Military pressure on Ukraine from Russia and the
separatists that Moscow supports is likely to last decades and future
generations will have to undergo military training, President Petro Poroshenko
said on Saturday.
Poroshenko made one of his gloomiest predictions
on prospects for peace in his country days before he meets German and French
leaders in Berlin for a summit he called to urge them to put pressure on Russia
to comply with a 6-month-old peace plan strained by ceasefire violations and
shelling.
Poroshenko, speaking at a military rally in
Kharkiv region at which he handed over new weapons and equipment to the army,
praised Ukrainian forces for combating what he called a "Russian
offensive" in the separatist conflict that erupted in the eastern
Donbass region in April 2014.
But he saw a possibility of a "large-scale
escalation" of military action from Russian-backed separatists around
Ukraine's Independence Day, which falls on Monday.
"The military threat from the east is a
tangible reality for decades to come. This threat will not go away in the near future
and every generation of Ukrainians must have army experience," he said.
Military call-ups and mobilization would
continue, he added. "The time of ill-considered pacifism and short-sighted
neglect of the defense issues have now receded into the past," he said.
More than 6,500 people — Ukrainian
soldiers, civilians, and rebel forces — have been killed in the conflict.
Pro-Russian rebels took up arms in the east after Russia annexed Crimea in
March 2014 in response to the overthrow of a pro-Moscow president in Kiev by
street protests a month earlier.
Kiev and Western governments, which have imposed
sanctions on Russia, say there is irrefutable evidence of Russian involvement
in the separatist resistance. Moscow denies it is providing men or arms.
Ukrainian authorities have mobilized huge
numbers of police and interior-ministry troops to reinforce security for
independence celebrations on Sunday and Monday which will include a march in
Kiev of soldiers serving on the front line.
After attending celebrations on Monday,
Poroshenko is due to fly to Berlin to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel and
French President Francois Hollande.
He said on Thursday he would press them to step
up diplomatic pressure on Moscow to end Russian "aggression" and force
it to comply with a peace plan and ceasefire mapped out last February in Minsk,
Belarus.
Both sides have withdrawn large numbers of heavy
weapons from the conflict zone in line with the ceasefire but violations and
sporadic clashes still take a steady toll of lives daily.
Several civilians and Ukrainian soldiers have
been killed in a recent upsurge in fighting in the east and southeast, near the
port city of Mariupol.
(Writing By Richard Balmforth; Editing by Andrew
Heavens)
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