2014-03-04

03.17 Samantha Power, the US ambassador to the UN, has said

on Twitter that “Russia must directly dialogue with Ukraine,

immediately pull back forces, and allow international monitors”.

02.55 The supposed 5am (3amGMT) deadline for surrender is looming – and

according to Ukrainian TV 22 Ukrainian units in Crimea are still guarding

their bases and there have been no reports of action by Russian troops.

02.39 During the two-hour National Security Council meeting, Barack

Obama discussed with his advisers what steps the United States and its

allies could take to “further isolate” Russia over its military

intervention in Ukraine, a White House official has said.

The group discussed ways to “reinforce that the Russians still have an

opportunity to take immediate steps to de-escalate the situation or they

face further political and economic repercussions from the international

community,” the official said about the meeting.

“The president will continue to receive regular updates on the situation,

and to remain in close contact with his foreign counterparts,” the

official said.

02.34 The BBC reports that former Russian tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky,

who spent a decade in prison in Russia, has offered to travel to

Ukraine to try to help resolve the escalating conflict.

02.20 There is an interesting piece in the New Yorker suggesting Angela

Merkel is the person to watch in coming days
and could hold the key to convincing Vladimir Putin to order his

soldiers back to their barracks.

02.00 Here is an image

from the meeting between Barack Obama and the National Security Council

earlier. Body language speaks volumes.

01.54 Liam Halligan argues in the Telegraph that sanctions

won’t worry Vladimir Putin:

Economic sanctions will be extremely difficult to impose on Russia and are,

for all their symbolism, likely to be counterproductive. For one thing, as

is clear to anyone who knows Russia’s commercial landscape, many large and

powerful Western companies have invested heavily in this vast, resource-rich

country and won’t want their interests harmed.

01.36 Reuters is reporting that the decision to suspend military

cooperation is significant:

The US military does not take such steps lightly and took no such action,

for example, last year during turmoil in Egypt that saw the army topple the

country’s first freely elected leader.

Military-to-military contacts help bridge gaps between nations and reduce

chances of misunderstandings, officials often say.

01.17 The United States has also put trade and investment talks with

Russia on hold.

“We have suspended upcoming bilateral trade and investment engagement

with the government of Russia that were part of a move toward deeper

commercial and trade ties,” a spokesman for the Office of the US Trade

Representative said.

01.04 Here is more information on the Pentagon announcement, which

includes the suspension of military exercises and port visits:

“We call on Russia to de-escalate the crisis in Ukraine and for Russian

forces in Crimea to return to their bases, as required under the agreements

governing the Russia Black Sea Fleet,” Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral

John Kirby said.

“Some media outlets are speculating on possible ship movements in the

region. There has been no change to our military posture in Europe or the

Mediterranean; our Navy units continue to conduct routine, previously

planned operations and exercises with allies and partners in the region.”

00.51 The Pentagon has announced that it is putting “on hold all

military-to-military engagements between the United States and Russia… in

light of recent events in Ukraine”.

00.37 US senator John MCain has been speaking to Newsnight and had a

warning for Europe over Ukraine.

00.25 The Huffington Post reports that most Americans want the

administration to stay out of the Ukraine crisis.

00.11 Patrick Reevell reports from the Ukrainian garrison at Balbek,

where relatives

of the soldiers inside have arrived
in the hope that they can prevent an overnight attack from Russian

troops.

23.50 Mr Obama’s national security adviser Susan Rice, Treasury

Secretary Jack Lew and General Martin Dempsey are also at the meeting, which

comes as Mr Kerry is preparing to fly to Kiev.

23.35 As the crisis continues, Barack Obama is reportedly holding a

meeting at the White House with senior military and national security

advisers, including Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel and John Kerry, the secretary

of state, to discuss the situation in Ukraine.

23.15 Reuters reports that US MPs are preparing legislation to provide

support to Ukraine and consulting with the Obama administration on possible

sanctions against individual Russians, and Ukrainians cooperating with them,

the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman has said.

“Russia’s military intervention in Ukraine constitutes a clear violation

of international law and demands a swift and coordinated response from the

international community to support the Ukraine and counter Russian efforts

to annex Ukrainian territory by force,” Senator Robert Menendez, a New

Jersey Democrat, said in a statement.

The Senate panel is developing a legislative package, supported by both

Democrats and Republicans, to authorize funds to provide at least $1 billion

in loan guarantees to provide structural support to Ukraine’s economy, Mr

Menendez said.

22.58 Pro-Russian authorities in Crimea have confirmed they will cut

off water and electricity to Ukrainian soldiers in bases surrounded by

Russian forces.

Sergei Markov, a former Russian MP who held meetings with pro-Russian

authorities on the Ukrainian peninsula earlier on in the day, has told

reporters the soldiers would also be told they would not receive their next

pay packet if they did not publicly renounce their loyalty to the new

provisional government in Kiev.

“If they stay here and remain loyal to Kiev and the Ukrainian government,

it will become more uncomfortable for them,” said Mr Markov, who sits

in a Kremlin-backed public policy chamber. “The pressure is going to

increase tonight.”

Ukraine Ambassador to the United Nations Yuriy Sergeyev during a Security

Council meeting at the United Nations in New York (AFP/Getty Images)

22.47 The UN Security Council meeting has adjourned. Before it did, the

US said observers from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in

Europe (OSCE) will deploy in Crimea tonight, and called upon Russia to “ensure

that their access is not impeded”.

