As delivered by Ambassador Daniel B. Baer to the Permanent Council, Vienna | October 22, 2015 | Comment on this item on our Facebook page
During the past few weeks, we have heard
in the Permanent Council our distinguished Russian colleague call the conflict
in Ukraine an “internal” one. Let us recall how we came to discuss this issue
in the Permanent Council. On February 27, 2014, men in military uniforms
lacking any insignia occupied the Crimean Parliament building in Simferopol,
the capital of Ukraine’s Autonomous Republic of Crimea. They then took over the
rest of the Crimean peninsula, seizing total control and holding its residents
captive. Russia insisted then that these soldiers were local patriots
protesting the government in Kyiv and defending themselves against threats of
discrimination. These so called local patriots then held a sham “referendum” at
gunpoint on March 16, 2014. The outcome supposedly reflected the will of the
people of Crimea to leave Ukraine and return to Russia.
The evidence tells a different story:
These were Russian soldiers and operatives. If there were any doubts about what
happened in Crimea, President Putin himself cleared them up when, in April
2014, he confirmed that the mystery soldiers were in fact Russian personnel. In
a 2015 interview, President Putin told the world that he had in fact launched
the plan to forcibly annex Crimea on February 22, 2014, the day after former
President Yanukovych fled Kyiv. The so-called Crimean “referendum” to join
Russia was held in violation of Ukrainian law, the Ukrainian constitution, and
international norms. The invasion and occupation of Crimea runs counter to Russia’s
international obligations and OSCE commitments. Russia must end its occupation
of Crimea, which remains a part of Ukraine.
Madam Chair, colleagues, much of what
happened in Crimea happened in eastern Ukraine. The Russian military presence
in the Donbas is real, and Russian aggression sparked the conflict there.
Moscow sent Russian military personnel into Ukraine to train and equip the
separatists, and to provide command and control support to separatist forces.
There are enough Russian military and security personnel thoroughly integrated
with separatist fighters in the Donbas that we do not differentiate between the
two groups. It is one fighting force that is well armed, equipped, and
commanded, and a complete Russian creation. In fact, we know Russia is still
supplying the fighting force in eastern Ukraine. These facts bear remembering
when our distinguished Russian colleague says, as he did during the last
Permanent Council meeting that, “our esteemed colleagues once again thought it
a good idea to dream up an imaginary Russian military presence in Donbas.”
Ukraine and the United States have
provided to OSCE participating States extensive evidence of the considerable
Russian military presence in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian authorities have even
arrested several active duty Russian personnel in government-controlled
territory in Ukraine. The OSCE Special Monitoring Mission has provided
additional evidence, and recently reported the presence of some of Russia’s
most sophisticated military equipment, including the Buratino TOS-1 rocket
system and the Zhytel mobile jamming station. When a number of delegations
raised the presence of this equipment in the last Permanent Council, the
distinguished Russian Ambassador stated, “Attempts to read anything into this
remain in the realm of pseudoscientific fiction and are not in keeping with the
format of the Permanent Council.” I beg to differ.
Recent history in the Crimean and Donbas
regions of Ukraine is important because Russia now appears to be denying its
responsibility for implementing the Minsk agreements. At the last Permanent
Council, the distinguished Russian representative referred to Russia as a
“facilitator” of the Minsk agreements. Let’s be clear: Russia is a party to the
Minsk agreements. This has been the case from the beginning because Russia has
been directly involved in the conflict from the beginning. The Russian
representative signed the September 2014 Minsk Protocol and Memorandum, and the
February 2015 Package of Measures. With this signature, Russia committed to
implement all of its Minsk commitments by the end of 2015.
We do not hear from Russia about the steps
it has taken or will take to ensure the full implementation of Minsk. I would
like to point out again that Ukraine has made significant progress implementing
its Minsk commitments. Ukraine’s good faith efforts have largely been met by
Russian filibustering and demands for direct dialogue between the separatists
and Kyiv outside of the Trilateral Contact Group’s four working groups. Dialogue
between Kyiv and the separatists and their Russian sponsors can only happen in
the working groups in the presence of Russia and the OSCE. Russia’s actions
clearly show that Moscow is more focused on blaming Kyiv should Minsk fail,
rather than on ensuring Minsk succeeds.
With the ceasefire largely holding and
initial implementation of the supplemental heavy weapons agreement underway, we
have the chance to make progress on Minsk in the next few months. The steps
Russia must take are clear:
1.
Russia
and the separatists must complete the agreed upon supplemental withdrawal of
tanks and heavy weapons. This includes furnishing the SMM with complete
baseline data on these weapons. We expect Ukraine to do the same.
2. Russia and the separatists must engage in good faith
in the political working group to reach agreement on modalities to hold local
elections in certain parts of Donetsk and Luhansk, in accordance with Ukrainian
law and international standards, and with ODIHR observation.
3. Russia must order combined Russian-separatist forces
to stop impeding or interfering with SMM operations. Jamming of SMM UAVs must
stop, and the SMM must be allowed to access the entirety of the territory under
separatist control, including the border with Russia.
4. Russia must ensure the separatists permit the delivery
of humanitarian assistance into areas outside of Ukrainian government control.
The aid must be delivered by recognized humanitarian organizations, in keeping
with Ukrainian law and international standards.
5. Russia must withdraw its weapons and forces from
Ukrainian territory without delay.
6. Russia must return control of the Ukrainian side of
the international border to the Ukrainian government.
7. Russia must release all hostages and illegally
detained persons.
The United States is not alone in making
clear that sanctions against Russia are linked to the full implementation of
Minsk. Sanctions related to Crimea will remain in place as long as the
occupation persists. We cannot accept half measures. Russia must adhere to the
commitments it made and fully implement Minsk, and restore control of Crimea to
the government in Kyiv.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
ULB thanked John Smith for the coperation.
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