Russia "won't exclude" putting military hardware in Cuba or Venezuela
Moscow — A senior Russian diplomat wouldn't rule out the
possibility of his country placing military infrastructure in Cuba or
Venezuela, as the Kremlin called two recent rounds of talks with the U.S. and
NATO "unsuccessful." Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov, who led
negotiations with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman in Geneva this
week, said Thursday that he didn't want "to confirm anything, [but] won't
exclude anything here either," when asked whether Russia might consider
establishing a military presence in America's backyard.
"It depends on the actions of American
colleagues," Ryabkov said Thursday in an interview with the RTVI channel,
adding that Russia could also undertake unspecified "measures"
involving its navy.
It was a significant ratcheting up of the tension between
the U.S. and Russia in a week that many hoped would put diplomacy front and
center. The current standoff between Moscow and Washington has been casually
framed as a contemporary echo of the Cold War for weeks, but Ryabkov's remarks
were sure to resonate loudly in the ears of Americans either aware of or old
enough to remember the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.
There was no immediate reaction from Russia's allies in
Havana or Caracas to Ryabkov's remarks.
A few weeks ago, Moscow sent Washington a list of
"security guarantees" demanding that NATO halt its eastward expansion
and, most importantly, close the door for Ukraine to join the alliance.
Following high-stakes talks in Geneva and Brussels this week, Sherman called
some of Moscow's demands "simply non-starters."
"We will not slam the door shut on NATO's open-door
policy," she told reporters on Wednesday. "We are not going to agree
that NATO cannot expand any further."
Russia's military has massed about 100,000 troops along its
border with Ukraine, stoking fears that it could be preparing for another
invasion of the country as it did in 2014, when Vladimir Putin sent in his
forces and annexed the Crimean Peninsula. U.S. officials have said an invasion
could begin as soon as January or February and involve as many as 175,000
Russian troops.
Russian officials have sent mixed signals on whether Putin
indeed plans to attack Ukraine, denying any intention to do so outright, but
stressing that all options remain on the table in the standoff, including
military action to "counter threats" if the West refuses to agree to
its demands.
"The jury's out on which path Vladimir Putin is going
to choose," U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told MSNBC on Thursday.
"Is he going to choose the path of diplomacy and dialogue to resolve some
of these problems or is he going to pursue confrontation and aggression?"
Moscow has seen Ukraine as a potential security threat since
elections there ushered in new leadership that severed longtime close ties with
Russia and instead shifted the country's alliance to the West. Ukraine is
actively seeking NATO membership.
In talks with NATO on Wednesday, Russia said that if the
Western security alliance wants to "deescalate" the situation around
Ukraine, it must "abandon all military assistance to Ukraine and stop
supplying weaponry."
"Unsuccessful" talks, "extreme" measures
Earlier on Thursday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov
called the Russian-U.S. talks over Moscow's demanded security guarantees
"unsuccessful," and slammed the U.S. over new sanctions drafted in
Congress targeting senior Russian officials amid the push for diplomatic
détente.
"We view such documents and such statements in an
extremely negative way — especially against the backdrop of continuing
negotiations, which may be unsuccessful but are still talks," Peskov said
during a daily briefing call with reporters.
The proposed package of sanctions submitted by U.S. senators
on Wednesday, with support from the White House, is intended to
"devastate" the Russian economy should Moscow attack Ukraine. The
measures include personal sanctions against Putin and several other top
officials, including Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Prime Minister Mikhail
Mishustin.
"Introducing sanctions against the head of the
government or the head of Russia is an extreme measure which is comparable to
severing relations," Peskov said.
According to the draft, the U.S. government would also have
to investigate and present a report on Putin's personal wealth and assets held
by his family members, or any other people who may be holding them on his
behalf.
The last round of talks between Russia and the West, this
time under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE), was to wrap up on Thursday. As Poland begins its year-long
chairmanship of that security organization, the country's Foreign Minister
Zbigniew Rau warned that the risk of war in Europe was "now greater than
ever before in the last 30 years."
"For several weeks we have been faced with the prospect
of a major military escalation in Eastern Europe," Rau said, addressing
the 57-member alliance of nations.
Russia's Ryabkov said that Moscow would decide on its next
actions after it receives a written response to its demands, which it expected
next week.
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