Putin's top diplomat clashes with Western counterparts over Ukraine at G20 meeting - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:48 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
WorldTHE LATEST

Putin's top diplomat clashes with Western counterparts over Ukraine at G20 meeting

Ukraine urged its allies on Friday to send more weapons as its forces dug in to slow Russia's military advance through the eastern Donbas region, while a belligerent Moscow warned Western nations of consequences for their reprisals over its invasion.

Ukraine's allies at summit urge Russia to lift blockade hampering grain exports

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov arrives at the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia, on Friday. (Stefani Reynolds/Pool/AFP/Getty Images)

Ukraine urged its allies on Friday to send more weapons as its forces dug in to slow Russia's military advance through the eastern Donbas region, while a belligerent Moscow warned Western nations of consequences for their reprisals over its invasion.

Signalling that the Kremlin was in no mood for compromise, President Vladimir Putin said continued use of sanctions against Russia risked causing "catastrophic" energy price rises.

Putin's top diplomat, Sergei Lavrov, clashed with his Western counterparts at a G20 meeting, where they urged Russia to allow Kyiv to ship blockaded Ukrainian grain out to an increasingly hungry world.

Meanwhile, Moscow's envoy to London offered little prospect of a pullback from parts of Ukraine under Russian control.

Ambassador Andrei Kelin told Reuters that Russian troops would capture the rest of Donbas, in Eastern Ukraine, and were unlikely to withdraw from land across the southern coast.

Andrei Kelin, Russia's ambassador to Britain, is shown in London on Thursday. (Dylan Martinez/Reuters)

Ukraine would eventually have to strike a peace deal or "continue slipping down this hill" to ruin, he said.

On the Donbas front lines, Ukrainian officials reported Russian shelling of towns and villages ahead of an anticipated push for more territory.

A Ukrainian infantry unit on the road to the town of Siversk, whose members spoke to Reuters, had set up positions on the edge of a deep earth bunker covered with logs and sandbags and defended by machine-guns.

"Right now it's more of our artillery than theirs, so it's good," the unit deputy commander said. "But there might be incoming soon."

'Scorched earth tactics'

On Thursday, Putin had indicated that current prospects of finding a solution to the conflict were dim, saying Russia's campaign in Ukraine had barely started.

Kelin's remarks gave an insight into Russia's potential endgame a forced partition that would leave its former Soviet neighbour shorn of more than a fifth of its post-Soviet territory.

"Of course it is difficult to predict the withdrawal of our forces from the southern part of Ukraine because we have already experience that after withdrawal, provocations start," Kelin said.


An escalation of the war was possible, he added.

Ukrainian officials, echoing comments by the deputy commander of the infantry unit outside Siversk, said they needed more high-grade Western weapons to shore up the their defences.

Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of the National Security and Defence Council, said Ukraine still did not have enough Western weapons, and soldiers needed time to adapt to using them.

U.S. President Joe Biden signed a new weapons package worth up to $400 million US for Ukraine on Friday, including four additional high mobility artillery rocket systems (HIMARS) and more ammunition.

PHOTOS |Day 135 of Russia's invasion of Ukraine:

The United States started providing the key precision rocket weapon system to Ukraine last month after receiving assurances from Kyiv that it would not use them to hit targets inside Russian territory. Kyiv has attributed battlefield successes to the arrival of the HIMARS.

"When they came in, the Russian war machine could instantly feel its effect," Danilov told Reuters. But more Western military aid was vital, he added.

President Volodymyr Zelensky's chief of staff also urged the West to send more heavy weapons to counter what he called Russia's "scorched earth tactics."

WATCH |What happened in Week 20 of Russia's attack on Ukraine:

What happened in Week 20 of Russias attack on Ukraine

2 years ago
Duration 2:25
Russia declares victory in Luhansk and advances south to gain the rest of the Donbas. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky vows to regain the lost territory, and Canada becomes the first country to ratify Sweden and Finland's NATO accession protocols.

"With a sufficient number of howitzers, SPG and HIMARS, our soldiers are able to stop and drive the invaders from our land," Andriy Yermak wrote on Twitter.

Ukraine has not used HIMARS to strike Russian targets outside of Ukrainianterritory, a senior U.S. defence official said on Friday, disputing Russian accusations.

'Ukraine is not your country'

At the G20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, some of the staunchest critics of the Feb. 24 invasionconfronted Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister, who walked out of a meeting and denounced the West for "frenzied criticism."

High on the list of foreign ministers' concerns was getting grain shipments from Ukraine out through ports blocked by Russia's presence in the Black Sea and naval mines. Ukraine is a leading exporter, and aid agencies have warned that many developing countries face devastating food shortages if supplies fail to reach them.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Moscow to let Ukrainian grain out, a Western official said.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, at the G20 summit in Bali on Friday. (Stefani Reynolds/Reuters)

"He addressed Russia directly, saying: 'To our Russian colleagues: Ukraine is not your country. Its grain is not your grain. Why are you blocking the ports? You should let the grain out,'" the official said.

A U.S. State Department official later said Blinken had told the meeting thatif the G20 was to remain relevant, it must hold Russia accountable for its actions in Ukraine.

Since starting what it calls a special operation to demilitarize Ukraine, Russia has bombed cities to rubble, thousands have been killedand millions of people displaced.

Passengers are shown onboard an evacuation train in Pokrovsk, in Ukraine's Donbas region, on Friday. (Nariman El-Mofty/The Associated Press)

Ukraine and its Western allies say Russia is engaged in an unprovoked land grab.

Russian forces have seized a big chunk of territory across Ukraine's southern flank and are waging a war of attrition in the Donbas, the eastern industrial heartland made up of Luhansk and Donetsk provinces.

Luhansk's governor said Russian forces were indiscriminately shelling populated areas on Friday.

"They are not stopped even by the fact that civilians remain there, dying in houses and yards," Serhiy Gaidai said.

Reuters could not independently verify battlefield accounts.