22.41 US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power, speaking at the ongoing

Security Council meeting, has condemned what she called the “dangerous

military intervention in Ukraine”. Here is a link to her

full speech.

22.28 Responding to Mr Sergeyev’s statement, Russian ambassador to the

UN Vitaly Churkin said Moscow is permitted to deploy up to 25,000 soldiers

in Crimea according to a bilateral treaty. He said the Russian troops were

guarding Russian objects in Crimea and preventing “radical actions”.

22.10 Ukraine’s envoy to the UN, Yuriy Sergeyev, has also said that

Russia has deployed around 16,000 troops to Crimea since 24 February.

Addressing Russia he said: “You call it a coup, in the democratic world

we call it a revolution of dignity,” referring to the unrest in Ukraine

that led to President Viktor Yanukovych being forced from power.

21.25 Russian ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin said that Ukraine’s

ousted leader Viktor Yanukovich sent a letter to Russian President Vladimir

Putin requesting that he use the Russian military to restore law and order

in Ukraine.

“Under the influence of Western countries, there are open acts of terror

and violence,” Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin quoted the letter from

Yanukovich to Putin in an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council.

“People are being persecuted for language and political reasons,” he

quoted the letter as saying. “So in this regard I would call on the

President of Russia, Mr Putin, asking him to use the armed forces of the

Russian Federation to establish legitimacy, peace, law and order, stability

and defending the people of Ukraine.”

21.13 Broadcast from our correspondent Roland Oliphant who is was today

with the Cossaks in Chongar, where Russian-occupied Crimea meets Ukraine

proper.

21.03 Russian ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin: Russia’s goal in

Crimea is to defend human rights, especially those of ethnic Russians. He

claims Ukraine is on the brink of civil war and reportedly that civilians

have been killed. There have been no reports of this.

He also cited bill – which Ukraine has now vetoed – that would strip the

Russian language as a secondary language in Ukraine.

(Getty Images)

20.53 Interim Ukrainian Defence Minister Ihor Tenyukh: 16,000 Russian

troops are in Ukraine, as quoted by the Interfax-Ukraine news agency. The

agency quotes Mr Tenyukh as telling the Inter TV channel that about 5,500

Russian special-purpose troops had been relocated to Ukraine.

20.36 Interesting

CNN article by Aaron David Miller on how Ukraine could affect US policy

on Russia’s Middle Eastern allies: Syria and to a lesser extent, Iran.



Now Putin appears to be standing up to the international community and ready

to use force to protect Russia’s interests in Ukraine. He’s clearly not

prepared to do that for Syria. But victories for Russia, particularly in the

face of the West’s empty rhetoric and red lines, can only reinforce

al-Assad’s conviction that he’s betting on the right ally.

20.20 Strong language from Obama at the White House today just before

he goes into a meeting with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin

Netanyahu.



“What we are also indicating to the Russians is if in fact they continue

on the current trajectory they’re on, then we are examining a whole series

of steps — economic, diplomatic— that will isolate Russia and will have a

negative impact on Russia’s economy and status in the world. We’ve already

suspended preparations for the G-8 summit, and we would expect there would

be further follow-up on that. We’re looking at a whole range of issues that

John Kerry mentioned yesterday.”

20.17 The International Paralympic Committee has said it is not

expecting a boycott by athletes. “All the countries are happy to come

here,” said IPC spokesman Craig Spence.

The events in Ukraine are rather overshadowing the build up to the Paralympic

Games, due to open in Russia’s Sochi on Friday. Russia’s Interfax news

agency reports that Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev is “upbeat”

about the Games.

20.08 Andrey Vadimovich Makarevich, founder of the Russia’s oldest

active rock band Mashina Vremeni (Time Machine), has released a statement on

YouTube.

I’m very concerned about what is happening in Ukraine. But I’m much more

concerned about what’s happening on that account in my own country.

I cannot rid myself of the feeling that our authorities perceive the

country and its people as nothing more than things for them to control.

However, if a ruler does not listen to its people, and at the same time

uses force against it, the people will overthrow him. What happened in

Ukraine is typical of a revolution, and for all my lack of love of

revolutions, I cannot say that this was unjust.

20.05 ….and a thought for how Ukraine crisis might affect the US’

other foreign policy nightmare – Syria, an ally to Russia

Ex Obama WH official Steve Simon telling @ToThePoint_KCRW doesn’t think #Russian invasion of Ukraine will impact US #Syria policy.

— Laura Rozen (@lrozen) March 3, 2014

19.46 Obama has said that Russia is “on the wrong side if history”

on Ukraine and that its actions violate international law.

(AFP)

19.41 A secret briefing document held by an individual walking into

Downing Street has been photographed. It suggests the UK will oppose trade

sanctions against Russia following the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

Freelance photographer Steve Back of Political Pictures snapped the document.

The document also suggests that the UK will not try and restrict Russian trade

through the City of London.

It does, however, suggest that Britain may place visa restrictions on some

Russians.

19.35 Fantastic photo of what is reportedly a Ukrainian commander

telling the Russians he is staying.

Commander of #Ukraine military base surrounded by Russians announces his troops won’t leave. pic.twitter.com/FsDxrjsyEp

— Paul Waldie (@pwaldieGLOBE) March 3, 2014

19.26 NATO will hold fresh emergency talks on the Ukraine crisis

Tuesday, after Poland requested consultations with its allies on the threat

it poses under Article 4 of the alliance’s founding treaty.

