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As Border Tensions Rise, Ukraine and Russia Draw Nearer to Direct Conflict Border Tensions Rise Between Ukraine and Russia
(about 7 hours later)
KIEV, Ukraine — Accusations of cross-border hostilities between Ukraine and Russia intensified on Tuesday, deepening a shadowy war of real or imagined attacks and sabotage that threatens to draw the two countries into direct conflict. KIEV, Ukraine — Ukraine and Russia traded increasingly bitter accusations of cross-border hostilities on Tuesday, deepening a shadowy war of real attacks or orchestrated sabotage that increasingly threatens to draw the two countries into direct conflict.
On Tuesday, Ukrainian military officials said they suspected Russia of carrying out an airstrike that killed at least four civilians in the eastern Ukrainian town of Snizhne, about 12 miles from border. On Tuesday, Ukrainian military officials said they suspected Russia of carrying out an airstrike that destroyed a four-story apartment building in the eastern Ukrainian town of Snizhne, about 12 miles from border, killing at least 11 civilians. Pro-Russian separatists, in turn, said the Ukrainian military had carried out the bombing.
Pro-Russian separatist rebels, in turn, said the Ukrainian military had carried out the bombing, which destroyed a residential building. The announcement by Ukraine’s general prosecutor’s office that it was collecting evidence of a Russian role in the airstrike came a day after the government in Kiev said it believed Russia was responsible for the downing of a military transport plane in Luhansk. A day before that, the Russian Foreign Ministry warned of potentially “irreversible consequences” after one man was killed and two other people were wounded when mortar fire hit the town of Donetsk on the Russian side of the border.
The announcement by Ukraine’s general prosecutor’s office that it was collecting evidence of Russia’s role in the airstrike came a day after the government in Kiev said that Russia was responsible for the downing of a military transport plane in Luhansk. A day before that, the Russian Foreign Ministry warned of potentially “irreversible consequences” after one man was killed and two other people injured when mortar fire hit the town of Donetsk on the Russian side of the border. Officially, the Kremlin has denied arming, financing or directing the insurrection in eastern Ukraine, but its active support of the rebellion has been openly acknowledged in recent days. Separatist leaders have complained about the low quality and advanced age of the weapons provided by Russia and a lack of more proactive assistance as they have come under heavier attack by the Ukrainian military.
Anatoliy Matios, a deputy general prosecutor, said at a news conference in Kiev that the government intended to document Russia’s involvement in the bombing of the residential building in Snizhne. “It will be proven according to international standards that a neighboring state used military equipment and ammunition,” Mr. Matios said. On Tuesday, apparent new evidence of Russian military aid appeared on the roads of eastern Ukraine as convoys of tanks and smaller vehicles drove west through rebel-controlled territory toward Donetsk. Shortly after 10 a.m., a column of eight tanks, four large armored personnel carriers, and an assortment of smaller civilian cars and minivans wound its way through the small town of Vuglegirsk.
While separatists blamed the government for the airstrike, Ukrainian officials insisted that all military flights had been suspended on Monday after the downing of a military transport plane in a rocket attack. Russia on Tuesday denied that the rocket that destroyed the plane had been fired from its side of the border. Rebels reclined on the top of the tanks, as if on couches. A kiosk owner watched as they passed. “I’m just sick of it all,” said the owner, who would give only her first name, Larisa, out of concern for her safety.
With the risk of open war between Russia and Ukraine seeming to escalate by the day, the foreign ministers of Ukraine, France and Germany spoke by telephone on Tuesday morning with the chief of Russia’s presidential administration, Sergei Ivanov, and once again called for a resumption of negotiations by a so-called contact group tasked with brokering a political resolution. She saved her harshest words for Ukraine’s government. “They are killing their own people,” she said. “We won’t forgive them that.”
The talks have been stalled for more than 15 days, since before President Petro O. Poroshenko of Ukraine called off a unilateral cease-fire, and there was little sign that progress would come quickly. The foreign ministers, with Mr. Ivanvov filling in for Sergey S. Lavrov of Russia, said they were pushing to arrange a video conference in which negotiators might be able to agree on a location for a meeting. A half-hour later, a column of four tanks rolled down the same road, past a brilliant field of sunflowers. Behind were trucks and civilian cars, including a new-looking Volkswagen minivan, with a blue light on top.
As the recriminations over the cross-border attacks added new animosity to the long-simmering fight, the death toll continued to mount from the separatist insurrection in eastern Ukraine and the Ukrainian military’s effort to quash the rebellion. The continued supply of arms and equipment has riled officials in Kiev, including President Petro O. Poroshenko, who has urged the West to impose more painful economic sanctions against Russia.
At least six more Ukrainian soldiers were killed and 13 injured in overnight fighting throughout the east, Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council said at a news briefing on Tuesday. Anatoliy Matios, a deputy general prosecutor, said at a news conference in Kiev that the Ukrainian government intended to show evidence of Russia’s involvement in the bombing of the residential building in Snizhne.“It will be proven according to international standards that a neighboring state used military equipment and ammunition,” Mr. Matios said.
