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Russian and Crimean parliaments sign treaty of accession | Russian and Crimean parliaments sign treaty of accession |
(35 minutes later) | |
MOSCOW —Russia effectively absorbed Crimea on Tuesday afternoon, moments after President Vladimir Putin declared that Russia has no designs on any other parts of Ukraine. | |
In a speech to a joint session of parliament, which he used to call for the “reunification” of Crimea with Russia, he said the region has a special role in Russian history that makes it unique. | |
Ecstatic members of the Russian parliament watched while Putin and Crimean leaders signed a treaty of accession as soon as Putin was done speaking, and the Kremlin said afterward it considers the treaty to be in force even before parliament has ratified it. | |
Sevastopol, the city where Russia’s Black Sea fleet is based, also entered the Russian Federation, as a separate entity. | Sevastopol, the city where Russia’s Black Sea fleet is based, also entered the Russian Federation, as a separate entity. |
Even while declaring that Moscow will not seek to expand its holdings in Ukraine, Putin also promised that Russia will do what it must to protect the rights of Russians living abroad -- which suggests that he intends to play a role in restive eastern Ukraine, with its large ethnic Russian population. | |
[Photos: This is what happened in Ukraine before its independence.] | |
He said Moscow will always protect the rights of Russians using “political, diplomatic and legal means.” | He said Moscow will always protect the rights of Russians using “political, diplomatic and legal means.” |
But he stressed: “Don’t believe those who say Russia will take other regions after Crimea. We don’t need that.” | But he stressed: “Don’t believe those who say Russia will take other regions after Crimea. We don’t need that.” |
The speech touched off dancing and jubilant cheers in downtown Sevastopol, even as the United States continued diplomatic consultations it says are aimed at reversing Russia’s takeover of Crimea from Ukraine. | The speech touched off dancing and jubilant cheers in downtown Sevastopol, even as the United States continued diplomatic consultations it says are aimed at reversing Russia’s takeover of Crimea from Ukraine. |
There were moves to diplomatically isolate Russia: President Obama has called a meeting of major nations next week and pointedly left Moscow off the invitation list so the group could discuss Ukraine. Preparations for a high-profile summit in Russia have also been suspended. | |
Vice President Biden landed Tuesday morning in Warsaw, where he will confer with Polish and Estonian leaders about the situation. In the evening, he intends to fly to Lithuania for similar meetings. | |
One senior Obama administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the vice president’s plans, said his trip is “first and foremost to reassure our allies that we are deeply concerned about Russia’s action in Ukraine and what the deeper implications might be.” | |
The adviser said Biden will discuss measures that would be taken “in the days and weeks ahead,” building on financial sanctions imposed on 11 Russian and Ukrainian officials that President Obama announced Monday but that appeared to have little effect on Putin’s calculations. | The adviser said Biden will discuss measures that would be taken “in the days and weeks ahead,” building on financial sanctions imposed on 11 Russian and Ukrainian officials that President Obama announced Monday but that appeared to have little effect on Putin’s calculations. |
In Kiev, Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk gave a nationally televised address Tuesday in which — pointedly using the Russian language — he seemed to recognize the limits of the situation. He pledged that Ukraine would not join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and sought to reassure ethnic Russians and the government in Moscow. | |
But his government also said it “will never recognize” Crimea’s new status, the Interfax news agency reported, citing a statement from the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry. | |
Russia’s swift annexation of Crimea, however, suggests that the Kremlin wants to put the Crimean crisis quickly beyond the point where the results could be turned back. Relations between Moscow and the West are now arguably at their lowest point since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. Even the 1999 NATO intervention in Kosovo did not produce a level of hostility between the two sides such as now exists. | |
Putin mentioned Kosovo several times in a 50-minute speech that was a catalogue of Russian complaints about the West over the past 20 years. He touched on the downfall of the Soviet Union, Kosovo, NATO expansion, missile defense, Libya, Iraq and Syria. He mentioned Soviet support for the reunification of Germany in 1990. | |
“I hope Germans will support the aspirations of Russians to restore Russia,” he said. | |
“Our Western partners have crossed a line,” Putin said. “They’ve been unprofessional.” | |
He said the challenge presented to Russia by the Ukrainian crisis could not be ducked. | |
“We have to admit one thing — Russia is an active participant in international affairs,” he said. “At these critical times, we see the maturity of nations, the strength of nations.” | |
Putin traced Russian roots in Crimea to the baptism there of Vladimir, who converted the Russian people to Christianity just over 1,000 years ago. He mentioned that the bones of Soviet soldiers who fought the Germans in World War II are buried all across the peninsula. | Putin traced Russian roots in Crimea to the baptism there of Vladimir, who converted the Russian people to Christianity just over 1,000 years ago. He mentioned that the bones of Soviet soldiers who fought the Germans in World War II are buried all across the peninsula. |
“All these places are sacred to us,” he said. After noting that Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev assigned Crimea to Ukraine in 1954, he argued that Russia by rights should have gotten it back in 1991 when the Soviet Union dissolved. | “All these places are sacred to us,” he said. After noting that Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev assigned Crimea to Ukraine in 1954, he argued that Russia by rights should have gotten it back in 1991 when the Soviet Union dissolved. |
“Russia was not just robbed — it was robbed in broad daylight,” he said. | |
In his historical remarks, he also touched on Russians’ roots in Ukraine, in a way that many Ukrainians may not have found to be reassuring. “We sympathize with the people of Ukraine,” he said. “We’re one nation. Kiev is the mother of all Russian cities.” | |
He described Kiev as a city today where a legitimate protest was overtaken by those plotting a coup, backed by “Western sponsors,” and where government ministers cannot act without first getting permission “from the gunmen on the Maidan” — a reference to Independence Square, the cradle of the protest movement. | |
“We have no one to negotiate with,” he said. | |
Putin insisted that Russia was acting within international law. He dwelled at some length on Kosovo, which broke free of Serbia in 1999, after NATO intervention, and ultimately declared independence, with international recognition, in 2008. | |
He said that precedent gives Western countries no standing to complain about Crimea. | He said that precedent gives Western countries no standing to complain about Crimea. |
“You can’t call something black one day, and the same thing white the next,” he said. | “You can’t call something black one day, and the same thing white the next,” he said. |
He complained that leaders in the West, led by Americans, “believe they’ve been entrusted by God to decide the fate of other people.” | He complained that leaders in the West, led by Americans, “believe they’ve been entrusted by God to decide the fate of other people.” |
His address, devoted to proving that Russia cannot be pushed around, was met with a standing ovation — which is much less common here than in the U.S. Congress. | |
In Sevastopol, several thousand people flocked to a central square to watch Putin speak on a giant TV screen. They applauded loudly several times as he spoke — when he said it would have been a betrayal to deny the Crimeans when they asked Russian troops to come protect them. | |
After Putin finished speaking and the treaty was signed, the crowd started dancing in the square and singing the Russian national anthem. | |
“We did it. We did it. We truly did it,” exclaimed Svetlana Kalinina, 53, as tears rolled down her cheeks from behind her sunglasses. | “We did it. We did it. We truly did it,” exclaimed Svetlana Kalinina, 53, as tears rolled down her cheeks from behind her sunglasses. |
Another woman who said her first name was Natasha kept repeating, “Thank you, Putin.” | |
“I have waited so long for this,” she said, “We were given away, like a sack of potatoes. And finally we are coming back home.” | “I have waited so long for this,” she said, “We were given away, like a sack of potatoes. And finally we are coming back home.” |
Anthony Faiola in Kiev, Scott Wilson in Warsaw and Carol Morello in Sevastopol contributed to this report. |