The United States
imposed new sanctions on allies of Russian President Vladimir Putin on
Monday, prompting Moscow to denounce "Cold War" tactics amid more
violence in eastern Ukraine. The move to ban visas
and freeze assets of the likes of Putin's friend Igor Sechin, head of
oil giant Rosneft, also drew fire from President Barack Obama's domestic critics, who called it a "slap on the wrist." EU states added 15 more Russians and Ukrainians to their blacklist and will reveal them on Tuesday. The new round of U.S. sanctions, following those imposed last month when Russia annexed Crimea, barely registered in eastern Ukraine, where pro-Moscow rebels were holding a group of German and other OSCE military observers for a fourth day. Despite
a Ukrainian military operation to contain them, the militants extended
their grip by seizing key public buildings in another town in the
Donetsk region. In the regional capital, Donetsk, club-wielding
pro-Russian activists broke up a rally by supporters of the
Western-backed government in Kiev. The
high-profile mayor of Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, was badly wounded
by a gunman, raising fears of further unrest in a Russian-speaking
region that has seen less trouble of late than the neighboring provinces
of Donetsk and Luhansk. U.S.
sanctions were aimed, Washington officials said, at "cronies" of Putin.
Seven men, including Sechin, were targeted by visa bans and freezing of
any U.S. assets, and 17 companies were also named. "The
goal is not to go after Mr. Putin personally," Obama said. "The goal is
to change his calculus with respect to how the current actions that
he's engaging in Ukraine could have an adverse impact on the Russian economy over the long haul." Washington
will also deny export licenses for any high-technology items that could
contribute to Russian military capabilities and revoke any existing
export licenses that meet these conditions, the White House said. In
addition to Sechin, the Russians sanctioned by the United States
included another Putin ally, Sergei Chemezov, head of Rostec, a Russian
state-owned high-tech products company. The
others named were Oleg Belavencev, Putin's presidential envoy to
Crimea, Dmitry Kozak, deputy prime minister of the Russian Federation,
Evgeniy Murov, director of Russia's federal protective service, Aleksei
Pushkov, a state Duma deputy, and Vyacheslav Volodin, a Putin adviser. Not included was Gazprom chief Alexei Miller, a close ally of Putin who had been seen as a possible target. Obama
is under pressure from opposition Republicans at home to move faster on
sanctions. But in taking what he described as "calibrated steps", he
has emphasized a need to act in concert with European countries, which
have more at stake economically and a more cumbersome process for taking
decisions. There was
little prospect of a change in the calculus for Putin, who critics say
is stirring up fear among ethnic Russians in order to redraw post-Soviet
borders and rebuild Moscow's empire. "Washington
is in effect reviving ... an old method of restricting normal
cooperation, from Cold War times, essentially chasing itself into a
dark, dusty closet of a bygone era," said Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei
Ryabkov, describing the sanctions as illegitimate, uncivilized and in
breach of international law. In
an hour-long phone call with U.S. Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel, Russian
Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu voiced concern about an "unprecedented"
increase in U.S. and NATO activity near Russia's borders and urged Hagel
to help "turn down the rhetoric" over Ukraine, Moscow's Defense
Ministry said. RALLY ATTACKED Both
sides continue to offer diametrically mirror-image versions of events
in Ukraine. The West sees the pro-Western leaders who took power after
Kremlin-backed President Viktor Yanukovich fled to Russia in February as legitimate and believes Putin is trying to undermine their efforts to hold an election. For
Moscow, they are "fascists" and "putschists", anti-Russian Ukrainian
nationalists against whom the Russian speakers of Crimea and the east
have risen up in self-defence - a view it broadcasts into Ukraine on
state-run Russian media. Opinion
polls show substantial but still only minority support in the
depressed, industrial east of Ukraine for it to follow Crimea into union
with Russia. Several
people were injured on Monday after dozens of men in military fatigues,
carrying baseball bats and throwing firecrackers, tried to break up a
demonstration in Donetsk. A
crowd of about 2,000 waved Ukrainian flags and chanted: "Donetsk is
Ukraine" and "Putin, no", but they dispersed after the assault, in which
Reuters journalists saw at least 10 people treated for head injuries. Earlier
in the same region, armed men in camouflage who refused to identify
themselves seized the police station and town hall in Kostyantynivka.
Reuters journalists saw about 20 well-organized gunmen controlling the
administration building. They erected a barricade of tires, sandbags and concrete blocks. Soviet songs played over loudspeakers, and women gathered signatures in support of an uprising against rule from Kiev. Kharkiv
Mayor Gennady Kernes, a colorful and well-known figure nationwide, was
shot in the back while out exercising, and doctors are battling to save
his life. Kernes, 54, is a member of the party through which Yanukovich
and fellow easterners had dominated a Ukrainian system widely seen as
deeply corrupt. Among the most prominent Jewish politicians in the country who earned his wealth from business
dealings in the crime-ridden 1990s, Kernes had called for Kharkiv to
quit Ukraine after Yanukovich fell, but had lately clamped down on
separatists. The government said police were looking into whether the
assassination attempt was linked to the arrest of pro-Russian
separatists on Sunday. GERMAN HOSTAGES Although
Russia signed a deal with Ukraine and Kiev's U.S. and EU allies at
Geneva 10 days ago under which militants should surrender to OSCE
monitors, it flatly denies Ukrainian and Western assertions it is
controlling the militants' activities and that it has special forces
orchestrating events on the ground. "Russia's involvement in the recent violence in eastern Ukraine is indisputable," a White House statement said. After an appeal from Germany,
long Moscow's firmest advocate in the West, for Russia to intervene to
secure the release of the seven European monitors, four of whom are
German, Moscow's ambassador to the OSCE said it would be good if they
were freed. But he also
condemned the OSCE, of which Russia is a member, for being "extremely
irresponsible" in sending them to eastern Ukraine. Moscow has condemned
the Kiev authorities for failing to provide security in the industrial
and heavily populated east, close to the Russian border. In
the face of Western and Ukrainian calls for it to pull back troops
massed on Ukraine's frontier, the Russian Foreign Ministry said on
Monday it had "deep concern" about forces Kiev has sent to the region,
suggesting that Ukrainian troops might be preparing for "the destruction
of entire cities". In the
separatist military stronghold at Slaviansk, the self-declared mayor,
Vyacheslav Ponomaryov, said he had given OSCE mediators a list of
detainees his movement wanted freed by Kiev in return for the OSCE
observers he is holding. The
Russian Foreign Ministry said the jailed leader of an earlier
separatist protest in Donetsk was on hunger strike to protest against
his torture. It also cited reports that Ukraine was building detention
centers "very reminiscent of Nazi concentration camps" for "dissenting
citizens" in the east. The Moscow stock market shrugged off the sanctions, rising almost 1 percent when they failed to penalize more companies. Although
its chief executive, Sechin, was hit by a visa ban, few expected
Rosneft or its international partners to suffer much, though its shares
lost 1.7 percent on the day. Western
countries say sanctions are already having an effect on Russia by
scaring investors into pulling out capital. The central bank has raised
interest rates to support the ruble, and Russian firms are finding it
harder to raise funds.
U.S. sanctions Putin allies as Ukraine violence goes on
Reuters
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