MEET THE PREZ: Poroshenko addresses residents during a meeting yesterday in Sloviansk. Ukraine’s government kept up military pressure against pro-Russian rebels yesterday, threatening them with a ‘nasty surprise’, while the militants said they were preparing to fight back after losing their main stronghold.

AFP

Ukraine has brushed off strong European pressure and rejected talks with pro-Russian rebels on a truce to halt a bloody insurgency convulsing the ex-Soviet nation until they laid down their arms.

The unconditional stance reflected a new confidence in Kiev that it was on the verge of quashing an uprising it views as Moscow’s retribution for the February ouster of a Kremlin-backed leader and the decision to pursue a historic alliance with the West.

However, it was also bound to frustrate European Union leaders’ push for a diplomatic solution as well as the Kremlin’s own efforts to force Kiev to make compromises that would preserve the Russian-speaking east’s links to Moscow.

“Now, any negotiations are possible only after the rebels completely lay down their arms,” Defence Minister Valeriy Geletey said in a statement.

Ukrainian forces have scored a string of surprise military successes since the weekend that forced most of the militias to retreat to the sprawling eastern industrial hubs of Donetsk and Luhansk – both capitals of their own “People’s Republics”.

President Petro Poroshenko has ordered his troops to blockade the insurgents inside the cities and cut them off from any further arms supplies.

But it was not immediately clear how the new pro-Western leader intended to force the militias to give up their three-month campaign to join Russian rule.

Luhansk separatist leader Valeriy Bolotov claimed yesterday that his men had managed to actually push back Ukrainian troops from part of the Russian border city and receive fresh supplies of anti-aircraft and artillery guns.

He added that any future truce talks would be conducted “on our own terms”.

Poroshenko tore up a 10-day ceasefire on July 1 because of uninterrupted rebel attacks that claimed the lives of more than 20 Ukrainian troops.

Uneasy EU leaders are hoping that a new truce and a Kremlin promise not to meddle can take pressure off the bloc to adopt sweeping sanctions that could damage their own strong energy and financial bonds with Russia.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said on Monday that “even if the situation in eastern Ukraine has shifted in favour of the Ukrainian security forces, there will be no purely military resolution of the conflict”.

Presidents Francois Hollande said he intended to press Poroshenko today during a joint call with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

But Washington has consistently backed the stepped-up campaign being waged by Ukrainian troops and irregular forces since Poroshenko’s promise after his election in May to quickly quash an uprising that has cost nearly 500 lives and inflamed East-West ties.

The United States views Ukraine’s territorial integrity as vital to European security and important to halting Russian President Vladimir Putin’s seeming ambition to resurrect a tsarist or post-Soviet empire.

US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki reiterated on Monday that “the government of Ukraine is defending the country of Ukraine, and I think they have every right to do that, as does the international community”.

Yesterday Poroshenko dismissed the man who had headed Kiev’s self-proclaimed “anti-terrorist operation” since its launch on April 13 and replaced him with Vasyl Grytsak – a career security service officer.

The reshuffle was one of several in the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) and appeared to represent an attempt by Poroshenko to place trusted associates in top positions rather than any change in tactic in the campaign.

Germany’s Berenberg Bank economist Holger Schmieding said that Putin now faced a tough choice between dealing a blow to Russia’s economy by further boosting support for the rebels or seeing his own popularity suffer by taking no action at all.

“He may either have to step up his support for the pro-Russian insurgents who are now on the defensive; or he may be seen as letting Ukraine advance on the ground in Donbass,” Schmieding wrote in reference to the eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions.

“The former could trigger more serious sanctions and further capital flight from Russia. The latter could hurt his popularity and his ‘strongman’ image in Russia where (he) had whipped up nationalist sentiment in the last five months,” he wrote.

 

 

 

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