The 28 member states ambassadors will meet because “developments in and

around Ukraine are seen to constitute a threat to neighboring Allied

countries and having direct and serious implications for the security and

stability of the Euro-Atlantic area,” NATO head Anders Fogh Rasmussen

said.

19.24 A section of a dispatch by our correspondent Roland Oliphant with

the Cossaks in Chongar, where Russian-occupied Crimea meets Ukraine proper.

On the northern side of the causeway, a small tent city marks the defacto

frontier of what is becoming the autonomous republic of Crimea.

Chicanes built of tires and wooden pallets block the road, while the flags

of Russia, the Russian navy, and the Kuban Cossack host flutter over the

frontier post, where cars and articulated lorries queue up to be allowed

into Ukraine proper.

“We’re here to prevent provocations,” said a man who identified himself as

Igor Zlobin, the commander of the detachment of Kuban Cossacks who man this

checkpoint.

“There is no one here but Cossacks. We’re here because our brothers are

here,” he said.

Mr Zlobin did not explain by what right his men had set up this checkpoint,

to whose authority they answered, or how he came by the Kalashnikov assault

rifle that dangled over his camouflaged paunch like a compass needle on a

pivot.

18.48 The Obama administration has said that any Russian threat to

Ukraine’s navy would be a “dangerous escalation” of an extremely

tense situation and it would hold Moscow directly accountable for such an

escalation.

The reaction comes hot on the heels of a reported statement earlier today from

a Ukrainian military spokesman, who apparently said that Russia had issued

an ultimatum to the crews of two Ukrainian warships in Crimea, demanding

that they immediately surrender or be stormed and seized.

18.43 Here is a video of pro Russian protesters storming government

buildings in Donetsk. The protesters smashed windows and climbed over gates

to occupy government buildings in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine.

18.31 The EU has condemned the Russian “act of aggression”

against Ukraine and threatened sanctions unless Russia takes “de-escalating

steps” and returns its troops to their barracks ahead of an emergency

summit of European leaders in Brussels on Thursday. EU foreign ministers

have held

the door of diplomacy open to Moscow but given Russia an ultimatum to back

off with the threat of “future targeted measures”

The ministers fall short of calling the seizure of Crimea an “invasion”

and Baroness Ashton, the EU foreign minister, made it clear that a return to

barracks for Russian forces is what is meant by a “de-escalation”.

18.04 According to Reuters the US has said it would hold Russia

directly responsible if it has threatened the use of force against the

Ukrainian military. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said:

“These reports today of threats of force against Ukrainian military

installations would, if true, in our view constitute a dangerous escalation

of the situation for which we would hold Russia directly responsible.”

17.58 BREAKING Our man in Brussels Bruno Waterfield says that the EU

has threatened sanctions against Russia:

The EU has condemned the Russian “act of aggression” against

Ukraine and threatened sanctions unless Russia take “de-escalating steps”

and returns troops to barracks ahead of an emergency summit of European

leaders in Brussels on Thursday.

EU foreign ministers have held the door of diplomacy open to Moscow but

given Russia an ultimatum to back off with the threat of “future

targeted measures”.

17.52 Russian troops pictured with armoured personel carriers and

mechanical diggers at Chongar, the North East entry point to Crimea:

(David Rose for The Telegraph)

17.49 According to Reuters US Vice President Joe Biden warned Russian

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev during a phone call of “increasing

political and economic isolation” if Russia does not pull back its

forces from Ukraine.

“The vice president made clear that if the situation in Ukraine is not

resolved, Russia will face increasing political and economic isolation,”

a White House official said.

17.45 Ukrainian seamen are pictured standing guard on the Ukrainian

navy ship Slavutich at Sevastopol harbor, as Russia deny they issued an

ultimatum to Ukraine:

(Andrew Lubimov/AP)

17.37 Joe Conlan, a trader from energy consultancy firm Inenco,

explains why gas prices could be threatened by the Ukraine crisis:

“While the UK does not directly import gas from Russia, we receive it

through secondary imports, such as Russian exports of gas to Germany, and we

import via pipelines from Belgium and Holland.

“If the conflict persists, then sanctions are likely to be placed on

Russia. These sanctions could include sanctions on gas exports, which would

place considerable strain on the UK, France and Germany.”

17.32 Some more information from Raf Sanchez on the US’s decision to

cancel its presidential delegation to Sochi:

The US has cancelled its presidential delegation to the Paralympics in

Sochi in protest at Russia’s intervention in Crimea. While American athletes

will still take part, the six-person delegation, led by Tammy Duckworth, a

Congresswoman who lost both legs in Iraq, will no longer attend.

“In addition to other measures we are taking in response to the

situation in Ukraine, the United States will no longer send a Presidential

Delegation to the upcoming Winter Paralympic Games in Sochi,” said Caitlin

Hayden, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council.

17.28 According to Reuters, the European Union will consider “targeted

measures” against Russia if tensions do not start easing in Ukraine’s

Crimea region.

France’s foreign minister, Laurent Fabius said that the EU wanted to see a

de-escalation – meaning a return of Russian troops to their bases in Crimea

– between now and Thursday.

“If there is not in the coming hours a very quick de-escalation, then

we will decide concrete measures such as the suspension of all talks on

visas, suspension of economic agreements and concretely that means that ties

will be cut on lot of subjects,”

“There could be targeted measures and that can also affect people,

officials and their assets,”

“We are extremely worried. The general tone is that the Russians

appear to have decided to go even further. Europe must be firm.”

