Wednesday, April 30, 2014

U.S. Department of State

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Secretary Kerry writes about the importance of #NetFreedom  in his latest DipNote blog.

"Since the printing press, no technology has had a greater capacity than the Internet for individual empowerment, economic development, and human expression.

How telling then that, while countries around the world are devoting precious resources to expanding their citizens’ access to the Internet, Russia is doing the opposite.

Just yesterday, Russia’s Parliament passed a package of new restrictions on blogging and the Internet, a potent legislative cocktail of regression and repression.

It is part of a pattern. Russian-backed militias operating in Ukraine have been detaining legitimate journalists and knocking down television towers to block the truth from getting out. While the world celebrated the Internet’s potential for positive change at NETmundial, Russia isolated itself by objecting to the principles and ideals of Internet freedom."

Read more: http://goo.gl/1eaaKz

Ukraine's restive east slipping from government's grasp

from reuters




(Reuters) - Pro-Moscow separatists seized government offices in more Ukrainian towns on Wednesday, in a further sign that authorities in Kiev are losing control of the country's eastern industrial heartland bordering Russia.
Gunmen who turned up at dawn took control of official buildings in Horlivka, a town of almost 300,000 people, said a Reuters photographer. They refused to be photographed.
The heavily armed men wore the same military uniforms without insignia as other unidentified "green men" who have joined pro-Russian protesters with clubs and chains in seizing control of towns across Ukraine's Donbass coal and steel belt.
Some 30 pro-Russian separatists also seized a city council building in Alchevsk, further east in Luhansk region, Interfax-Ukraine news agency said. They took down the Ukrainian flag and flew a city banner before allowing workers to leave.
Attempts to contain the insurgency by the government in Kiev have proved largely unsuccessful, with security forces repeatedly outmaneuvered by the separatists. The West and the new Ukrainian government accuse Russia of being behind the unrest, a charge Moscow denies.
Daniel Baer, the U.S. ambassador to the OSCE, a European security watchdog which has monitors in the region, told reporters in Vienna: "I think it's very clear that what is happening would not be happening without Russian involvement."
A police official in Donetsk, the provincial capital where separatists have declared a "People's Republic of Donetsk", said separatists were also in control of the Horlivka police station, having seized the regional police headquarters earlier in April.
The murder of a town councilor from Horlivka who opposed the separatists was cited by Kiev last week among reasons for launching new efforts to regain control of the region.
Wednesday's takeovers followed the fall of the main government buildings on Tuesday further east in Luhansk, capital of Ukraine's easternmost province, driving home just how far control over the densely populated region has slipped from the central government in Kiev.
"They've taken them. The government administration and police," the police official said of Horlivka.
SECESSION REFERENDUM
The town sits just north of Donetsk, unofficial capital of the whole Donbass area, where mainly Russian-speaking separatists have called a referendum on secession for May 11.
Many hope to follow Crimea's break from Ukraine in March and subsequent annexation by Russia, following the overthrow of Ukraine's Moscow-backed president Viktor Yanukovich in late February in a tug-of-war between the West and Russia over the strategic direction of the former Soviet republic.
The Donbass region is home to giant steel smelters and heavy plants that produce up to a third of Ukraine's industrial output. An armed uprising began there in early April, with Kiev almost powerless to respond for fear of provoking an invasion by tens of thousands of Russian troops massed on the border.
Many Russian-speaking business "oligarchs" from the Donbass backed Yanukovich and exercise great influence over the region.
On Wednesday, the most powerful of these, Ukraine's richest man Rinat Akhmetov issued a formal statement saying he remained committed to his investments in the Donbass and to keeping the region as part of Ukraine.
Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk warned his ministers their jobs were on the line if the east remained out of reach - "The country demands action," he said.
Oleksander Turchinov, Ukraine's acting president until after an election on May 25, reiterated on Wednesday that police were incapable of reasserting control in the region and said the armed forces were on full alert for a Russian invasion.
That prompted a return volley from Moscow, where the Foreign Ministry demanded that Kiev "immediately ceases the bellicose rhetoric, which is aimed at intimidating its own population".
There were, however, more conciliatory noises elsewhere.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Russia would not "do stupid things" in response to Western sanctions.
Describing a phone call between President Vladimir Putin and British Prime Minister David Cameron, the Kremlin said they agreed that only "peaceful means" could resolve the conflict - although Putin has shown little sign of backing down to sanctions.
In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel said she ruled out any military solution to the conflict over Ukraine, which is sandwiched between Russia and the U.S.-led NATO bloc:
"Would we have learned anything 100 years after the start of World War One and 75 years after the start of World War Two if we resorted to the same methods? No," said Merkel, who will visit U.S. President Barack Obama on Friday. "We will not resolve our conflicts in Europe with military means.
"Military solutions can be excluded."
SANCTIONS COST
There were further signs on Monday that Russia is paying an economic price for its involvement in Ukraine. The International Monetary Fund said international sanctions imposed on Moscow over the crisis in Ukraine were hurting the economy.
The IMF cut its 2014 growth forecast for Russia to 0.2 percent from 1.3 percent and forecast capital outflows of $100 billion this year.
The IMF mission chief to Russia, Antonio Spilimbergo, also told reporters that Russia was "experiencing recession" and that a resolution of the Ukraine crisis would significantly reduce Russia's own economic uncertainties.
"If you understand by recession two quarters of negative economic growth then Russia is experiencing recession now," Spilimbergo said.
Ukraine is also suffering from the turmoil, with economic output falling 1.1 percent year-on-year in the first three months of 2014, according to government figures released on Wednesday. Gazprom said Ukraine's unpaid bill for gas supplied by the Russian energy giant was now $3.5 billion.
However, the European Union said it was ready to provide economic aid to Ukraine along with the IMF, which on Wednesday approved a $17-billion aid package, including an immediate disbursement of $3.2 billion.

