(Reuters) - Russia
expressed outrage on Friday over a "frenzied anti-Russian campaign" by
U.S. media and political analysts, stepping up a war of words that has
intensified during the Ukraine crisis. Ties between Moscow
and Washington have sunk to their lowest level since the Cold War over
the crisis in Ukraine, and each side has accused the other of waging an
information war. The Russian
Foreign Ministry said "propagandists" working on orders from Washington
were producing "Russophobic lampoons, carefully building an image of Russia as an enemy, instilling hatred of anything Russian in ordinary people." The West accuses Russia of backing separatists in east Ukraine by providing them with weapons and troops, and Russia says the West plotted the overthrow of a Moscow-backed president in Kiev last year. Each side denies the accusations. Washington
imposed sanctions on Moscow after it annexed the Black Sea peninsula of
Crimea from Ukraine in March last year and stepped them up after the
separatist rebellion began in east Ukraine the following month. The
two nuclear powers and veto-wielding members of the U.N. Security
Council are also at odds over many other international matters and
differ on human rights and democracy issues.
Moscow condemns 'anti-Russian campaign' in U.S.

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