By Gabriela Baczynska and Thomas Grove
KRAMATORSK/SLAVIANSK, Ukraine (Reuters) - Separatists flew the Russian
flag on armored vehicles taken from the Ukrainian army on Wednesday,
humiliating a Kiev government operation to recapture eastern towns
controlled by pro-Moscow partisans.
Six armored personnel carriers were driven into the rebel-held town of
Slaviansk to waves and shouts of "Russia! Russia!". It was not
immediately clear whether they had been captured by rebels or handed
over to them by Ukrainian deserters.
Another 15 armored troop
carriers full of paratroops were surrounded and halted by a pro-Russian
crowd at a town near an airbase. They were allowed to retreat only after
the soldiers handed the firing pins from their rifles to a rebel
commander.The military setback leaves Kiev looking weak on the eve of a peace conference on Thursday, when its foreign minister will meet his Russian, U.S. and European counterparts in Geneva.
Moscow has responded to the overthrow of its ally Ukrainian president
Viktor Yanukovich in February by announcing its right to intervene
militarily to protect Russian speakers across the former Soviet Union, a
new doctrine that has overturned decades of post-Cold War diplomacy.
Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea peninsula last month, and its armed
supporters have now taken control over swathes of Ukraine's eastern
industrial heartland.
It has
massed thousands of troops on near the Ukrainian frontier. A Reuters
reporting team that visited the border area late last week and again on
Wednesday said Russian military activity had increased markedly over the
past few days, with more troops and vehicles on the roads.
At
one site in an open field in Russia's Belgorod region about 20 km (12
miles) from the frontier there were now 10 large army tents and about 20
military trucks, far more than last week, although a squadron of attack
helicopters had left.So far, the United States and European Union have imposed only targeted sanctions against a list of Russian and Ukrainian individuals and firms, which Moscow has openly mocked. Washington and Brussels say they are working on far tougher measures.
The EU took a step towards imposing harsher sanctions on Wednesday by informing its member states of the likely impact of proposed measures on each of them. Countries have a week to respond before the European Commission starts drawing up plans.
The Ukrainian government confirmed that six of its armored vehicles were now in the hands of separatists. Photos of their number markings showed they were among vehicles deployed earlier in the government's attempted "anti-terrorist" operation.
Kiev had sent the convoy of paratroops to capture an airfield, the
start of an operation to reclaim towns held by separatists who have
declared an independent "People's Republic" in the industrial Donbass
region.
The Kiev
government is seeking to reassert control without bloodshed, which it
fears would precipitate a Russian invasion. Its operation is the first
test of Kiev's under-funded army, which had until now played no role in
six months of internal unrest. The government seems to have resorted to
using troops after losing faith that police in the east would stay
loyal.
The
government troops began their operation on Tuesday, arriving by
helicopter to take control of an airfield at Kramatorsk. They drove
armored personnel carriers flying the Ukrainian flag into the town in
the early morning.
But six of
those vehicles later rumbled into Slaviansk, 15 km (9 miles) away, with
Russian and separatist flags and armed men in motley combat fatigues on
top. They stopped outside the separatist-occupied town hall.
One soldier guarding one of the vehicles said he was a member of Ukraine's 25th paratrooper division, the unit sent by Kiev to recapture Slaviansk and Kramatorsk.
"All the soldiers and the officers are here. We are all boys who won't
shoot our own people," he said, adding that his men had had no food for
four days until local residents fed them.
The Defence Ministry in
Kiev said the vehicles had been captured. "A column was blocked by a
crowd of local people in Kramatorsk with members of a Russian
diversionary-terrorist group among them," it said. "As a result,
extremists seized the equipment."
Above Slaviansk, a Ukrainian jet fighter carried out several minutes of aerobatics over the town's main square.
"I am a Ukrainian officer, that's the first thing. The other is that I will not shoot at my own people no matter what," said the officer who said he could not give his name as he was not authorized to speak to the media.
"I want things to be normal, people to go back home, not sit in some
fields with weapons. I want children to see weapons only on TV ... I
want us to live together as we were. And I want to be back home to my
wife and child."
The crowd
blockaded the troops until the commander of the unit, Colonel Oleksander
Schvets, agreed to order his men to hand over the firing pins from
their rifles to a separatist leader. The crowd then allowed the troops
to drive back to their base in Dnipropetrovsk, a southern city.
The pro-Russian separatists began the uprising in the east by seizing
government buildings in three cities on April 6, and have tightened
their grip in recent days. Their armed paramilitaries now control
buildings in about 10 towns and have seized hundreds of weapons. Two
people were killed on Sunday in Slaviansk, including a Ukrainian state
security agent shot dead.
Kiev calls the uprising a blatant repeat of the seizure of Crimea, where
armed pro-Russian partisans also occupied buildings, declared
independence and proclaimed themselves in charge of state bodies. The
main difference so far is that Russian troops have not appeared overtly
as they did in Crimea, where Moscow already had military bases.
NATO says there are 40,000 Russian soldiers amassed on the frontier, forces which could capture eastern Ukraine in days.
Hopes are faint for any progress at the talks in Geneva on Thursday. As
in the case of Crimea last month, diplomacy appears to have fallen far
behind the pace of events on the ground, with pro-Russian partisans
establishing control of territory before Western countries can muster a
response.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin is scheduled to speak on Thursday at an annual question
and answer session with citizens, which could signal how far he intends
to go in Ukraine.
A
triumphant speech he gave in March justifying the annexation of Crimea
has been seen as a decisive moment in Russia's relations with the West,
signaling Moscow no longer feels bound by customary rules governing the
use of force.
BRINK OF CIVIL WAR
Putin told German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a telephone call late on
Tuesday that Kiev had "embarked on an anti-constitutional course" by
using the army. "The sharp escalation of the conflict puts the country,
in effect, on the brink of civil war," the Kremlin quoted him as saying.
Washington and NATO have made clear they will not fight to protect
Ukraine. Instead, NATO announced urgent new steps to reinforce the
security of alliance members that border on it.
"You will see deployments at sea, in the air, on land, to take place
immediately. That means within days," NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh
Rasmussen told a news conference after meeting of ambassadors from the
28-member alliance.
After
several days of delay, Ukraine's operation began at the Kramatorsk
airfield on Tuesday, where Ukrainian soldiers disembarked from two
helicopters. Reporters heard gunfire that seemed to prevent an air force
plane from landing. Kiev says there were no casualties.
"I think
Donbass should be an independent country allied with Russia," said a
local resident who gave his name as Olexander, part of the crowd that
turned out to block the troop column on Wednesday. "My homeland is the
Soviet Union. We just need to chop off the rotten west of Ukraine and
we'll be fine."
(Additional
reporting by Christian Lowe in Moscow, Richard Balmforth in Kiev and
Nguyen Phuong Linh in Hanoi; Writing by Peter Graff; editing by David
Stamp)
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