point a way out of the Ukrainian crisis
has been agreed during four-way talks between the foreign ministers
of Germany, France, Russia and Ukraine, German FM Frank-Walter
Steinmeier said.
In
their joint statement, the ministers called for the Contact Group to
resume its work “no later than July
5 with the goal of reaching an unconditional and mutually agreed,
sustainable ceasefire.”
The
group should include representatives of both Kiev and the
self-defense forces of the People’s Republics of Donetsk and
Lugansk, Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, said.
While
Russia only has limited influence over the self-defense forces in
southeast Ukraine, Lavrov said that their representatives, including
Donetsk People's Republic leader Aleksandr Boroday, have already
“publicly stated that they
are ready to answer Russia’s and the OSCE’s calls to start
consultations on a ceasefire.”
“The
ceasefire should be monitored by the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission
in Ukraine in conformity with its mandate,”
the statement reads.
Lavrov,
said that the ceasefire was essential to prevent further casualties
among the civilian population, and to provide a chance of reaching an
agreement between the sides in the conflict.
Moscow
is ready to grant Ukraine border guards access to Russian territory
so that they can control border crossings at several checkpoints,
while the mutually agreed ceasefire is in place.
The
Russian FM insisted that the ceasefire must in no way be used as a
chance to redeploy forces by the sides involved in the Ukrainian
conflict.
"All
sides must contribute to a secure environment,"
the statement concluded, emphasizing the need to ensure the safety
and security of journalists working in the conflict zone.
Steinmeier
expressed hope that by working together the sides will be able to
stop “the escalation of the
conflict, which has taken place in recent days.”
Mission
accomplished?
Ukraine’s
foreign minister, Pavlo Klimkin, confirmed that during the Berlin
talks the parties agreed “the
establishment of a bilateral ceasefire, which will be monitored by
the OSCE.”
However,
he added that de-escalation will only happen when the Ukrainian
president’s peace plan is respected in its totality.
Klimkin
also expressed hope that “the
effectiveness of control over the border regime between the Ukraine
and Russia will be strengthened” as
a result of the Berlin agreements.
French
foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, has described the outcome of
Tuesday’s talks as “missing
accomplished.”
“Our
task is, first of all, to achieve peace and security. I think that
the agreement the four countries reached is a step in the right
direction,”
he said.
According to Fabius, the most important issues to
be addressed in Ukraine are “ceasefire;
release of hostage and border settlement."
The
meeting in Berlin took place two days after the situation in Ukraine
was discussed in a telephone conversation between Russian President
Vladimir Putin, German chancellor Angela Merkel, head of the French
state Francois Hollande and Ukraine’s new president Petro
Poroshenko.
The four heads of state have supported the
idea of urgently staging the third round of consultations between
Kiev and the self-defense forces and have briefed their foreign
ministers accordingly.
The
violence has again escalated in Ukraine after president Poroshenko
terminated the ceasefire in the south-east of the country on June
30.
Chairman of the Ukrainian National Security and
Defense Council, Andrey Lysenko, said that Kiev troops and
self-defense forces engaged in combat on 19 occasions during the last
24 hours.
Three Ukrainian soldiers were killed and 10 other injured
in those gunfights, he added.
The self-defense forces
speak of a deadly airstrike by Kiev forces, which saw five people
dead and completely destroyed a street in the village of Staraya
Kondrashovka northeast of the city of Lugansk.
“We
will completely clean out the separatists and free the east of
Ukraine. The Donetsk and Luhansk regions will again live in
peace,” Aleksandr
Turchinov, Ukraine’s parliamentary speaker, is cited by Euronews as
saying.
At least, 200 people have been killed and another
600 injured since the start of Kiev’s so called “anti-terrorist
operation” in eastern Ukraine, the country’s national security
service announced.
The
number of Ukrainian refugees in Russia has reached 110,000
people,
while 54,400 others have been internally displaced, the UN’s
refugee department stated.
Russian
Prime Minister, Dmitry Medvedev, says Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko is now personally responsible for all the victims of
Kiev’s military campaign.
“By
breaking the truce [with self-defense forces in the People’s
Republics of Donetsk and Lugansk] President Poroshenko has made a
dramatic mistake. It’ll bring new victims. And for all of them,
he’ll be personally responsible,”
Medvedev
wrote on his Facebook page.
“It
will be much more difficult to revive talks. These are the rules of a
war,” he
added.
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