The self-declared separatist Luhansk People’s Republic said that 15 civilians had been killed and more than 60 injured in bombardments and other fighting throughout the region. While separatists blamed the government for the airstrike, Ukrainian officials insisted that all military flights had been suspended on Monday after the downing of the military transport plane in a rocket attack. Russia on Tuesday denied that the rocket that destroyed the plane had been fired from its side of the border.
That was not including at least four civilians killed in the airstrike in Snizhne, which destroyed a five-story apartment building shortly after 6 a.m. As the cross-border recriminations added new animosity to the fight, the death toll continued to mount from the separatist insurrection in eastern Ukraine and the Ukrainian military’s effort to quash the rebellion.
“An unknown plane bombed the town of Snizhne,” Mr. Lysenko said. “Bombs fell directly on downtown streets, on Lenin Street. There is information on dead and wounded local citizens, ruined buildings. We declare that since yesterday, when a rescue operation aimed at finding Ukrainian pilots from downed AN-26 began, planes of the armed forces of Ukraine did not make any flight.” At least six more Ukrainian soldiers were killed and 13 wounded in overnight fighting throughout the east, Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council, said at a news briefing on Tuesday.
He called the attack “a cynical and bloody provocation in order to discredit the Ukrainian military.” The self-declared separatist Luhansk People’s Republic said that 15 civilians had been killed and more than 60 wounded in bombardments and other fighting throughout the region. That did not include the 11 civilians killed in the airstrike in Snizhne.
Ukrainian officials have said that the downed cargo plane was flying at a high-enough altitude that destroying it required a more sophisticated surface-to-air missile, provided by Russia. They also said it appeared that the missile had been fired from the Russian side of the border. Mr. Lysenko called the attack in Snizhne “a cynical and bloody provocation in order to discredit the Ukrainian military.”
Russia denied that accusation on Tuesday, saying that the plane was shot down too far from the border to have involved a Russian missile, and that the United States should have provided more conclusive evidence from satellite imagery. Ukrainian officials have said that the downed cargo plane was flying at a high-enough altitude that destroying it required a sophisticated surface-to-air missile provided by Russia. They also said it appeared that the missile had been fired from the Russian side of the border.
“The place where the plane came down is known and it is far from the Russian border,” said Col. Gen. Yury Solovyov, the ex-commander of Russia’s Special Mission Command, responsible for air defenses, according to the Interfax news service. “Russia has no air defense systems with such a range along the border with Ukraine.” Russia denied that accusation on Tuesday, saying that the plane was shot down too far from the border to have involved a Russian missile.
General Solovyov added: “If the Ukrainian claims had been true, the U.S. would have produced space-based information a long time ago indicating that a Russian air defense system shot down the AN-26. Like us, they see things in real time and notice what flies where and who launches what.” A senior Western official, who declined to be identified because he was discussing intelligence reports, said that the information on the downing of the Ukrainian plane was inconclusive.
He told Interfax that the Ukrainian plane could have been hit by a Strela-10 surface-to-air missile, which rebels are known to possess.
In Vienna, where Western officials were gathered for negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program, a senior official who declined to be identified because he was discussing intelligence reports said that the information on the downing of the Ukrainian plane was inconclusive.
The official said that the initial conclusion of some government analysts was that the aircraft had probably been destroyed by a Russian surface-to-air missile and not a shoulder-fired antiaircraft system. The official also said that the missile had probably been fired from the Russian side of the border, an assertion that was impossible to verify.The official said that the initial conclusion of some government analysts was that the aircraft had probably been destroyed by a Russian surface-to-air missile and not a shoulder-fired antiaircraft system. The official also said that the missile had probably been fired from the Russian side of the border, an assertion that was impossible to verify.
Western officials have generally been quick to support the Ukrainian version of events, and have repeatedly chastised the Kremlin for not doing enough to stop the flow of weapons and fighters across the border into eastern Ukraine. Western officials have generally been quick to support the Ukrainian version of events, and have repeatedly chastised the Kremlin for not doing enough to stop the flow of weapons and fighters across the border.
Part of the Western strategy seems to be to build a case for additional economic sanctions against Russia, but so far the United States and its European allies have failed to move beyond threats to imposing penalties that would target broad sectors of the Russian economy. On Monday, the White House summoned European Union ambassadors to push for restrictions on the Russian financial sector and to show them intelligence documenting Russian support for separatists, Bloomberg News reported. European Union leaders are scheduled to meet Wednesday to consider action.
While Russia’s support for the separatists is undeniable, senior Russian officials, including President Vladimir V. Putin, have been calling loudly for a peaceful settlement and insisting that there is no basis for additional sanctions. Western business interests particularly in Europe, which would be more heavily affected than the United States have lobbied heavily against additional sanctions, fearing lost revenues. If European allies do not go along, American officials said Mr. Obama might decide to go ahead with sanctions on his own, an approach he has tried to avoid for fear of allowing Russia to drive a wedge between the United States and Europe.