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Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.
Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (ARCHIVE)

Follow all of the developments as they happen

08:15 19.5.2015

08:17 19.5.2015

08:23 19.5.2015
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland speaks to reporters after talks with Russian Foreign Ministry officials in Moscow on May 18.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland speaks to reporters after talks with Russian Foreign Ministry officials in Moscow on May 18.

U.S. Diplomats Discuss Ukraine, Syria In Moscow

Two top American diplomats were in Moscow on May 18 for top-level talks for the first time in months on two crises bedeviling global affairs -- Ukraine and Syria.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Europe Victoria Nuland met with senior Russian officials to discuss ways of "deepening our engagement" in implementing a shaky Ukraine cease-fire, a senior department official said.

She told reporters in Moscow that they discussed "concrete steps" and "particularly dug in on how the United States might be able to support the process" of implementing the cease-fire.

Meanwhile, special U.S. envoy for Syria Daniel Rubinstein met with Russian Foreign Ministry counterparts on "how to create the conditions for a genuine, sustainable political transition in Syria," the department said.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said they had a "sincere and detailed discussion" about Syria.

Rubinstein emphasized the "urgent need" to defeat extremist groups through both military steps and a political solution, and emphasized how Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's continued presence exacerbates "sectarianism and extremism" in Syria and the region.

Based on reporting by dpa and AFP
08:31 19.5.2015

Ukraine Says Russia Tried To Kill Captured Russian Soldiers

BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Ukraine Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin said on Monday that Russia had tried to kill the two Russian servicemen Kiev says it has captured in east Ukraine.

Klimkin, speaking in Brussels after trade talks, declined to give details of how Russian forces had tried to kill the pair.

Ukraine's military reported on Sunday that it had detained two Russian servicemen, but the Kremlin reiterated on Monday that there were no regular Russian troops fighting in east Ukraine.

Ukraine and NATO accuse Moscow of supporting pro-Russian separatists with troops and military supplies.

08:36 19.5.2015
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (left) meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi on May 12.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (left) meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi on May 12.

Kerry Plays Russian Roulette Gambling On Easing Ties

Washington, May 19, 2015 (AFP) -- US Secretary of State John Kerry took a risky gamble facing derision and much skepticism when he flew to Russia last week for the first time in two years to meet President Vladimir Putin.

But his bet may be beginning to pay off, as two top American diplomats were welcomed in Moscow on Monday for top-level talks for the first time in months on two crises bedeviling global affairs -- Ukraine and Syria.

Kerry's trip ran counter to international efforts to isolate the Russian president for his actions in Ukraine.

Critics were swift to line up to lambast the top US diplomat, accusing him of merely bolstering Putin's image for little in return.

Writing for CNN, Leon Aron, director of Russian Studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, bitingly dismissed Kerry's Sochi press conference alongside his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov as "a gooey stream of unctuous cliches, non sequiturs, tautologies and euphemisms that underscored Putin's diplomatic victory."

But even though there was no concrete breakthrough after eight hours of talks at the Black Sea resort of Sochi, there are signs of a different tone in a relationship long marred by animosity, but vital in dealing with a host of issues from the Middle East to nuclear non-proliferation.

Assistant Secretary for Europe Victoria Nuland met with senior Russian officials to discuss ways of "deepening our engagement" in implementing a shaky Ukraine ceasefire, a senior State Department official said.

Meanwhile, special US envoy for Syria Daniel Rubinstein was also in the Russian capital to discuss with the foreign ministry "how to create the conditions for a genuine, sustainable political transition in Syria," the State Department said.

- Digging in -

A fluent Russian speaker, Nuland has not traveled to Moscow since late 2013 just before Putin incurred global wrath by moving to annex the southern Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea and backing separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.

She told reporters in Moscow that "we particularly dug in on how the United States might be able to support the process" of implementing the Ukraine ceasefire, including discussing "concrete steps."

Washington, along with its European allies, has slapped sanctions on Moscow, punishing it for its role in Europe's worst post-Cold War crisis in hopes of reversing Putin's policies.

But in the intervening months as fighting in Ukraine has dragged on, US-Russian ties have plunged and US efforts to engage Moscow have stalemated -- except on the issue of the Iran nuclear talks where Russian officials are a key player.

Kerry has for some time been eager to talk to Putin, amid US fears that the Russian leader is increasingly relying on only a tiny circle of loyal advisors.

The aim of the Sochi trip was to keep the lines of communication open, stressed Kerry, saying there was "no substitute" for direct talks.

"This was an important visit at an important time, and we didn't come here with an expectation that we were going to define a specific path forward with respect to one crisis or another, or have a major breakthrough," he said.

Lavrov said the trip "had allowed us to better understand each other."

Some analysts highlighted that in the current climate, US President Barack Obama cannot travel to Russia and risk humiliation by the belligerent Putin.

"Having a face-to-face meeting with Putin is very important, but it would be very risky for President Obama to do that," Brookings Institution expert Fiona Hill told AFP.

But she cautioned: "It's too soon to talk about the reset of the reset."

US officials said privately they had been surprised by the new tenor of the conversation with Putin in Sochi, who appeared ready for in-depth discussions, eschewing his usual lengthy anti-West diatribes.

At the end of their talks hosted by the Russian leader in his summer residence, the two men even shared some small talk, cracking a bottle of local wine.

Hill cautioned that the United States would have to "be very, very careful" going forward, warning "Russian intentions are extremely difficult to figure out."

Both countries needed the other, she stressed.

"Russia does not want to be left out in this strategic interplay in the Middle East," Hill explained.

Joerg Forbrig, expert on Eastern Europe with the German Marshall Fund, said Kerry's visit was "very symbolic, with very little substance."

"Nothing really happened and it was a gesture by the Americans for the Russians," he told AFP.

"The Americans acknowledge that there are issues that need to be resolved with Russia, but I don't believe that Russia is sincere because their main objective is to confront the West."

10:13 19.5.2015

10:14 19.5.2015

10:57 19.5.2015

An excerpt:

VELYKA NOVOSILKA, Ukraine -- About once a week, Leonid Sholkovsky has a reccurring dream about the battlefields from which he collects the remains of fallen Ukrainian soldiers.

In the dream, a young fighter is walking toward Sholkovsky, stepping over the twisted scraps of military vehicles and dead soldiers strewn across the blackened fields of eastern Ukraine. The solider has a helmet on, and there is a blue and yellow patch on the shoulder of his camouflage jacket, so Sholkovsky knows the soldier could be one of the dozens of Ukrainian men he has sent home in a body bag over the last six months.

What Sholkovsky doesn’t understand is why the young solider is shaking his finger at him.

“He’s either trying to warn me of something, or telling me not to finish what I’m doing,” Sholkovsky said. “Every time I go into a church now, I light a candle for that soldier, whoever he is.”

Few would envy Sholkovsky’s work, not least because of the nightmares that come with it.

11:04 19.5.2015

11:04 19.5.2015

Top NATO, Russian officials to meet in Brussels

BRUSSELS (AP) -- NATO officials say the alliance secretary-general will hold talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, the first such contacts since they met in January.

According to one NATO official, secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg and Lavrov will meet Tuesday in Brussels, and are expected to discuss NATO-Russia relations, including military-to-military lines of communications and the need for transparency in military activities.

The NATO official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with alliance custom, said the talks will also address the importance of fully implementing the Minsk agreements, which are designed to end the fighting in eastern Ukraine.

NATO accuses Russia of backing the pro-Moscow rebels in Ukraine's east, and relations between the alliance and Russia have dropped to their lowest point since the Cold War.

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