Deutsche Welle, 19 May 2014
The office
of Russian President Vladimir Putin says he has ordered military forces
involved in drills near Ukraine to return to their bases. However, NATO has
said there is no indication so far that they have moved.
Putin's
office said on Monday that he had ordered military forces near the Ukraine
border to return to their permanent bases, a statement from the Kremlin said.
The Kremlin
said "due to the end of planned spring exercises," troops that had
been deployed in the Rostov, Belgorod and Bryansk regions have been ordered to
return to barracks.
It remained
unclear if the order will mean there are any fewer soldiers in total deployed
near the border between Russia and Ukraine.
In the
statement, the president's office also called for an "immediate end"
to the military operation by Ukrainian troops in the east of the country,
urging that they be withdrawn.
Ukrainian
authorities launched an offensive earlier this month in the eastern regions to
quell a pro-Russian uprising in which government buildings were seized.
Western
governments have previously voiced concern about some 40,000 troops deployed
near the frontier, calling for them to be pulled back. Putin was said to have
voiced support for round table talks held in Ukraine under a Swiss-brokered
peace plan.
'No clear
signs'
In response
to the Monday statement, NATO said there was no evidence that troops in the
relevant regions were yet on the move.
Earlier
this month, Putin claimed the troops had been withdrawn, but both the US and
NATO responded swiftly, claiming there was no indication that they had done so.
Russian
news agencies on Monday quoted Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as saying that
Russia needed to reevaluate its ties with both the EU and NATO.
"These
relations require a substantial rethink, and together with our partners from
the EU and NATO nations we are trying to conduct an analysis in order to better
understand where we are, where our assessments coincide and where we
disagree," the state-run agency RIA quoted Lavrov as saying.
Ahead of
his trip to Shanghai this week, Putin said Russia sees relations with China as
a top priority, with relations currently the best ever.
"In
the context of the turbulent global economy, the strengthening of mutually
beneficial trade and economic ties, as well as the increase of investment flows
between Russia and China, are of paramount importance," Putin said.
The
toppling of Ukraine's pro-Russian government followed months of protest that
began after Ukraine's former President Viktor Yanukovych backed out of a deal
to sign an association treaty with the EU. It led to a referendum in Crimea and
subsequent votes in the pro-Russian east of the country that favored closer
ties to Moscow than to Brussels.
rc/jm (AP, Reuters)
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