‘Unity day’ in Ukraine, US says Russia may yet invade: Live news | Ukraine-Russia crisis News

Despite Russia announcing a pullback of some of its troops stationed around Ukraine’s borders and welcoming further talks with the West, the United States and its allies have said they need evidence of the troop movements and warned that the threat of a Russian invasion still looms.

President Joe Biden said Washington had not verified Moscow’s withdrawal of forces. “Our analysts indicate that they remain very much in a threatening position,” he said, adding, however, there was still room for diplomacy to solve the crisis.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has declared Wednesday – the day some US reports suggested an incursion could be launched – “a day of unity”. He has called on Ukraine’s citizens to display national flags and don blue and yellow ribbons in order to demonstrate the country’s “unity to the whole world”.

Here are the latest updates:

Ukrainians face ‘game of cat and mouse’ with stoic calm

Ukrainians living in the country’s east are carrying on their daily lives, mostly as usual, as local analysts warn the crisis may rumble on for months to come.

“This could even last indefinitely – the game of cat and mouse is just getting started,” Peter Zalmayev, director of the Eurasia Democracy Initiative, a think-tank on post-Soviet states, told Al Jazeera.

Read more here.


Russia bolstering troop numbers near Ukraine, Canada’s defence minister says

Canadian Defence Minister Anita Anand has said she hopes to see evidence of a Russian troop withdrawal from around Ukraine’s borders but warned that for the moment, numbers were increasing.

“The escalation of Russian troops at the Ukrainian border, including in Belarus, is increasingly significant,” Anand told reporters as she arrived for a meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels.

“We look forward to seeing evidence of the withdrawal of troops on Russia’s part. But we need to prepare for any eventuality with that significant escalation of Russian troops that we have seen over the last weeks,” she said, adding the situation was at a pivotal moment.


Timeline: Ukraine’s turbulent history

Ukraine has faced significant challenges since winning independence in 1991.

For a timeline of developments, click here.


‘We are here to stay’: Ukrainians raise flags in show of national unity

Ukrainians are raising national flags and playing the country’s anthem to mark the country’s “day of unity”.

The yellow and blue banner fluttered outside schools, hospitals and many shops, while a loudspeaker at a local government office in the capital, Kyiv, blared patriotic songs. National television and government Youtube channels also broadcast speeches and rousing reminders of Ukraine’s nationhood.

“Everyone wants to scare us … [but] we are here to stay,” Ludmila, a pensioner, who wore a tiny Ukrainian flag in the lapel of her coat, told Reuters.

Ukraine’s biggest national flag, on the country’s highest flagpole, and the giant ‘Motherland’ monument are seen at a compound of the World War II museum in Kyiv [File: Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters]

Russian soldiers will leave Belarus once drills conclude, foreign minister says

Belarusian Foreign Minister Vladimir Makei says no Russian soldiers or military equipment will remain in the country after the pair’s joint military drills come to an end.

Moscow has repeatedly said the tens of thousands of troops it has deployed to neighbouring Belarus, which also borders Ukraine, for war games will leave once the exercsies are over.


‘The choice today is a choice between war and tragic sacrifices’: EU Council president

European Council President Charles Michel has urged Russia to demonstrate its will to de-escalate the crisis by actions rather than words.

“In the last two days, Russia has signaled that it may be open to diplomacy, and we urge Russia to take concrete and tangible steps towards de-escalation because this is the condition for sincere political dialogue,” Michel told European lawmakers.

“The choice today is a choice between war and tragic sacrifices that would go along with that war or the courage of a political engagement, the courage of a diplomatic negotiation”, he added.


Ukraine’s defence ministry reports ongoing ‘unprecedented’ cyberattack on its web portal

Ukraine’s defence ministry says its web portal has been hit by an unprecedented denial of service cyberattack that is still ongoing.

The ministry said hackers had succeeded in finding vulnerabilities in the programming code of the portal. Traffic was being rerouted to servers in the US while the issue was being fixed, it said.

