Author Topic: What the Russian, Ukrainian delegations agreed on and Moldova rejects NATO  (Read 3319 times)

Roger

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   What the Russian, Ukrainian delegations agreed on and Moldova rejects NATO
TASS

Mar 1, 2022


   On February 28, in Gomel, Belarus, Ukrainian and Russian delegations held their first round of talks on a ceasefire in Ukraine and agreed upon a new meeting. According to Adviser to the Ukrainian President's Chief of Staff Mikhail Podolyak, "the parties determined a number of priority subjects with certain solutions mapped out." In order for "the solutions to have any opportunities to be implemented, the sides left for their capitals for consultations." The next meeting will be held in the near future, according to Russian Presidential Aide Vladimir Medinsky who led the Russian delegation.

The talks started around 14:00 Moscow time and lasted over five hours. Ukraine was represented by head of Ukraine's ruling party's parliamentary faction David Arakhamia, Defense Minister Alexey Reznikov and Podolyak. The Russian side was headed by Medinsky and included Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko and Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin.

The main result of the talks is that the parties are ready to continue them, according to Director of the Fund for Assistance to 21st Century Technologies Ivan Konovalov. That said, it is possible to presume that the discussion touched mostly on political issues, such as the status of Ukraine, rather than the situation "on the ground," the expert thinks. Since the sides agreed to continue consultations, it seems that they found some foothold to begin dialogue, however, it is absolutely not clear what concession on the part of Ukraine may be discussed, according to Coordinator of the European Dialogue Expert Group in Ukraine Georgy Chizhov. He suggested that the sides may have discussed the status of Russian language as Ukraine's second official one.

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Second round of Russian-Ukrainian talks to be held on March 2
TASS

Mar 1, 2022


   Another round of talks between the Russian and Ukrainian delegations are scheduled for March 2, Ukraine's Zerkalo Nedeli media outlet said on Tuesday.

Another Ukrainian media outlet, Glavkom, citing sources in the Ukrainian delegation, disclosed the terms advanced by the sides during the first meeting. It said that Russia allegedly demanded Ukraine commit to paper its off-bloc status at the parliamentary level and organize a referendum on this matter. Apart from that, the Russian side demanded Ukraine recognize the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics in the administrative borders of the corresponding regions and drop its demand that Crimea should be returned to Ukraine. Ukraine, according to Glavkom, demanded a ceasefire and withdrawal of Russian troops from its territory.

The Russian-Ukrainian talks were held on Monday. The talks lasted for five hours. The Russian delegation was led by presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky, who said earlier that the Russian delegation was ready to speak with the Ukrainian side as long as it may take to reach agreements. He also said that the delegations had preliminarily agreed to hold the next round of talks in Belarus.

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Talks with Russia to be held, not in Belovezhskaya Pushcha, Ukrainian official says
TASS

Mar 3, 2022


   The Ukrainian side stated that talks with Russia will be held yet not in Belovezhskaya Pushcha in Belarus but elsewhere, David Arakhamia of the Ukrainian delegation said on Wednesday.

"Information about the negotiations in [Belovezhskaya Pushcha] does not correspond to reality. Negotiations will really happen, but the place is different. All the details will be later," he wrote on Facebook.

The Russian delegation has already arrived in Belovezhskaya Pushcha where, as it was planned earlier, a second round of talks between both countries would happen. Vladimir Medinsky who heads the Russian delegation, reported upon the arrival that Russian representatives were expecting the Ukrainian delegation on March 3. According to him, the site for the talks was selected jointly. The Belarusian Foreign Ministry reported that the talks would be held in Belovezhskaya Pushcha.

In response to these statements, Adviser to the Ukrainian President's Chief of Staff Mikhail Podolyak, one of the members of the Ukrainian delegation, urged to wait until "the real beginning of the dialogue." "It is doubtful that without the presence of the other (Ukrainian) side at the negotiating table, negotiations can really take place. So just wait for the real beginning of the dialogue," he wrote on Twitter.

The makeup of the Russian delegation has not changed - in addition to Medinsky, it includes Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko, Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin, Chairman of the Russian State Duma Committee on Foreign Affairs Leonid Slutsky, as well as Russian Ambassador to Belarus, Russia's permanent representative at the Contact Group Boris Gryzlov.