When asked whether the EU could put sanctions on Russian individuals,

including Putin, Fabius said there was a precedent last week when the EU

agreed to sanction former Ukranian President Viktor Yanukovich and officials

close to him.

“Similar decisions could be taken,”

17.25 Unidentified soldiers are pictured blocking the Ukrainian naval

base in the village of Novoozerne, near Simferopol

(Ivan Sekretarev/AP)

17.15 BREAKING: Our man in Moscow Howard Amos says that the

Russian government has denied reports of an ultimatum issued to the Ukraine:

The Russian Defense Ministry has dismissed claims that an ultimatum to

surrender has been issued to Ukrainian armed forces in Crimea.

A Defense Ministry spokesperson described the reports of an ultimatum as

“complete nonsense,” according to Russian business daily Vedomosti.

17.09 According to Reuters, the White House has said it will no longer

send a presidential delegation to the Paralympic Games in Sochi in protest

at the situation in Ukraine.

16.56 Ukrainian soldiers pictured standing behind a fence while

unidentified armed men block the headquarters of the Ukrainian Navy in

Sebastopol

(VIKTOR DRACHEV/AFP/Getty Images)

16.52 Russian news channel RT is

reporting that 400 kilos of explosives and arms have been seized from

Kiev activists on the Crimean border.

TNT was confiscated as well as grenades, rifles and guns

16.49 Bruno Waterfield has some more information about the EU foreign

ministers who are still debating how to approach Russia:

EU foreign ministers are debating whether to explicitly warn Russia that

unless it pulls back then sanctions will follow.

The square brackets indicate where the debate lies – with splits over how

strong the EU’s language should be.

“[In the absence of de-escalating steps by Russia] The EU has decided to

suspend bilateral talks with the Russian authorities on visa matters, as

well as on the New Agreement,[ including modernisation and sectorial

cooperation dialogue.],” the draft EU text says.

“In the absence of an agreed solution, the EU will [consider]

[begin

preparations] for future targeted measures], [including an arms embargo].”

16.45 Here is some more from our man Damien McElroy about that Russian

ultimatum to Ukraine:

The head of the media-centre for the Ministry of Defence in Crimea,

Vladyslav Seleanyov, confirmed the ultimatum to BBC

Ukraine.

He said: “I spoke to the officers of the Ukrainian fleet. Vice-admiral

of Russian fleet Alexander Vitko gave them the ultimatum. He demands either

to surrender all the weapons or to take Russian side in the conflict.

Otherwise they are threatening to attack”

16.40 According to Reuters the speaker of Russia’s lower parliament

house said earlier today that “for now, there is no need” to send

the Russian armed forces into Ukraine.

On Saturday Vladimir Putin secured the parliament’s permission to use the

military in Ukraine if he wishes, citing the need to protect Russians.

State Duma speaker Sergei Naryshkin told the state-run Rossiya-24 television

in an interview:

“The decision … only gives the right (to use the armed forces),

which can be exercised in case of necessity; for now there is no need.“

16.35 The U.N. Security Council has scheduled an open meeting on the

crisis in Ukraine next Monday. It will be the third meeting of the Security

Council since last Friday, but the first open meeting that is not confined

to the 15 council members.

16.30 BREAKING: Snap from AP appears to confirm Russian ultimatum:

Ukraine: Russians issue ultimatum for surrender of 2

Ukrainian warships in Crimea.

16.24 Here is another picture of Putin with Defence Minister Sergei

Shoigu, left, and head of the Russian army’s main department of combat

preparation Ivan Buvaltsev watching military exercises.

Before now Putin hadn’t been seen since Russian troops entered Crimea.

(Kremlin/RIA Novosti/Reuters)

16.14 The Evening

Standard is reporting that the price of bread could soar because of the

Ukraine crisis.

16.12 Here is an interesting fact found on Twitter:

16.06 Vladimir Putin has been attending the final day of military

exercises. He watched armoured tanks and vehicles at the Kirillovsky

training ground outside Vyborg, a town on Russia’s border with Finland.

He smiled as he walked towards the command centre where he watched tanks,

barely visible in thick fog, and listened to artillery fire.

It is the first sighting of Putin in several days.

16.02 According to Reuters Russia has said that NATO’s criticism of its

actions in Crimea region will not help stabilise the situation in Ukraine:

“We believe that such a position will not help stabilise the situation

in Ukraine and only encourages those forces that would like to use the

current events to achieve their irresponsible political goals,” the

Russian foreign ministry said.

15.55 CBS journalist Erin Lyall

has seen officers’ wives at a Ukrainian base making a human shield to

prevent a Russian invasion:

15.52: The Reuters report on the Russian ultimatum appears to have

originated from Interfax Ukraine – it is NOT confirmed as yet.

15.29 Some more information from Bruno Waterfield on the earlier

meeting with EU foreign ministers which resulted in a draft text being drawn

up:

The draft EU text, seen by the Telegraph, warns Russia that its use of

armed forces in Crimea are in “clear breach” “of the UN Charter and the OSCE

Helsinki Final Act, as well as of Russia’s specific commitments to respect

Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity under the Budapest

Memorandum of 1994 and the bilateral Treaty on Friendship, Cooperation and

Partnership of 1997.”