(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk, Natalia Zinets and Elizabeth Piper in Kiev, Thomas Grove in Luhansk, Maria Tsvetkova in Slaviansk and Lidia Kelly in Moscow; Writing by Matt Robinson and Giles Elgood Editing by Peter Millership and Alastair Macdonald)

Ukraine seeks to check spread of unrest as pro-Russian gunmen extend control in east

from washingtonpost



HORLIVKA, Ukraine — Pro-Russian gunmen extended their control over eastern Ukraineon Wednesday, as the country’s acting president admitted that police and security forces were either helpless to prevent the unrest or were actively colluding with the separatist rebels.
Oleksandr Turchynov said the Ukrainian government’s goal now was to prevent the agitation from spreading to other territories, and he called for the creation of special regional police forces so that a presidential election could take place on May 25 as scheduled. But he warned that the threat of a Russian invasion was very real and said his country’s armed forces have been placed on full alert.
Video
Pro-Russia activists stormed several official buildings in the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk and fired on police headquarters.
Pro-Russia activists stormed several official buildings in the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk and fired on police headquarters.
Read more

Eastern Ukraine's separatists were ‘nobodies’ — until now

Eastern Ukraine's separatists were ‘nobodies’ — until now
Their rise from obscurity feeds suspicion that Ukrainian rebel leaders are being propped up by Russia.

U.S., Europe still diverge on handling of Russia

U.S., Europe still diverge on handling of Russia
Although the Obama administration and its allies try to present a united front, things aren’t “clear cut.”
Turchynov spoke in the capital, Kiev, hours after insurgents wielding automatic weapons took control of the city council building in the eastern city of Horlivka in the Donetsk region. The previous day,another mob seized control of the regional government headquarters in the city of Luhansk, capital of the neighboring region of the same name, smashing windows as they forced their way in.
In Horlivka, Anatoly Starostin, the commander of separatist forces, said they took control of a police station Tuesday evening without any problems, and he described the police there as “corrupt, weak and unprofessional.” The separatists then took over city hall Wednesday with the agreement of the local mayor, who supported their cause and would remain in his post, he said. A flag of the self-styled “Donetsk People’s Republic” flew over the building Wednesday.
“All I want is to be a citizen of Russia, and for this part of Ukraine to be part of Russia,” Starostin, 42, said in an interview in the lobby of city hall. “My commanders gave me a task to control the city.”
Starostin said he came from the city of Slovyansk, which has been under separatist control for about two weeks, with orders to recruit a “self-defense force” from among the people of Horlivka.
The militia controlling city hall wore masks and carried automatic rifles; Starostin wore a new camouflage uniform without any insignia, and no mask. “Russian soldiers do not go to war with masks on their faces,” he said, indicating that although he is not a Russian soldier now, he aspires to be one eventually.
In Kiev, Turchnyov, the acting president, told a meeting of regional governors that local security forces were unable to protect citizens.
“I will be frank: Today, security forces are unable to quickly take the situation in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions under control,” Turchynov said, according to the Interfax-Ukraine news service. “The security bodies . . . are unable to carry out their duties of protecting citizens. They are helpless in those matters. Moreover, some of those units are either helping or cooperating with terrorist organizations.”
Turchynov instructed the governors to try to prevent the threat from spreading to other regions in the central and southern parts of the country.
“Mercenaries and special units that are active on Ukrainian territory have been tasked with attacking those regions,” Turchynov was quoted as saying by Interfax. “That is why I am stressing: our task is to stop the spread of the terrorist threat first of all in the Kharkiv and Odessa regions,”
Russia has massed tens of thousands of troops near its border with Ukraine, although it says it has no plans to invade. But Ukraine’s acting president told the regional governors that those assurances could not be trusted.
“I once again return to the real danger of the Russian Federation beginning a land war against Ukraine,” he said. “Our armed forces have been put on full military readiness.”
The insurgents now control buildings in about a dozen cities in eastern Ukraine as they press demands for broader regional rights as well as greater ties or outright annexation by Russia. The militiamen are holding some activists and journalists hostage, including a group of observers from a European security organization.
In Luhansk, one of the largest cities in eastern Ukraine, gunmen in camouflage uniforms maintained control of several government offices they seized Tuesday.






