Ukraine Seeks Meeting With Russia Within 48 Hours To Discuss Build-up

Skip to content
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Culture
  • Arts
  • Travel
  • Earth
  • Audio
  • Video
  • Live
HomeNewsSportBusinessTechnologyHealthCultureArtsTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveWeatherNewslettersUkraine seeks meeting with Russia within 48 hours to discuss build-up14 February 2022ShareSaveShareSave
Getty Images A Ukrainian serviceman points a machine gun through an opening in a sandbag bunker during military exercisesGetty Images
Ukrainian soldiers and police have conducted a wide range of exercises in recent days

Ukraine has called for a meeting with Russia and other members of a key European security group over the escalating tensions on its border.

Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Russia had ignored formal requests to explain the build-up of troops.

He said the next step was requesting a meeting within the next 48 hours for transparency about Russia's plans.

Russia has denied any plans to invade Ukraine despite the build-up of some 100,000 soldiers on Ukraine's borders.

But with the US saying Moscow could begin with aerial bombardments "at any time" more than a dozen nations have urged their citizens to leave Ukraine.

Ukraine's ambassador in London, Vadym Prystaiko, has backtracked on comments he made to the BBC in which he said Ukraine was willing to be "flexible" on its ambition to join Nato, which would have been be a major concession to Russia.

But in a subsequent interview he said that Ukraine had a constitutional commitment to join Nato and it depended on the "readiness of Nato itself" whether Ukraine would be admitted.

British Armed Forces Minister James Heappey said the UK would support whatever Ukraine decided to do.

  • LIVE: Russian invasion fears grow as foreigners flee Ukraine
  • EXPLAINER: Is Russia preparing to invade Ukraine?
  • ANALYSIS: Five ways out of conflict
  • ON THE GROUND: A Ukrainian city unifies against Russia's threats

Ukraine has made a request via the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) for Russia to explain its build-up of troops. Under the Vienna Document, of which Russia is party to, OSCE members can ask for information on a member's military activities.

"If Russia is serious when it talks about the indivisibility of security in the OSCE space, it must fulfil its commitment to military transparency in order to de-escalate tensions and enhance security for all," Mr Kuleba said.

However, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, who criticised the "panic" that could spread from such claims, said he had seen no proof that Russia was planning an invasion in the coming days.

Watch: Ukraine ambassador clarifies his remarks on Nato membership

On Sunday, he spoke for nearly an hour by phone with US President Joe Biden. The White House said President Biden had reiterated US support for Ukraine, and that both leaders had agreed on "the importance of continuing to pursue diplomacy and deterrence".

Ukraine's statement of the call said its president had thanked the US for its "unwavering support" and that, at the end, President Zelensky had invited the US leader to come to Ukraine. There has been no comment on the invite from the White House.

An hour-long call between President Biden and Russian leader Vladimir Putin the day before failed to yield a breakthrough.

map
1px transparent line

In the latest attempt to find a diplomatic solution, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has meetings scheduled with President Zelensky in Kyiv later on Monday and with President Putin in Moscow on Tuesday.

The chancellor, who took over the leadership of Germany from Angela Merkel in December, has warned of severe economic consequences for Russia if it should launch any invasion, echoing statements by other Western nations and members of the Nato military alliance.

But Berlin officials have downplayed any expectation of a breakthrough.

Meanwhile, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson plans to hold fresh diplomatic talks across Europe to bring Russia "back from the brink" of war.

In Washington, President Biden's National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said an invasion could begin "any day now".

Mr Sullivan said the US is closely monitoring for a potential "false flag" operation by Moscow as a pretext for a full-scale invasion so it can claim it is responding to Ukrainian aggression.

Russia contends that its build-up of troops along the Ukraine border is its own concern, within its own territory. On Sunday, senior foreign policy official Yuri Ushakov characterised the US warnings of imminent invasion as "hysteria has reached its peak".

The struggle to run a business in Ukraine's second city

Has Putin's war in Ukraine failed?

Russian attack on Ukraine highly likely - minister

A dozen nations tell citizens: leave Ukraine now

UK tells its nationals in Ukraine to leave

Putin pledges no new Ukraine escalation - Macron

Stakes are very high over Ukraine crisis, PM says

Five ways out of Ukraine conflict

Ukraine accuses Russia of sea blockade

Irish citizens register with embassy in Ukraine

Ros Atkins on… Nato's role in the Ukraine crisis

EuropeRussia-Ukraine warVolodymyr ZelenskyRussiaUkraineRelated

Rob Jetten becomes Netherlands' youngest ever PM

Explosions kill police officer and injure 25 in western Ukraine

Italian toddler dies after transplant with heart 'burned by frostbite'

More from the BBC1 hr agoA woman is taking a selfie with a young girl to the left of her with her hand on her arm and an older woman to the right with short grey hair and glasses. They are all smiling and the background is blurred but appears to be a train station. The woman in the middle has long brown hair and is wearing black headphones around her neck.

'I learnt how to navigate uncertainty after leaving Ukraine'

Two Ukrainian mothers fled to the UK with their families when the war with Russia started in 2022.

1 hr ago5 hrs agoWomen walk among remains of residential buildings destroyed by shelling, as Russias invasion of Ukraine continues, in Zhytomyr

Why did Putin's Russia invade Ukraine?

Russia hoped to overthrow Ukraine's pro-Western government, but Moscow's war has dragged on for more than three years.

5 hrs ago13 hrs agoA woman with a blue and yellow flag round her shoulders stands in a market square with people behind her.

Town vigil marks four years of conflict in Ukraine

The service in Ipswich Minster marks four years since the full-scale Russian invasion.

13 hrs ago13 hrs agoA recruitment poster in the Russian town of Yelets promises big sums of money for anyone who joins up. It shows a man in uniform pointing a rifle to the right

Four years into its full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia is feeling the effects

Steve Rosenberg reports on the economic consequences of Russia's war, and how people are coping.

13 hrs ago21 hrs agoPresident Zelensky sits in a chair wearing a black shirt and staring to the right of the camera. He's sitting in front of a Ukrainian flag

Zelensky tells BBC Putin has started WW3 and must be stopped

Ukraine's president sat down with the BBC's Jeremy Bowen in Kyiv days before the four-year anniversary of the war.

21 hrs ago

Tag » When Is Ukraine Meeting With Russia