(NPR) --- French Foreign
Minister Laurent Fabius said this morning on French radio that if separatist
troops Mariupol ,
that would constitute a new red line.
Ukrainian servicemen stand guard on a street near a burning
building after a shelling by pro-Russian rebels of a residential
sector in Mariupol, eastern Ukraine, last month.
Reuters /Landov
|
"I told my
counterpart Sergei Lavrov that such a move would mean Russia wants to make a link with Crimea , and that would change everything," said
Fabius.
Then he stated that
Europe would have to look at slapping new sanctions on Russia .
Ukrainian President
Petro Poroshenko has been making the rounds of European capitals, working to
get a real cease-fire in place and to get Russian troops out of his country. Russia denies that its forces are in Ukraine and
that it is assisting separatists.
At a summit just 10
days ago in Brussels , Belgium ,
on the day after the second Minsk
cease-fire agreement was signed, Poroshenko had seemed hopeful. He said he felt
a real unity and support for Ukraine
from its European partners.
One French analyst
says it is becoming increasingly painful to watch fruitless negotiations with Russia , when it
is clear the separatists and their Russian allies have no intention of stopping
the fight.
Just days after the
February 12 peace agreement was signed, they launched a final assault on the
key train hub town of Debaltseve ,
forcing Ukrainian forces to withdraw.
Now there are
reports of shelling around the port city of Mariupol . If the city were to fall to
separatists, a land corridor would be created between separatist territory and
Crimea, which was annexed by Russia
last year.
One Russian
newspaper, Novaya Gazeta, has published what it says is a classified Kremlin document
from February 2014, which meticulously plans the annexation of Crimea and the
destabilizing of eastern Ukraine .
Across the Atlantic , U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has called
the Ukrainian separatists a de facto extension of the Russian army.
Yesterday's
discussions in Paris by the four signatories to
the Minsk agreement (France ,
Germany , Ukraine and Russia ) produced little but tension
and disagreement. The only thing the foreign ministers agreed upon was to bolster
a European peace-monitoring mission in eastern Ukraine .
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