“The EU calls on Russia to immediately withdraw its armed forces to the

areas of their permanent stationing, in accordance with the Agreement on the

Status and Conditions of the Black Sea Fleet stationing on the territory of

Ukraine of 1997.”

15.25: More on that ultimatum: This from Reuters:

Russia’s Black Sea Fleet has told Ukrainian forces in Crimea to surrender

by 5 a.m. (0300 GMT) on Tuesday or face a military assault, Interfax news

agency quoted a source in the Ukrainian Defence Ministry as saying.

The ultimatum, Interfax said, was issued by Alexander Vitko, the fleet’s

commander.

The ministry did not immediately confirm the report and there was no

immediate comment by the Black Sea Fleet, which has a base in Crimea, where

Russian forces are in control.

“If they do not surrender before 5 a.m. tomorrow, a real assault will

be started against units and divisions of the armed forces across Crimea,”

the agency quoted the ministry source as saying.

15.20 BREAKING: Russian news agency Interfax says Ukraine faces 3am GMT

deadline for the navy in Crimea to surrender or face “a real assault”

15.14 This photo from Donetsk shows riot police standing in line in

front of pro-Russian protesters, who are trying to occupy the regional

administration building.

(EPA)

15.03 AFP is reporting the strong response from Russia to warnings by

United States Secretary of State John Kerry over military intervention in

Ukraine.

Mr Kerry, who is set to visit Kiev on Tuesday to meet the new leadership,

warned Russia on Sunday that it risked exclusion from the Group of Eight

nations and faced possible sanctions for sending troops into Ukraine’s

southern Crimea region.

In a statement on its website Russia’s foreign ministry said:

“We consider the threats against Russia made in a series of public

statements by US Secretary of State John Kerry over the latest events in

Ukraine and in Crimea to be unacceptable,”

Moscow accused Kerry of relying on “Cold War cliches“, saying

that he had not bothered to understand the complex processes taking place in

Ukrainian society.

Kerry failed to “objectively assess the situation that is continuing

to deteriorate after the forcible seizure of power in Kiev by radical

extremists,” the ministry said.

It accused the United States and its allies of turning a blind eye to the “rampant

Russophobia and anti-Semitism” of the opposition protesters who

took power in Kiev.

“The West’s allies now are outright neo-Nazis who wreck Orthodox

churches and synagogues,” the ministry said.

15.00 Mr Lavrov also called on Ukraine to revert to the agreement

signed by Viktor Yanukovich on February 21 which aimed to end the political

crisis.

Lavrov said Yanukovych respected the agreement, but the opposition “did

nothing.”

“The illegal arms have not been relinquished, the government buildings

and streets of Kiev have not been completely freed, radicals maintain

control of cities.

“Instead of a promised national unity government a ‘government of the

victors’ has been created.”

14.45 A little bit more from Russia’s Foreign Secretary Sergei Lavrov

who has justified Russian troops entering Crimea as a necessary protection

for Russian citizens living there. He told the U.N. Human Rights Council in

Geneva:

“We are talking here about protection of our citizens and compatriots,

about protection of the most fundamental of the human rights – the right to

live, and nothing more”

“Those who are trying to interpret the situation as a sort of

aggression and threatening us with sanctions and boycotts, these are the

same partners who have been consistently and vigorously encouraging the

political powers close to them to declare ultimatums and renounce dialogue,”

“We call upon them to show a responsibility and to set aside

geopolitical calculations and put the interests of the Ukrainian people

above all.”

14.37 Reuters has some powerful eyewitness information from Donetsk

where pro-Russian demonstrators occupied the first floor of the regional

government building.

A Reuters reporter in a press centre on the fourth floor of the building said

the protesters had seized the first floor but were unable to go higher

because lifts were disabled and stairwell doors shut.

The 11-storey building has been flying the Russian flag, rather than the

Ukrainian flag, for three days, with demonstrators carrying Russian flags

staging rallies outside.

A Reuters photographer said several hundred protesters, waving Russian flags

and shouting “Putin, come!”, had managed to enter the regional

government building through a side door after confronting police who guarded

the main entrance. Windows were broken on the second floor as protesters

tried to get to higher floors.

The Donetsk protest leader, Pavel Gubarev, demanded the parliament in Kiev be

declared illegitimate, a pro-Russian governor be accepted in Donetsk and all

security forces be put under regional command.

The Donetsk regional authorities have already voted to hold a referendum on

the status of the region, which Kiev has branded illegal.

14.30 Christiane Amanpour has the first interview with former Ukraine

prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko which will air tonight on CNN

14.17 Our correspondant in Brussels Bruno Waterfield has more

from the EU discussions on Ukraine:

EU foreign ministers are discussing whether to call Russia’s seizure of

Crimea an “invasion” or a “clear violation of sovereignty and territorial

integrity” of Ukraine.

The decision will have a major bearing on how the EU approaches its biggest

foreign policy challenge since the Balkans war of the early 1990s.

EU foreign ministers will warn Russia that unless it pulls back then

sanctions will follow.

14.11 Here

is the full story on German chancellor Angela Merkel’s comments that

Vladimir Putin has ‘lost touch with reality’.

German newspaper Bild wrote that she had complained to Barack Obama that Mr

Putin was “living in another world”.

