By Michael MAINVILLE with Dave CLARK in Kyiv
MOSCOW, Feb 22 (AFP) — President Vladimir Putin ordered Russian troops into two Moscow-backed rebel regions of Ukraine Monday, defying Western threats of sanctions and prompting an emergency UN Security Council meeting to try to avert war.
Earlier, the Kremlin leader recognized the independence of two rebel-held areas of the Donetsk and Lugansk regions of Ukraine, paving the way for an operation to deploy part of the potential invasion force he has massed around the country.
In an often angry 65-minute televised national address from his office, Putin railed against Ukraine as a failed state and “puppet” of the West.
Putin said it was necessary to “take a long overdue decision, to immediately recognize the independence” of the two regions.
In two official decrees, the Russian president instructed his defense ministry to assume “the function of peacekeeping” in the separatist-held regions.
Moscow’s gambit triggered international condemnation and a promise of targeted sanctions from the United States and the European Union — with a broader package of economic punishment to come in the event of further incursion into Ukraine’s territory.
At the emergency meeting of the Security Council, US ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield described as “nonsense” Putin’s claims the troops being sent to eastern Ukraine were peacekeepers.
“We know what they really are,” said the US envoy in an address to an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council.
Thomas-Greenfield said Putin’s speech amounted to a “series of outrageous, false claims” that were aimed at “creating a pretext for war.”
‘We are on our own land’
As news of the late-night recognition hit the streets of Kyiv, many were in disbelief but said they were ready to defend their country if called on.
“I am very shocked,” Artem Ivaschenko, a 22-year-old cook originally from Donetsk, told AFP in the capital, calling the recognition the “scariest news” had heard since he had fled the region eight years ago.
“I live here, I already lost a part of my homeland, it was taken away, so I will protect it.
Russia will now deploy troops with the support of separatist officials, with Ukraine forced to either accept the loss of a part of its territory or face an armed conflict against its vastly more powerful neighbor.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky convened a meeting of his national security council and held telephone calls with several world leaders in a bid to shore up support.
“We expect clear support steps and effective support steps from our partners,” he declared in a late night televised address, vowing that Kyiv was not afraid of anyone.
“It is very important to see now who is our true friend and partner, and who will continue to scare the Russian Federation with words,” he said.
“We are on our own land.
‘Blitzkrieg’
In his address, Putin repeatedly suggested Ukraine was essentially part of Russia.
He accused Kyiv of persecuting Russian speakers and of preparing a “blitzkrieg” against the breakaway regions of Donetsk and Lugansk in Ukraine’s east.
“As for those who seized and hold power in Kyiv, we demand an immediate end to their military operations,” Putin said.
“Otherwise, all responsibility for the possible continuation of bloodshed will be fully on the conscience of the regime in power in Ukraine.”
And he made clear the stakes were bigger than Ukraine, whose efforts to join NATO and the European Union have deeply angered Moscow.
“The use of Ukraine as an instrument of confrontation with our country poses a serious, very big threat to us,” Putin said.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called Putin’s move “a flagrant violation of the sovereignty and integrity of the Ukraine”, with his foreign minister promising new sanctions on Russia.
EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel vowed the bloc “will react with sanctions against those involved in this illegal act”.
The announcement came after weeks of tensions between Moscow and the West over Ukraine.
Western leaders had warned that Russia was planning to invade its pro-Western neighbor after massing more than 150,000 troops on its borders, a claim Moscow repeatedly denied.
Tensions then spiked this week after an outbreak of heavy shellfire on Ukraine’s eastern frontline with the separatists and a series of reported incidents on the border with Russia.
Ukrainian officials said two soldiers and a civilian died in more shelling of frontline villages Monday.
The fear of conflict has sparked evacuations from the Ukrainian capital, with the United States late Monday saying it was sending all of its diplomats remaining in the country to Poland out of security fears.
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