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Home News Russia regime change West’s real aim in Ukraine row: Lavrov

Russia regime change West’s real aim in Ukraine row: Lavrov

Published on 22/11/2014

Russia on Saturday accused the West of seeking regime change in Moscow, raising tensions over the Ukraine conflict in the worst crisis in relations since the end of the Cold War.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke out against Western sanctions on Russia after US Vice President Joe Biden hinted Friday at possible further measures over Moscow’s “unacceptable” role in the former Soviet republic.

Kiev’s defence minister charged Saturday that there were 7,500 Russian troops in eastern Ukraine, although Russia denies claims that it provides military support to pro-Moscow separatists battling government forces.

“The West is showing unambiguously that they do not want to force (Russia) to change policy. They want to achieve a change of regime,” Lavrov said in Moscow.

“Now public figures in Western countries are saying that it’s necessary to introduce sanctions that would destroy the economy and rouse public protests,” he added in comments cited by the state-run TASS news agency.

The United States and European Union have imposed several rounds of sanctions on Moscow over Ukraine, targeting the key energy, defence and finance sectors. As a result, the ruble has lost just under a third of its value against the euro since the start of the year.

On a visit to Kiev Friday, Biden accused Russia of failing to honour a peace agreement signed in September, which included a now tattered ceasefire for eastern Ukraine.

“So long as that continues, Russia will face rising costs, greater isolation,” Biden added.

Some 4,300 people have been killed in the conflict in seven months, according to the United Nations, including 298 who died when Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down in July.

Nearly 1,000 people have died since the ceasefire came into effect.

– NATO membership ‘science fiction’ –

Lavrov’s comments came after Ukraine’s Defence Minister Stepan Poltorak claimed Russia had thousands of troops in the east and vowed to boost Kiev’s military capacity.

“Unfortunately, the stabilisation of the situation in the east of Ukraine does not depend only on us,” Poltorak said. “The presence of 7,500 representatives of Russian armed forces in Ukraine destabilises the situation and prevents us from stabilising it.”

Cash-strapped Ukraine also plans to “increase the strength of the armed forces” and boost levels of arms and equipment, he added, pledging that this would take place “in the nearest time” but not giving a specific timeframe.

The minister’s comments came after Ukraine’s new coalition declared that joining NATO was a priority, stipulating that a law be passed by the end of the year confirming the intention to push for membership.

The five-party coalition, agreed on Friday after October elections, features the groupings of President Petro Poroshenko, Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and former premier Yulia Tymoshenko.

But experts play down Ukraine’s chances of joining NATO anytime soon.

“The idea of the alliance accepting a country in armed conflict with Russia is science fiction,” said Vasyl Filipchuk, a former senior Ukrainian official who is chairman of the International Centre for Policy Studies in Kiev.

NATO, a military alliance of 28 nations including the United States, this week warned of a “very serious build-up” of Russian troops, artillery and air defence systems inside Ukraine and on the Russian side of the border.

In the latest batch of US assistance to Ukraine, three radars designed to detect incoming mortar fire were delivered Friday following Biden’s visit, with a total of 20 arriving in the next few weeks.

The United States has so far ruled out providing weapons and ammunition to Ukraine, approving only “non-lethal” assistance such as radars, night vision goggles and body armour.

– More unrest in east –

Ukraine’s head of security operations in the east said that 20 units of Russian “military hardware” had crossed the border Saturday, adding that they were en route to the rebel stronghold of Lugansk.

In the past 24 hours, four Ukrainian soldiers and one civilian have been killed in eastern Ukraine, officials said.

Ukraine’s military on Friday accused Russia of shelling its territory for the first time since the ceasefire was signed.

Also on Friday, Kiev marked a year since the start of protests on the city’s Independence Square which led to the ousting of the previous pro-Moscow regime, Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the conflict in the east.

On Saturday, Ukraine marks the 10th anniversary of the Orange Revolution, as an earlier round of pro-democracy protests were known, and holds a day of mourning for millions of victims of the Soviet-era famine in the 1930s.

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