Ukraine Attack Will Bring Severe Costs, Biden Warns Putin

Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin
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Efforts to de-escalate the tensions in Ukraine via a frenzy of telephone diplomacy was unable to achieve any serious results on Saturday, with the White House insisting that Russia would face ‘swift and severe costs’ if its troops carry out the planned invasion.

Africa Daily News, New York reports that Russian President Vladimir Putin had earlier slammed Western claims that such a move might be on the horizon, calling the idea ‘provocative speculation’ that could result to a conflict in the ex-Soviet country.

Just a few weeks of tensions that have seen Russia nearly surround its western neighbour with more than 100,000 troops intensified after Washington warned that an all-out invasion could begin ‘any day’ and Russia launched its biggest naval drills in years across the Black Sea.

Read Also: ‘Be ‘Firm’ In Russia Talks’ , Ukraine Urges West

‘If Russia undertakes a further invasion of Ukraine, the United States together with our Allies and partners will respond decisively and impose swift and severe costs on Russia,’ US President Joe Biden told Putin, according to the White House.

While the United States was prepared to engage in diplomacy, “we are equally prepared for other scenarios”, Biden said, as the two nations stare down one of the gravest crises in East-West relations since the Cold War.

While the Biden-Putin talks were “professional and substantive”, lasting just over an hour, they produced “no fundamental change” in dynamics, a senior US official told reporters.

Russia’s defence ministry added to the febrile atmosphere by announcing that it had chased off a US submarine that it alleged had crossed into its territorial waters near the Kuril Islands in the northern Pacific.

The ministry disclosed that it had summoned the US defence attache in Moscow over the incident, while the Pentagon said only that it was aware of press reports.

Putin began his afternoon by holding talks with Macron that the French presidency said lasted one hour and 40 minutes.

Macron’s office said ‘both expressed a desire to continue dialogue’ but, like Washington, reported no clear progress.

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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