Saturday, April 26, 2014

Ukraine crisis: Is war inevitable?

from bbc


A Ukrainian soldier jumps off an armoured personnel carrier at a checkpoint in the village of Malinivka, east of Sloviansk in eastern Ukraine, 24 April 2014Ukraine has deployed troops to try to take back control in the east
Tensions are rising. The rhetorical brinkmanship is escalating.
Some 40,000 Russian troops remain massed on Ukraine's border. Military drills are under way. And the Ukrainian authorities have deployed troops themselves to try to take back control over eastern towns where buildings have been seized by pro-Russian elements.
The diplomatic battle is escalating, too, with the US laying the blame squarely on Russia for the failure to implement last week's Geneva deal. More economic sanctions loom just as Moscow insists that it may have to act to defend "Russians" who are under threat from the Ukrainian security forces.
So under all these circumstances, is war inevitable?
The answer of course is no, but all the elements for a conflict are certainly there.
The troops are in place and the arguments have been marshalled.
Ukraine map
Russia has constructed a narrative that presents any potential military action as a kind of "peace-keeping" intervention. Its forces could be on the move at short notice.
So an important qualification is needed. War may not be "inevitable" - we cannot look into President Vladimir Putin's mind - but there is indeed a worrying chance that fighting, involving the overt use of Russian troops, could break out.
Nothing, though, is tidy in this affair. And the sporadic and messy skirmishes that have already taken place in eastern Ukraine between the Kiev government's forces and pro-Russian gunmen could be a prelude to what may be to come.
Let's look at the options.

A full-scale Russian assault

Russian servicemen drive armoured personnel carriers on the outskirts of the city of Belgorod near the Russian-Ukrainian border, 25 April 2014Russian troops are massed near the Russian-Ukrainian border
Moscow certainly has enough troops, supplies and logistics assembled to launch a major offensive into eastern Ukraine.
Nato commanders have suggested that this could potentially seek to punch across the country all the way to Odessa or even the Russian-controlled enclave in Moldova, Transnistria.
A significant level of Ukrainian resistance might be expected; Russian forces might have to contend with a guerrilla war against their lines of communication; and even the large Russian force assembled could find itself stretched - Russia would have to bring significant follow-on forces (probably of lesser quality) to bear to secure such gains.

Destabilisation as the status-quo

A pro-Russian man stands on barricades outside the Mariupol town hall, East Ukraine, 24 April 2014Pro-Russian groups have barricaded official buildings in eastern Ukraine
The other end of the spectrum of options is the continuation of pretty much what we see going on right now, ie the mobilisation of pro-Russian groups inside Ukraine; a sporadic battle of road-blocks and barricaded buildings with (and Nato certainly believes this) Russian special forces operating on the ground to help orchestrate events.
The idea here is to maintain the sense of chaos, of the Kiev government's inability to control its own territory, with the continuing threat from Russian forces poised on its borders. The danger here is that events on the ground could precipitate a local crisis that sparks a more significant Russian involvement.

