The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Biden offers Ukraine ‘strong support’ over struggle with Russia

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WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden gave “strong” backing Thursday to Ukraine in its struggle with Russia and urged a diplomatic solution to the conflict in eastern Europe, while promising US help if Moscow attacks.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky issued a statement thanking Biden for his “strong support” in a phone call lasting about an hour and a half.

And the White House said Biden “reaffirmed the United States’ unwavering commitment to Ukraine’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.”

Biden also placed a separate call to the leaders of Nato members Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Slovakia, which are all in eastern Europe and deeply concerned by Russian military threats to Ukraine.

They “discussed Russia’s destabilis­ing military buildup along Ukraine’s border and the need for a united, ready, and resolute Nato stance for the collective defence of allies,” the White House said.

Biden had already spent two hours talking to President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, warning him that if Russian troops now massed next to Ukraine launch a major attack, Moscow would then face US economic sanctions “like none he’s ever seen.”

But the White House stressed that Biden, in his calls on Thursday, was also pushing for reinvigora­ted diplomacy, including the stalled peace talks between Ukraine and Russia.

“Within the next couple days, we’re obviously going to continue talking with our European partners, we’re going to continue talking with our Russian partners and finding a way forward,” a senior administra­tion official told reporters.

Western and Ukrainian officials say they fear Russia which already seized Ukraine’s entire Crimea region in 2014 and also backed a separatist rebellion in the east - is preparing an even larger scale invasion. Russia says it has deployed troops, estimated to number about 100,000, on the border only out of fear that the former Soviet republic is becoming an outpost of the Nato alliance.

Ukraine is nowhere near to entering Nato, although Washington insists that Russia should not have a veto on Kiev’s ambitions.

Beyond the battlefiel­ds of eastern Ukraine, however, the dispute has turned into a much broader struggle over the path for eastern Europe, where for decades the Soviet Union had total dominance but most countries now are part of Western institutio­ns.

At the same time, neither the United States nor any European powers want open war with Russia over Ukraine, and Biden appears to be seeking a return to negotiatio­ns.

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