14.07 We have put together a

gallery of photos from the conflict so far

14.05 Some powerful images coming through from Lithuania where

demonstrators have gathered outside the Russian Embassy in Vilnius to

protest against Russian intervention in Ukraine

Demonstrators gather outside the Russian Embassy in Vilnius (AP)

13.57 Here is some more information from our man Damien in Kiev on

Hague:

The Foreign Secretary reported that the Ukrainian officials he had met

believed that Russia had opened a new front in its aggressive moves to

unsettle Ukraine’s new administration with helicopter incursions on Monday

on the northern border with Belarus. He said:

“They are concerned on an hour-by-hour, minute-by-minute basis with

the situation in Crimea and about other provocations – reports for example

today of Russian helicopters flying over the border, along the border, of

Ukraine and Belarus.

“They are deeply unhappy about what amounts to the loss of control

over Crimea and they are finding the lack of direct communications with

Russia to be a huge problem.”

13.50 Keir Giles, an asociate fellow at Chatham House, said that Russia

will take “whatever it can” from the situation.

“Russia learned from the armed conflict in Georgia in 2008 that use of

military force against neighbours can swiftly achieve foreign policy

objectives at little long-term strategic cost.

“In Crimea in 2014, Russia has once again solved a problem in a way

which most of the West found unimaginable in advance and unpalatable after

the fact. But the rest of the world has little leverage to deter or punish

Moscow.

“The West can scold Russia and cancel summits, but Moscow has at no

time considered words of outrage to be a response which needs to be taken

into consideration.”

13.45 Meanwhile life goes on in the village of Perevalnoye despite the

surreal standoff between Russian and Ukrainian forces.

A woman and child go about their daily business in the village of

Perevalnoye (Reuters)

13.40 Our man in Kiev, Damien, says that Hague has given his backing to

the establishment of a monitoring force to investigate allegations that

revolutionary forces are attacking the Russian population. Hague said:

“Yes there is a good case for international monitoring of the

situation given that allegations have been made by Russia about what’s

happening in Ukraine,” he said. “I think this is very important

for the world to be able to see the facts. Of course the OSCE are taking

this up.”

Reports from eastern Ukraine had so far failed to bear out the Russian

claims. He said: “I haven’t had any credible reports of domestic

agitation of this kind.”

Mr Hague warned that the crisis remained far from any turning point, saying

Moscow was yet to signal its readiness to pursue a diplomatic outcome either

with the new Ukraine leadership or Western states. “There has be no

signal from Moscow nor any sign of a change in policy. There are no grounds

for optimism for a change in the Russian position.”

13.20 Lord Ashdown has called the situation, “a

mistake away from conflict’

13.16 Here is some video footage of William Hague speaking at the press

conference this morning alongside Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk

13.09 This just in from Damien McElroy on those demonstrators in

Donetsk:

Reports coming through that shots had been fired when at least 100

demonstrators waving Russian flags stormed into a government building in

Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, and occupied at least one floor of the building.

Itar-Tass news agency says there are no police on the scene. The 11-storey

building has been flying the Russian flag, rather than the Ukrainian flag,

for three days. No reports of any injuries.

13.03 More from Bruno Waterfield in Brussels on what the EU could do:

This is what we’re expecting out of the meeting of EU foreign ministers as

the talks begin.

The focus will be on condemnation of Russia and keeping the door of

diplomacy open. EU will back OSCE or UN led mediation between Ukraine and

Russia. There will be an implied threat of costs and measures if Russia does

not cooperate.

EU is expected to agree the broad detail of asset freeze sanctions aimed at

the old Ukrainian regime on the basis of helping the new Kiev government

recover money siphoned out of the country.

This will be on the basis of a list provided by Ukraine and could include

Yanukovych, his son, up to 20 senior officials.

12.57 European Union foreign ministers are currently working on the

joint response to Russia’s military incursion in Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula

that could include economic sanctions.

AP says the 28 foreign ministers are currently holding an emergency meeting.

Irish Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore said sanctions against Russia are an “option”

that will be discussed. Several other ministers, however, cautioned the

focus for now should be on diplomacy and forging a direct dialogue between

Russia and the new leadership in Ukraine to deescalate the situation.

Spain’s foreign minister, Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo, said discussions are

also underway on convening an emergency summit of EU leaders Thursday.

12.50 AP has words from Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov who is

justifying the use of Russian troops in Crimea.

“This is a question of defending our citizens and compatriots,

ensuring human rights, especially the right to life,” Lavrov said.

“Those who are trying to interpret the situation as a sort of

aggression and threatening sanctions and boycotts, these are the same

partners of ours who have consistently encouraged their political forces in

the ultimatum to refuse dialogue and ultimately have polarized Ukrainian

society. We call upon them to show a responsibility and to set aside

geopolitical calculations and put the interests of the Ukrainian people

above all.”

12.45 Reports now that Moscow stock markets have plunged up to 13.5%.

That’s a big hit and if you want to know more about the financial effects of

this crisis we are running a parallel live blog here

with our colleagues in the City department giving expert analysis.

12.38 This video can’t be independently verified, but according to

Buzzfeed, pro-Kremlin accounts on Twitter say it shows anti-Kiev protestors

breaking into the Donetsk government building:

12.29 More from Ban Ki-Moon who has called on Russia to avoid action.

Ahead of his meeting with Sergei Lavrov he said:

“It is critical to ensure full respect for and the preservation of

Ukraine’s independence, unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity,”

“It is now of the utmost importance to restore calm and to de-escalate

tensions immediately through dialogue,” he said, urging Russia to “start

to engage constructively and through peaceful means with Ukraine”.