A limited "peace-keeping" intervention

This might be Russia's preferred option if matters escalate. A small-scale local intervention to "protect Russian-speakers" in a given area.
Russia already insists that it has all the necessary basis in international law to do this. However it is hard to see Ukrainian forces not responding to such a move and a "limited" incursion might quickly escalate into a larger seizure of territory.
A pro-Russian armed man guards a checkpoint near Krasny Liman village outside Sloviansk, Ukraine, 24 April 2014Russia maintains it has the right to protect Russian-speakers in Ukraine
Having said that war is not inevitable, one must acknowledge that all the pointers are not positive - the direction of events is heading towards confrontation.
However the real question is not what happens next, but how does this crisis end?
Does Russia really want to seize and possibly incorporate parts of eastern Ukraine as it did with Crimea? Does Moscow want to risk the economic damage that a military move into Ukraine might bring down on its head?
Or alternatively has the West simply misjudged how important Ukraine is to Russia? And has it also miscalculated the level of risk and potential economic damage that Mr Putin is willing to absorb to secure what he sees as his country's vital strategic interests?


Friday, April 25, 2014

G7 to 'move swiftly' on more Russia sanctions

from usatoday


Tom Vanden Brook, Olga Rudenko and Doug Stanglin, USA TODAY 11:22 p.m. EDT April 25, 2014


Ukraine


The United States and other nations in the Group of Seven say they have agreed to "move swiftly" to impose additional economic sanctions on Russia in response to its actions in Ukraine.
In a joint statement released Friday night by the White House, the G-7 nations say they will act urgently to intensify "targeted sanctions." The statement says that the G-7 will also continue to prepare broader sanctions on key Russian economic sectors if Moscow takes more aggressive action.
The White House says U.S. sanctions could be levied as early as Monday.
The G-7 nations say they are moving forward on the targeted sanctions now because of the urgency of securing plans for Ukraine to hold presidential elections next month.
Russian warplanes have entered Ukrainian airspace several times in the last 24 hours, the Pentagon announced Friday.
U.S. officials called on Russia to cease the operations, said Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman.
"We call upon the Russians to take immediate steps to de-escalate the situation," Warren said.
Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke with his Russian counterpart on Thursday, but details of their conversation were not released. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has tried, without success, to contact Russia's defense minister.
Ukraine's air defenses are old but still potent enough, under the right circumstances, to take down Russian aircraft, said Michael O'Hanlon, a military analyst at the Brookings Institution. In fact, drawing fire might be Russia's intent by entering Ukraine's airspace.
"I don't put a deliberate provocation, in order to create a pretext for response and invasion, past Putin at this point," O'Hanlon said.
The U.S. response to such a move, O'Hanlon said, would be limited, perhaps the sale of arms or sharing intelligence.
The violation of Ukraine's airspace follows war games that Russian troops began near the border. About 40,000 Russian troops have massed there, according to the Pentagon. Last month, Russian troops seized key facilities on the Crimean peninsula and annexed it.
Tensions in the region have escalated steadily since then. Russian-backed separatists have seized government facilities in eastern Ukraine, prompting Ukrainian forces to try to evict them. Several people have been killed in those clashes.
Earlier this week, the Pentagon deployed 600 paratroopers to Poland and three other Baltic states to reassure NATO allies in the region about the U.S. commitment to their defense.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk charged Friday that Moscow "wants to start World War III" by seeking to take over Ukraine militarily and politically.
"Russia behaves as an armed gangster, but the time will come when the gangster will be hit in the face," he said at a government meeting Friday. "The aggressive efforts of the Russian military on Ukraine's soil will lead to a conflict on European soil."
"The world has not yet forgotten World War II, but Russia already wants to start World War III," Yatsenyuk said.
The prime minister accused Russia of organizing the unrest in Ukraine's east to sabotage Ukrainian presidential elections, scheduled for May 25 when the country will vote on a replacement for former president Viktor Yanukovych, who was ousted following street protests in February.
