Six months after referendum I revisited #Crimea for @dw_english - engl version https://t.co/oVif32CS7N
— MareikeAden (@MareikeAden) September 28, 2014
Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council has been tweeting its take on the situation in the east of the country today:
This morning terrorists performed another unsuccessful attack on Donetsk airport, and shelled Avdiivka with artillery
— NSDC of Ukraine (@NSDC_ua) September 28, 2014
Terrorists continue violation of ceasefire, shelling positions and residential areas. Most active in Donetsk airport, Debaltsevo, Shchastya
— NSDC of Ukraine (@NSDC_ua) September 28, 2014
RF continue reconnaissance activity both on the border and from air, extension of military units in occupied Crimea and on Kherson border
— NSDC of Ukraine (@NSDC_ua) September 28, 2014
Video for Secretary @PennyPritzker opening comments with President @poroshenko. We will stand with Ukraine every step http://t.co/wsYy6GY9Mm
— Geoffrey Pyatt (@GeoffPyatt) September 28, 2014
This NYT report on Putin's coterie of billionaires has been setting the blogosphere alight over the past few hours:
The New York Times: It pays to be Putin’s friend http://t.co/TWVTmQqPeW pic.twitter.com/meGW1jCDHa
— Kyiv Post (@KyivPost) September 28, 2014
How to become a billionaire? Make friends with Putin http://t.co/YmlN6dVEDk
— Anne Applebaum (@anneapplebaum) September 28, 2014
This is the story on #Russia you must read today. Terrific reporting by @nytimes crew. It Pays to Be Putin’s Friend http://t.co/1WbHysr3SC
— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) September 28, 2014
The annual festival of blacksmiths took place in the war-torn Donetsk against all the odds a week ago. http://t.co/DpineHlSJs
— Leonid Ragozin (@leonidragozin) September 28, 2014
Lavrov says another "reset" needed. RT @riabreakingnews: России и США требуют второй «перезагрузки», считает Лавров http://t.co/AGD5PiWAqW
— Glenn Kates (@gkates) September 28, 2014
Good morning. Thus far, it seems like it could be a relatively quiet day, so we'll take this opportunity to revisit an extremely frank interview given by Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite to "The Washington Post" a couple of days ago. Here are some choice quotes:
The situation [in Ukraine] is still deteriorating. Russian troops are still on the territory of Ukraine. That means that Europe and the world are allowing Russia to be a country which is not only threatening its neighbors but is also organizing a war against its neighbors. It is the same international terrorism as we have in Iraq and Syria.
[...]
If we will be too soft with our sanctions or adapt sanctions but not implement them, I think he will go further trying to unite east Ukraine with south Ukraine and Crimea. He recently said that in two days he is capable to reach Warsaw, the Baltic states and Bucharest. So that is an open threat to his neighbors.
Might he go to Transnistria?
If we will allow him to go, he will go anywhere. The problem is that Putin’s Russia today is ready and willing to go to war. Europe and the West are not ready and not willing to go to war. There is no leadership in Europe or in the world able to stop Putin. Afterwards, we will be surprised that new territories are taken, that new countries are partitioned, and it will be a lot more costly and too late maybe to solve it.
Are you worried he will next attack the Baltics?
If he will not be stopped in Ukraine, he will go further.
You can read the entire interview here
We are now closing the live blog for today. Don't forget that you can follow all our continuous Ukraine coverage here.
Lavrov at UN: Ukraine's non-aligned, neutral status should be respected and preserved http://t.co/LXRE2df8eR
— Sean Guillory (@seansrussiablog) September 27, 2014
Here's a wrap-up from our news desk of Lavrov's address to the UN:
Addressing the UN General Assembly, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has launched a blistering attack on the United States and its Western allies, saying they are acting in defiance of the sovereign right of nations.
In his September 27 speech, Lavrov said the United States must abandon its claims to "eternal uniqueness," accusing it of resorting to military interference to defend its interests.
"Military interference has become the norm, despite the dismal outcome of all operations of force that the United States has carried out over recent years," he said.
The foreign minister cited the NATO air campaign in the former Yugoslavia, the Iraq War, the campaign in Libya, and the Afghanistan mission as examples of U.S.-led military actions that led to "chaos and instability."
In Syria, where the United States is leading an aerial campaign, Lavrov said the fight against the Islamic State extremist group should be coordinated with the Damascus regime, a Russian ally.
Lavrov also criticized NATO for its "hostile rhetoric" toward Russia, saying it shows the military alliance’s inability to change its Cold War "genetic code."
He charged that the "U.S.-led Western alliance" is portraying itself as a "champion of democracy" when in fact they were "trying to decide for everyone what is good or evil."
He accused the United States and European Union of seeking to “expand the geopolitical area that is under their control, without taking into account the balance of interests of all the people of Europe."
According to the Russian foreign minister, Ukraine has "fallen victim" to the West’s "arrogant policy," asserting that the United States and the European Union supported a "coup" that ousted President Viktor Yanukovych in February.
Lavrov said Russia’s annexation of Crimea in March was the choice of the largely Russian-speaking population there.
He reiterated that Moscow is "sincerely interested" in the restoration of peace in Ukraine, where he said a way out of the crisis is "within reach" if support is denied to the "party of war" in Kyiv.
Lavrov also called for those guilty of the bloodshed in Ukraine to be identified and brought to justice, saying it will otherwise be "hard to count on national reconciliation."
He made no mention of Western allegations that Russia has sent troops and weapons into eastern Ukraine in support of pro-Russian separatists.
But he said Russia has sent "large supplies of weapons and military equipment" to Iraq, Syria, and other Middle Eastern countries and will continue its military support.
Earlier on September 27, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier accused Russia of breaking international law by unilaterally changing the existing borders in Europe.
He told the UN General Assembly that the tensions between Russia and Ukraine are not just a regional conflict, but affect the whole international community.
"We must not allow the old division between East and West to re-emerge in the United Nations," Steinmeier said
(With AFP, AP, Interfax)