The issue was first reported on Tuesday, when a series of cyberattacks knocked the Ukrainian army and major banks offline, officials in the country said.


Russia says video shows military equipment leaving Crimea

Russia’s defence ministry has released video footage that it says shows a column of tanks and military vehicles leaving annexed Crimea after drills, adding that some troops would also return to their permanent bases.

“Combat equipment and military personnel will be delivered by military trains to the units’ permanent deployment points,” the ministry said. “Upon arrival, the equipment will be serviced and prepared for carrying out the next phase of combat training.”

The video, published by Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency, showed dozens of military vehicles crossing a railway bridge at night. Moscow seized the Crimean Peninsula from Kyiv in early 2014.


UK says no evidence of Russian withdrawal from Ukraine’s border

The United Kingdom is yet to seen any evidence that Russia is withdrawing troops from positions near the Ukrainian border, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has said.

“We haven’t seen any evidence at the moment of that withdrawal,” Wallace told the UK’s Times Radio. “We’ll take Russia at its word, but we will judge them on their actions,” he added.


Russia announces end of Crimea military drills, troops leaving

Russia said military drills in Moscow-annexed Crimea had ended and that soldiers were returning to their garrisons, a day after it announced a first troop pullback from Ukraine’s borders.

“Units of the Southern Military District, having completed their participation in tactical exercises, are moving to their permanent deployment points,” Moscow’s defence ministry said in a statement, as state television showed images of military units crossing a bridge linking the Russian-controlled peninsula to the mainland.

INTERACTIVE- Where are Russian troops stationed?


Ukraine defence minister sees stable security situation

Oleksii Reznikov has said the latest threat assessments did not contain “anything unexpected” and were consistent with earlier views.

In a televised statement, Ukraine’s defence minister said his country’s armed forces were keeping up a nationwide military drill, one of which would be attended by the military attache of Belarus.


Russia makes moves to ease Ukraine tensions but West remains sceptical

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Moscow does not want war and would rely on diplomatic efforts to eliminate any chance that Ukraine could one day join NATO – his key demand in the crisis. At the same time, he did not commit to a full military pullback, saying Russia’s next moves in the standoff will depend on how the situation evolves.

Biden, for his part, promised that Washington would give diplomacy “every chance”, but he struck a sceptical tone about Moscow’s intentions.

“Two paths are still open,” Biden said in remarks at the White House. “But let there be no doubt: if Russia commits this breach by invading Ukraine, responsible nations around the world will not hesitate to respond. If we do not stand for freedom where it is at risk today, we’ll surely pay a steeper price tomorrow.”


Wheat and corn prices ride the Ukrainian rollercoaster

The crisis between Ukraine and Russia, two of the world’s biggest wheat and corn producers, has sent the commodities’ prices on a wild ride.

“The market doesn’t know nuance: Either it’s war and it goes up, or it’s peace and it goes down,” said Gautier Le Molgat, an analyst at Agritel.

The grains’ markets turned around three times in less than 24 hours this week: first on the Russian foreign minister’s optimistic tone on Monday, then on news of the US relocating its Ukrainian embassy, and finally on Moscow’s claims of a military pullback.

The stakes are especially high for wheat, with Russia being the world’s top exporter and Ukraine the fourth, according to estimates by the US Department of Agriculture. Together, the two countries account for almost a third of wheat’s world trade.


China may take advantage of Ukraine crisis, US general warns

US General Kenneth Wilsbach, the head of US Pacific Air Forces, has said that China might do something “provocative” in Asia while the Western world is preoccupied with the Ukraine crisis.

“From the standpoint of will China see what’s happening in Europe and … try to do something here in the Indo-Pacific – absolutely yes, that’s a concern,” Wilsbach said, using an alternative term for the Asia-Pacific region.

Beijing has aligned itself with Moscow amid the current crisis.



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