Over the past two weeks armed pro-Russia protesters have taken over some key administrative buildings in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, demanding a referendum on the region joining Russia.
Ukrainian officials have taken back some buildings in ongoing anti-terrorist operations that resumed Tuesday after separatists were accused of murdering a pro-Kiev local official, whose body was found near the separatist-controlled city of Slovyansk.
In the latest incident on Friday, a Ukrainian military helicopter exploded at an airfield in Ukraine's east after it was shot at by a grenade-launcher, said the country's Defense Ministry.
Pro-Russian protesters had stormed the same airfield April 15. At the time, the Ukrainian army pushed them back, wounding three protesters, to the dismay of some 300 locals who blamed the army for opening fire.
The Defense Ministry is investigating the incident, but has not released information on who they think is behind the attack. Nobody was killed in the incident, which came after Ukrainian law enforcers killed five separatists, while attacking their roadblock in the east.
In another development, a Ukrainian foreign ministry spokesman, Yevhen Perebyinis, said at a briefing on Friday that contact had been lost with members of a military verification mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Donetsk region, in the east.
Perebyinis said that "according to preliminary report, they could be captured by terrorists," Interfax Ukraine reports. The OSCE mission was sent into disputed areas to try to calm tensions. There have been no confirmation of the report that the members of the team may have run into trouble.forts of the Russian military on Ukraine's soil will lead to a conflict on European soil."
Meanwhile, Russia announced new military exercises Thursday involving ground and air forces near its border with Ukraine.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused the West of plotting to control Ukraine to bolster its own interests in the region.
"The West wants -- and this is how it all began -- to seize control of Ukraine because of their own political ambitions, not in the interests of the Ukrainian people," Lavrov said.
As tensions mounted, seven people were injured early Friday when a hand grenade was tossed at a checkpoint manned by pro-Ukrainian activists outside the Black Sea port of Odessa in southeastern Ukraine.
Local police spokesman Volodymyr Shablienko said unknown men threw the explosive device at a checkpoint set up by local authorities and activists.
Odessa residents have built several checkpoints outside of the city in an effort to block pro-Russian separatists entering from Moldova's breakaway territory of Transdniestria. The enclave, which declared indeendence in the early 1990s, is located about 50 miles west of Odessa. It is home to Russian peacekeepers and Russian troops guarding a cache of Soviet-era arms.
A senior official traveling in Asia with President Barack Obama said he is likely to call European leaders Friday to discuss the possibility of further economic sanctions on Russia. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because there had been no official announcement.
Secretary of State John Kerry charged on Thursday that Russia is not abiding by last week's Geneva agreement to de-escalate the crisis in Ukraine. Russia, he said, "has refused to take a single step in the right direction."
"If Russia continues in this direction, it will be not just a grave mistake, it will be an expensive mistake," he told reporters at the State Department. "The world will make sure costs for Russia will only grow."
In another development, Ukraine's State Security Service announced Friday that it had arrested two Ukrainians allegedly working for Russian intelligence services. One of the arrested was an officer of the Interior Ministry's Internal Troops, who was assigned with getting information on internal troop locations.
The internal troops are under the control of the Interior Ministry and are the main force behind the counter-terrorist operation lead by Ukraine's government in the east against armed separatists. The operation was suspended for a few days after Ukraine and Russia agreed on measures to deescalate tensions in the region in Geneva April 17.
Russia has hinted it may send troops into the region to protect ethnic Russians, but a new poll published by the Washington-based International Republican Institute showed that 69% of Ukrainians living in the country's troubled east are against Russian troops entering Ukraine.
Some in the east are also frustrated with a perceived lack of progress against the pro-Moscow protests.
"I say -- if we have a state, it must restore order, and not leave us one on one with these people," said Natalia Afanasieva, who lives in Horlivka, a city the Donetsk region."
Contributing: Associated Press
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Pentagon: Russian warplanes violate Ukraine's airspace

