Obama says strains over Ukraine not leading to new Cold War with Russia
President Barack Obama has escalated US economic sanctions against Russia on Tuesday for its aggression againstUkraine.
He dismissed suggestions the growing chill in US-Russian relations marked the start of a new Cold War, Reuters Reported.
“It’s not a new Cold War,” Obama told reporters.
“What it is, is a very specific issue related to Russia’s unwillingness to recognize that Ukraine can chart its own path,” he added.
The United States and the European Union, in a carefully coordinated action, announced targeted new sanctions against Russian banks, energy and defense firms.
It was the West’s most serious response yet to what it calls Russian instigation of and continuing support for the separatist uprising in the east and the shootdown of a Malaysian passenger jet on July 17 over eastern Ukraine.
Obama, speaking at the White House, said the sanctions would have a “greater impact on the Russian economy than we’ve seen so far” in a drive to force Moscow to stop backing the separatists.
Until now, Europe had stopped short of tougher steps against Russia for fear of retaliation.
Obama said the new sanctions were a sign of “the waning patience Europe has with nice words from President (Vladimir) Putin that are not matched by actions.”
Senior US officials voiced growing alarm about a Russian troop buildup on the border with eastern Ukraine and a continued supply of heavy weaponry to the separatists.
These are signs that, so far at least, the sanctions are not forcing Putin to back down despite the damage the sanctions are doing to the Russian economy.
Still, Obama did not seem inclined to provide lethal military aid to Ukraine, saying the Ukraine military was “better armed than the separatists” and the issue at hand was “how to prevent bloodshed in eastern Ukraine.”
But Republican Senator Marco Rubio, while applauding the new sanctions, voiced hope that Obama, along with European allies, “will also significantly increase our assistance, including military support, to the Ukrainian government.”
“Russia’s continued aggression against Ukraine cannot go unanswered, and we need to do much more to make clear that we and the rest of the free world stand with the people of Ukraine at this important moment,” Rubio said in a statement.
However, Russian foreign minister denied US blame and said, “The words of US President B. Obama that Russia is not cooperating with an international investigation into the catastrophe of the Malaysian Boeing cause confusion,” in their statement on Wednesday.
Source: Dhaka Tribune