The Russian-Ukrainian talks were held on Monday in the Gomel Region in Belarus, the meeting lasted five hours. The Russian delegation was led by Russian Presidential Aide Vladimir Medinsky. Earlier, he stated that the Russian delegation was ready to negotiate with the Ukrainian side for as long as it would be necessary to reach an agreement. Belarusian Foreign Minister Vladimir Makei said that he hoped that the two delegations would meet for another round of talks at the Belarusian-Polish border in a couple of days.

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Urgency of talks arises
Global Times, By Chen Qingqing and Zhang Han

March 3, 2022


   As Russia's military operation in Ukraine entered its seventh day, the world is closely observing the situation as the rising cost of the war is being felt not only by Russia and Ukraine, but also Europe, and has made the second round of negotiations for a possible ceasefire an urgent issue.

Countries like China have continued calling for diplomatic efforts to de-escalate Ukraine-Russia tensions, but the US-led Western bloc keeps fueling the crisis with more extreme sanctions and aggressive rhetoric, which would only lead to more conflicts, divisions and confrontations, experts said.

State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi had a phone conversation with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba at the latter's invitation on Tuesday. Kuleba said "China has played a constructive role on this issue and that Ukraine is ready to step up communication with China. He looked forward to China's mediation efforts for the ceasefire." The conversation proved that some accusations and reports to distort China's neutral stance from some Western politicians and media are groundless.

Peace talks urgent

The second round of negotiations between the delegations of Ukraine and Russia is scheduled on Wednesday night local time. According to information obtained by TASS, the talks are to be held in Belarus, in the Bialowieza forest. However, there is still no certainty about this, TASS said.

A second round of talks between Ukraine and Russia will take place later on Wednesday, Russian state news agency reported, citing an aide to the Ukrainian presidential office.

Although there's been a huge difference between the stances of the two sides, they have a strong willingness to solve the problem through negotiation, said the Chinese analysts.

Rather than encouraging the two sides to find a solution through negotiations as China advocated, the US and the West showed little encouragement for the peace talks. Instead, the US and its allies have been inciting Ukraine to continue confronting Russia, experts said.

The spillover effect of the crisis has become palpable. For Russia, given the multiple rounds of West-led sanctions, its economy and finance have been under mounting pressure. As the military conflict drags on, Ukraine has also been seeing significant consequences, which cast a shadow over the future of European countries as well.

Some experts said that given the growing pressure on energy prices, in addition to inflation pressure and the risk of triggering a new financial crisis, advancing the diplomatic measures to solve the crisis is echoing the interests of all relevant parties.

Continuing the military operation while having negotiations could be the target of Russia, which shows that Moscow is concerned that the other side may protract the process which will bring more uncertainties, some experts said.

Disrupting forces

"The US is unwilling to see the situation de-escalate soon, so it does not want to see any positive factors amid this crisis that could help ease the tensions, as the Ukraine crisis provides an opportunity for Washington to enhance its leading role in European security affairs," Li Haidong, a professor from the Institute of International Relations of China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko was quoted by Russian media as saying that Russian and Ukrainian counterparts will sit down at the negotiating table, but very powerful forces wish to derail this process.

"It is clear that the US needs geopolitical tensions to ease domestic pressure, but it also fears the tensions will burn the US itself. Russia would act tough to ensure its security if sanctions continue and even escalate, and threaten the Russian lifeline," Lü said.

US President Joe Biden raised his anti-Russia rhetoric during his State of the Union address on Tuesday vowing that Russian President Vladimir Putin "will pay a continuing high price over the long run" while he may make gains on the battlefield.

In the 6,500-word speech, nearly 1,200 words were dedicated to the Ukraine crisis, with both Republicans and Democrats cheering when Biden summarized US and EU financial sanctions imposed on Russia, including the closing of airspace to Russian flights. Ukrainian ambassador to the US Oksana Markarova was present at the event.

Judging from the atmosphere, Lü Xiang, a research fellow at the Institute of American Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, believes Biden partly achieved his goal — to unite the two parties and demonstrate US leadership in NATO and in front of its European allies.

However, experts suspected the short-term solidarity in the first week of battle may soon be forgotten when Europe, particularly Germany which has close economic interactions with Russia, suffers the pain of cutting trade ties with Russia.

"We have responded to this question many times," Wang Wenbin, spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said during the press conference on Wednesday when he was asked whether China would follow as Western countries sanctioned Russia. Instead of putting the livelihood and economy of Russia in severe difficulties, the unilateral sanctions have never been an effective way of solving the problem, which would only escalate the confrontations and divisions, the Chinese official said.