from usatoday


Tom Vanden Brook, Olga Rudenko and Doug Stanglin, USA TODAY6:08 p.m. EDT April 25, 2014

Ukraine



Russian warplanes have entered Ukrainian airspace several times in the last 24 hours, the Pentagon announced Friday.
U.S. officials called on Russia to cease the operations, said Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman.
"We call upon the Russians to take immediate steps to de-escalate the situation," Warren said.
Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke with his Russian counterpart on Thursday, but details of their conversation were not released. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has tried, without success, to contact Russia's defense minister.
Ukraine's air defenses are old but still potent enough, under the right circumstances, to take down Russian aircraft, said Michael O'Hanlon, a military analyst at the Brookings Institution. In fact, drawing fire might be Russia's intent by entering Ukraine's airspace.
"I don't put a deliberate provocation, in order to create a pretext for response and invasion, past Putin at this point," O'Hanlon said.
The U.S. response to such a move, O'Hanlon said, would be limited, perhaps the sale of arms or sharing intelligence.
The violation of Ukraine's airspace follows war games that Russian troops began near the border. About 40,000 Russian troops have massed there, according to the Pentagon. Last month, Russian troops seized key facilities on the Crimean peninsula and annexed it.
Tensions in the region have escalated steadily since then. Russian-backed separatists have seized government facilities in eastern Ukraine, prompting Ukrainian forces to try to evict them. Several people have been killed in those clashes.
Earlier this week, the Pentagon deployed 600 paratroopers to Poland and three other Baltic states to reassure NATO allies in the region about the U.S. commitment to their defense.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk charged Friday that Moscow "wants to start World War III" by seeking to take over Ukraine militarily and politically.
"Russia behaves as an armed gangster, but the time will come when the gangster will be hit in the face," he said at a government meeting Friday. "The aggressive efforts of the Russian military on Ukraine's soil will lead to a conflict on European soil."
"The world has not yet forgotten World War II, but Russia already wants to start World War III," Yatsenyuk said.
The prime minister accused Russia of organizing the unrest in Ukraine's east to sabotage Ukrainian presidential elections, scheduled for May 25 when the country will vote on a replacement for former president Viktor Yanukovych, who was ousted following street protests in February.
Over the past two weeks armed pro-Russia protesters have taken over some key administrative buildings in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, demanding a referendum on the region joining Russia.
Ukrainian officials have taken back some buildings in ongoing anti-terrorist operations that resumed Tuesday after separatists were accused of murdering a pro-Kiev local official, whose body was found near the separatist-controlled city of Slovyansk.
In the latest incident on Friday, a Ukrainian military helicopter exploded at an airfield in Ukraine's east after it was shot at by a grenade-launcher, said the country's Defense Ministry.
Pro-Russian protesters had stormed the same airfield April 15. At the time, the Ukrainian army pushed them back, wounding three protesters, to the dismay of some 300 locals who blamed the army for opening fire.
The Defense Ministry is investigating the incident, but has not released information on who they think is behind the attack. Nobody was killed in the incident, which came after Ukrainian law enforcers killed five separatists, while attacking their roadblock in the east.
In another development, a Ukrainian foreign ministry spokesman, Yevhen Perebyinis, said at a briefing on Friday that contact had been lost with members of a military verification mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Donetsk region, in the east.
Perebyinis said that "according to preliminary report, they could be captured by terrorists," Interfax Ukraine reports. The OSCE mission was sent into disputed areas to try to calm tensions. There have been no confirmation of the report that the members of the team may have run into trouble.forts of the Russian military on Ukraine's soil will lead to a conflict on European soil."
Meanwhile, Russia announced new military exercises Thursday involving ground and air forces near its border with Ukraine.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused the West of plotting to control Ukraine to bolster its own interests in the region.
"The West wants -- and this is how it all began -- to seize control of Ukraine because of their own political ambitions, not in the interests of the Ukrainian people," Lavrov said.
As tensions mounted, seven people were injured early Friday when a hand grenade was tossed at a checkpoint manned by pro-Ukrainian activists outside the Black Sea port of Odessa in southeastern Ukraine.
Local police spokesman Volodymyr Shablienko said unknown men threw the explosive device at a checkpoint set up by local authorities and activists.
Odessa residents have built several checkpoints outside of the city in an effort to block pro-Russian separatists entering from Moldova's breakaway territory of Transdniestria. The enclave, which declared indeendence in the early 1990s, is located about 50 miles west of Odessa. It is home to Russian peacekeepers and Russian troops guarding a cache of Soviet-era arms.
A senior official traveling in Asia with President Barack Obama said he is likely to call European leaders Friday to discuss the possibility of further economic sanctions on Russia. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because there had been no official announcement.
Secretary of State John Kerry charged on Thursday that Russia is not abiding by last week's Geneva agreement to de-escalate the crisis in Ukraine. Russia, he said, "has refused to take a single step in the right direction."
"If Russia continues in this direction, it will be not just a grave mistake, it will be an expensive mistake," he told reporters at the State Department. "The world will make sure costs for Russia will only grow."
In another development, Ukraine's State Security Service announced Friday that it had arrested two Ukrainians allegedly working for Russian intelligence services. One of the arrested was an officer of the Interior Ministry's Internal Troops, who was assigned with getting information on internal troop locations.
The internal troops are under the control of the Interior Ministry and are the main force behind the counter-terrorist operation lead by Ukraine's government in the east against armed separatists. The operation was suspended for a few days after Ukraine and Russia agreed on measures to deescalate tensions in the region in Geneva April 17.
Russia has hinted it may send troops into the region to protect ethnic Russians, but a new poll published by the Washington-based International Republican Institute showed that 69% of Ukrainians living in the country's troubled east are against Russian troops entering Ukraine.
Some in the east are also frustrated with a perceived lack of progress against the pro-Moscow protests.
"I say -- if we have a state, it must restore order, and not leave us one on one with these people," said Natalia Afanasieva, who lives in Horlivka, a city the Donetsk region."
Contributing: Associated Press
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