Russia-Ukraine conflict: US accuses Russia of plotting provocative actions
The United State Government has said Russia is scheming "offensive actions" to find an excuse to invade Ukraine.
A
Pentagon spokesman for Russia's Pentagon said in a statement that Russia was
planning to launch a "False Flag" operation in Ukraine so that Moscow
could accuse it of plotting to invade Ukraine, but Russia denied the
allegations. Has given
The allegations come a week after talks between the United States and Russia eased tensions. Ukraine on Friday accused Russia of backing cyber attacks on dozens of government websites.
Before the sites went offline, a message emerged influencing Ukrainians to "be prepared for the most horrible." However, access to most sites was restored within hours.
The
United States and NATO have condemned the attack and offered assistance to
Ukraine. Russia has not commented on the hacking.
"It
was all part of Russia's plan," Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told
reporters Friday. "Russia has already deployed a group of operatives in
what we call a fake flag operation," he said.
U.S.
officials say the operatives have been trained in civilian warfare tactics and
the use of explosives in sabotage operations against pro-Russian rebels.
Ukraine's
Defense Ministry says similar operations are being planned against Russian
troops stationed in the Transnistrian region, which has seceded from Moldova. Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the reports "unconfirmed".
America's dramatic step
Defense Ministry correspondent Barbara Platt Usher's analysis
It is not
uncommon for the United States to expose such specific intelligence
commitments, but the Biden administration has explicitly thwarted any Russia's
militant claims against Ukraine by exposing its alleged tactics of sabotage and
misinformation.
Pentagon
spokesman John Kirby said the United States wanted the world to know how the
game could be played out for the attack because the scenario was from the same
playbook that the Russians used in Crimea.
It is a
dramatic step after a week of intense diplomacy in which suggestions were made
but no agreement was reached on how to resolve the crisis.
Kirby says
the administration still believes there is time and space for diplomacy and
that it does not believe President Vladimir Putin has made a final decision to
invade Ukraine further.
The Russians deny any wrongdoing. The United States has been waiting for Putin's next move, but has not remained silent, threatening to impose "financial sanctions" and other consequences if Russia tries to infiltrate Ukraine further.
The remarks
came after an earlier statement from US National Security Adviser Jack
Sullivan.
Jack had
told reporters that Russia was trying to use Ukraine as an excuse to invade.
He said it
was the same method that Russia used when occupying Crimea in 2014.
Russia has
tens of thousands of troops on its border with Ukraine, as well as a stockpile
of weapons, raising fears of an attack.
American and Russian officials have been in talks for the past week to ease tensions with Ukraine, but no agreement seems to have been reached.
Russia denies planning to invade Ukraine but wants assurances against NATO's eastward expansion, but Western nations say they are unable to do so.
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