11.59 More information is filtering through from the press conference

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk held earlier alongside William

Hague, when he admitted that at the moment there was no discussion of

military intervention.

“Any attempt of Russia to grab Crimea will have no success at all. Give

us some time,” Mr Yatsenyuk said.

“For today, no military options (are) on the table,” he said, adding

that what they urgently need is an economic and political support.

“Real support. Tangible support. And we do believe that our Western

partners will provide this support,” he said.

11.55 Ban Ki-Moon, the UN Secretary General, has said that he will meet

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov today and will take the opportunity

to ask him to refrain from any acts of rhetoric that will further escalate

the situation on the ground.

He added that it was important that the situation is resolved and calm is

restored through dialogue.

11.50 More on the troops flowing into Crimea.

AFP adds: Over the last 24 hours, 10 Russian combat helicopters and eight

military cargo planes have landed on the Black Sea peninsula, Ukraine border

guards said in a statement, while four Russian warships have been in the

port of Sevastopol since Saturday.

11.43 Bruno Waterfield has sent us an update from Brussels. He reports:

Germany has signalled support for OSCE “fact finding” mission to

Crimea as alternative to “escalation” as EU foreign

ministers meet in Brussels.

“We are considering whether it wouldn’t make good sense to create

transparency about what is happening on the ground in eastern Ukraine and

Crimea instead of being dependent on rumours,” said Frank-Walter

Steinmeier, the German foreign ministers, on arrival in Brussels.

Berlin has come together with Washington on the idea of the OSCE role,

which is amlost certain to become a key part of the EU’s response but

Germany is still keen to take a more conciliatory role than the US on

sanctions.

Mr Steinmeier is stressing the need for diplomacy in a stark contrast to

Kiev, where the the Russian seizure of Crimea has been described as a

declaration of war.

“Crisis diplomacy is not a weakness but it will be more important than

ever to not fall into the abyss of military escalation,” he said.

A clergyman walks by as military personnel (R), believed to be Russian

servicemen, stand guard as Ukrainian servicemen are seen behind the gate

outside Simferopol (Reuters)

11.40 The German Government seems to be warning against military action

in an attempt to bring the increasingly volatile situation back form the

brink.

A spokesman for Angela Merkel has told reporters that it is not too late to

resolve the crisis by political means, while Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the

foreign minister, has said that the situation must be resolved through

diplomacy and leaders must not fall into the abyss of military escalation.

11.33 As the tensions between Russia and the West continue to rise, the

Washington Post has taken a look back at the New

York Times op-ed Vladimir Putin wrote a year ago when he was facing

the possibility of American military intervention in Syria.

His claims that decisions on war and peace “should happen only be consensus”

are now “jarring”, the paper points out.

11.30 Dramatic AFP news agency alert just coming in:

Russian troops flowing into Crimea: Ukraine border guards

11.26 Former British foreign secretary Malcolm Rifkind states what many

are now saying on Twitter

11.20 William Hague has been speaking in Kiev, and has warned Russia of “consequences

and costs” after pro-Kremlin forces appeared to have taken control of

Ukraine’s Black Sea peninsula of Crimea.

“It is not an acceptable way to behave and there will be consequences and

costs,” he said two days after Russian President Vladimir Putin got the

green light to send Russian troops to Ukraine from parliament.

11.15 Outside the city of Kharkov lies a Soviet-era tank graveyard,

crammed with row upon row of rusted relics as a reminder of the areas

military past. To see fascinating pictures of the graveyard have a look at

our gallery.

A man walks past flowers placed at a memorial for people killed in

clashes with the police at Kiev’s Independence Square (AP)

11.02 Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk has fought back against

the bloodless invasion of Crimea, saying that his country will never give up

on the Black Sea peninsula despite the fact that most believe it is now

completely under Russian control.

Yatseniuk has told reporters: “No one will give up Crimea to anyone.”

A map showing countries to which Russia has sent troops since the fall of the Soviet Union #infographic pic.twitter.com/q8cZ8scyI3

— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) March 3, 2014

10.55 Russia has announced that it is investigating the leader of a

Ukrainian far-right group that clashed with riot police at Kiev protests for

allegedly inciting acts of “terror” in Russia.

The powerful Investigative Committee said in a statement that it was seeking

the arrest of the leader of the shadowy Right Sector paramilitary group,

Dmytro Yarosh.

“In the opinion of investigators… Dmytro Yarosh publicly calls for

anti-Russian forces to commit extremist acts and terror in Russia,” the

Investigative Committee said.

Investigators will shortly ask a court to arrest Yarosh in absentia and then

put him on the international wanted list, it added.

If convicted of making calls to commit terrorist acts, Yarosh could face up to

seven years in prison.

The country’s communications watchdog has also blocked access to 13 Ukrainian

nationalist communities on the country’s most popular social networking

site, VKontakte, over “direct calls to carry out terrorist activity and

take part in unsanctioned mass rallies including in Moscow.”

Yarosh’s page was among those blocked, news agencies reported.

10.50 Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has ordered the building of a 4.5

kilometre bridge connecting Russia with Crimea across the Straits of

Kerch, according to Russian news agencies. A new company will be created to

realize the long-discussed project, which is estimated will cost

about $3 billion and take about 5 years to build.

An armed man stands near a Ukrainian military base in Simferopol (Reuters)

10.45 Vladimir Putin has been compared to Adolf Hitler by a former

Czech foreign minister who says he is repeating history by acting in Crimea

much like the Nazi leader did in central and eastern Europe in the late

1930s.

