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Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.
Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (ARCHIVE)

Follow all of the developments as they happen

11:55 25.3.2015

11:54 25.3.2015

11:18 25.3.2015

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10:34 25.3.2015

10:31 25.3.2015

Here's an extended excerpt of the piece, by Samuel Charap:

Russia is often denounced in the west as a revisionist power, determined to tear down the postwar international order. Given Moscow’s flagrant violations of basic principles of international law, and its bilateral and multilateral commitments to Ukraine, these allegations have merit.

Yet if Russia were a truly revisionist power, its leaders would not be devising ever more creative ways to portray the country as a law-abiding actor. Instead of conducting a referendum in Crimea, no matter how preposterously biased, Mr Putin would simply have seized the peninsula without engaging in any procedure or any explanation. Rather than denying his invasion of Ukraine’s east, this revisionist Putin would have been the first to announce his troops’ progress across the frontier. And he would have had no hesitation in admitting that he would continue violating his neighbour’s sovereignty as long as he deemed it in Russia’s interests to do so.

In other words, paradoxically, Moscow could well be lying about its behaviour in Ukraine not because it wants to destroy the international system but because it wants to preserve it; hypocrisy, after all, is the homage vice pays to virtue. As the legal successor of the Soviet Union, Russia was one of the system’s architects. It is a veto-wielding permanent member of its central decision-making body, the UN Security Council. The Kremlin sees itself as behaving much like Washington, which devises clever legal arguments for what are considered in Moscow grave in­stances of rule-breaking; the invasion of Iraq, say, or the recognition of Kosovo. Many in the Kremlin would say great powers can and do break the rules — but they must cloak their violations in rhetoric to prevent others following suit.

None of this is to say that Russia’s actions are anything but illegal and highly dangerous. But perhaps we in the west should not be so worked up about all the lying. It might be much worse for the international order if Mr Putin were to start telling the truth.

08:47 25.3.2015

Interfax quotes Verkhovna Rada lawmaker Borys Filatov as saying the deputy head of the Dnipropetrovsk regional state administration, Hennadiy Korban, has also resigned following the overnight resignation and dismissal of Governor Ihor Kolomoyskiy.

08:42 25.3.2015

Moody's has downgraded Ukraine's "long-term issuer and government debt ratings to Ca from Caa3" with a "negative" outlook. The ratings agency said in a press release that its move "reflects Moody's expectation that Ukraine's government and external debt levels will remain very high, in spite of the debt restructuring and plans to introduce reforms."

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