“What’s happening in Ukraine is history repeating itself,” Karel

Schwarzenberg said in an interview with Austrian daily Osterreich.

“Putin is acting along the same principle as Adolf Hitler” did

during his invasions of Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland in 1938 and 1939,

he said.

“Since he wanted to invade Crimea, he needed a pretext and said that his

compatriots were oppressed,” the 76-year-old Schwarzenberg said, adding

that Russians in Crimea, where they are a majority, were not facing any

discrimination”

“When Hitler wanted to annex Austria, he said that Germans there were

oppressed,” he said.

Europe should “clearly tell him that this is a violation of law that will

not pass,” said Schwarzenberg, who served as Czech foreign minister

from 2007-2009 and 2010-2013.

10.41 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said that his

country’s action in Ukraine is a matter of defending Russian citizens and

human rights. He has claimed that ‘radicals’ control some Ukraine towns.

10.30 From the Crimea, our Moscow correspondent Roland

Oliphant has sent this dispatch:

I’m on the road, trying to get a sense of the Russian take over. So far

there is a mixed picture of resistance and surrender. the standoff at the

border guards base in Perevalnoye is on going.

“They told is to lay down our arms so they can protect them from i do

t know who. but we wont give them up,” said a Ukrainian major at the

gate. His men are surrounded, however, and by the looks of things heavily

out gunned.

Elsewhere, armed Russian troops are inside the perimeter of the military

airfield at Dzhonkoi in northern Crimea. The Ukrainian commander tells me

about 15 armed Russians forced there way in on saturday, disabled the

control tower and parked vehicles on the runway to prevent it being used. “We

did not receive an order to break out our weapons, so we didn’t resist,”

said Lt-Col Nikolai Gavrish.

The Russians left the base shortly after the daily telegraph arrived. But

troops are also on patrol outside the local telecom company headquarters in

the town on Dzhonkoi.

Over all, the view from Crimea is that the ‘war’ is over – Russian forces

are in complete military control of the peninsula, and with NATO making no

move to back them up, the Ukrainians know that a firefight could only end

one way. Crimea now is effectively Russian territory.

Ukrainian recruits receive instructions from a commander in a recruitment

self defense quarter at Kiev’s Independence Square (AP)

10.25 And here is some more from Bruno in Brussels:

Compared to the strong position taken by the US there are different

geopolitical interests at play in Europe, especially for Germany.

Many in Berlin see the US is seen as too shrill, with Washington’s position

born of distance from Russia and Ukraine while Germany has to deal with a

situation close to its borders.

There are also economic links between Germany and Russia particularly in

terms of vital Russian gas imports for German industry.

So Germany is much more pragmatic and conciliatory with a focus on keeping

Russia at the diplomatic table.

During the EU talks it will be important to see how Poland, and Lithuania

line up with the US or Germany as both countries feel directly threatened by

Russia’s actions in Crimea.

10.10 This just in from out man in Brussels, Bruno

Waterfield.

Ambassadors are holding fast-moving talks this morning.

Diplomats tell me that the EU is unlikely to back the US position on

sanctions or to talk of kicking Russia out of the G8 at this stage.

There will be “only a general discussion of sanctions at this point” with

EU support for bi-lateral G8 measures, the suspension of the Sochi

summit preparations, said officials.

The EU could back an OSCE monitoring role, this was seen as working well in

Georgia after the 2008 conflict and it is a demand that could bridge

the gap between the US and Germany.

The EU focus will be on condemnation, a call for Russian withdrawal to its

legally authorised Crimean bases and urging a peaceful solution under

the auspices of international law.

Ukraine’s acting President Turchinov meets with William Hague in Kiev

this morning (Reuters)

09.58 The tension in the Ukraine has hit the markets, with global

stocks taking a tumble and the price of gold and oil rising as people opt

for safe investments. The FTSE opened down 1.5pc this morning, while

Russia’s shares have dropped. For

all the latest developments follow our business news and markets live blog.

09.53 Our full report on William Hague’s comments on the crisis

can be found here. He has started a series of meetings in Kiev as

global diplomatic pressure ratchets up on Russia.

0947: Putin has lost touch with reality…

Ouch – damaging line here in
that New York Times article.

Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany told Mr.Obama by telephone on Sunday

that after speaking with Mr. Putin she was not sure he was in touch with

reality, people briefed on the call said. “In another world,” she said.

A woman wearing a Ukrainian flag stands at a memorial for people killed

in clashes with the police at Kiev’s Independence Square (AP)

09.40 A Ukrainian border guard has told Reuters that Russian ships have

this morning been moving in and around the Crimean port city of Sevastopol,

where the Russian Black Sea Fleet has a base, and that forces had blocked

mobile telephone services in some parts of Crimea.

He said the build-up of Russian armour was near a ferry port on the Russian

side of what is known as the Kerch Strait, which separates the eastern edge

of the Crimea peninsula and the western edge of the Taman Peninsula.

The strait is 2.8 miles (4.5 km) wide at its narrowest point and up to 18

metres (59 feet) deep.

“There are armoured vehicles on the other side of the strait. We can’t

predict whether or not they will put any vehicles on the ferry,” the

spokesman said by telephone.

The border guard spokesman did not say how many armoured vehicles had gathered

in Russian territory, opposite the city of Kerch on the Ukrainian side of

the strait.

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