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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

10:01 14.7.2015

10:00 14.7.2015

10:00 14.7.2015

Ukraine is prepared to receive some two dozen convicts from Crimean prisons.

09:55 14.7.2015

09:54 14.7.2015

Protesters outside the Prosecutor-General's Office in Kyiv demanding the resignation of Deputy Prosecutor-General Vladimir Guzirya.

06:32 14.7.2015
Ukrainian and U.S. soldiers attend the opening ceremony of the joint military exercise at the Yavoriv training ground in the Lviv region on April 20.
Ukrainian and U.S. soldiers attend the opening ceremony of the joint military exercise at the Yavoriv training ground in the Lviv region on April 20.

U.S. Eyes Stepped-Up Plan To Train Ukrainian Army Soldiers

By RFE/RL

The United States is considering plans to train soldiers in the Ukrainian Army in the next few months, in a move that risks heightening tensions with Russia.

Lieutenant General Ben Hodges, commander of the U.S. Army in Europe, said the plan would expand a U.S. training program already under way for National Guard troops working under the Ukrainian Interior Ministry.

About 305 U.S. troops are currently training guardsmen, who operate checkpoints and perform other military tasks but are not front-line combat troops.

Ukraine has deployed some 64,000 soldiers in its eastern conflict zone, including some guardsmen.

"We would begin Ministry of Defense army units [training] starting in November," Hodges said, adding that "the final decision has not been taken."

The training would focus on basic tactical activities, with an emphasis on life-saving techniques and operations in highly contested areas, he said.

Elements could include defense against electronic warfare, including communications intercepts, and the kinds of jamming that Russian forces allegedly are conducting in the east of the country.

"It's a very effective way to help them that doesn't necessarily require weapons," Hodges told Pentagon reporters, adding that the United States is not considering providing Ukraine with lethal arms.

U.S allies in Europe must still agree to the plan, Hodges said. "The unity of NATO is the paramount concern in my view here," he said.

Ukraine has waged a 15-month war against Russian-backed eastern insurgents, in a conflict that has claimed more than 6,500 lives.

"We probably are at a point now where there is a potential for another offensive" from the Russian-backed rebels, Hodges said.

He added that Russia's long-term objective was not necessarily to take control of eastern Ukraine, or to create a land corridor linking Russia to the Crimean Peninsula, which Moscow annexed in March 2014.

"Russian interests are in keeping Ukraine bubbling, disrupted. Anything they can do to undermine President [Petro] Poroshenko, so that Ukraine could never join the [European Union], that's their interest," he said.

Meanwhile, Poroshenko was confronting a fresh crisis July 13 as a deadly standoff between Interior Ministry units and armed Ukrainian ultranationalists entered a third day in a western enclave near Hungary.

Hodges said the United States had given millions of dollars worth of equipment to Ukraine, including armored Humvee military vehicles, helmets, body armor, night-vision goggles, and thousands of pounds of medical supplies.

Lightweight counter-mortar radar supplied by the United States had been particularly valuable for the Ukrainians, who have used the system in ways "I don't think we realized you could do," Hodges said.

He declined to elaborate how the Ukrainians were using the system, which can locate the source of incoming mortar shells and help direct counterfire. But he said, "The Russians have gone after that radar in a big way because they see the effect of it."

He said the U.S. trainers also are learning from the Ukrainians.

"None of us have ever been under Russian artillery and rocket fire like the Ukrainians have," he said.

With reporting by AP, Reuters, and AFP
06:22 14.7.2015

Ukraine Leader Warned On Bills Rolling Back Economic Reforms

By RFE/RL

Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has dismissed legislation in Ukraine's parliament that would water down economic reforms demanded by the West in exchange for loans, saying it is sponsored by "lunatics."

In an interview with the Associated Press, Yatsenyuk predicted that none of several controversial bills to roll back reforms mandated by the International Monetary Fund would reach the floor of the parliament.

If they do, he said, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko will veto them.

"In every parliament, you have populists. Sometimes they look like lunatics," Yatsenyuk said. "This government and this president are determined and committed to our reform agenda."

U.S. President Barack Obama urged Yatsenyuk in a White House meeting to follow through with the reforms and commitments to the IMF, which has extended $40 billion in loans to Ukraine but held back a recent installment because of the stall on reforms.

The IMF has warned that rolling back the reforms would jeopardize all future loans.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker said the U.S. government would keep supporting Ukraine as long as it keeps moving in the right direction.

"The pressure is on the parliament to keep moving forward and to not slip backward," she said. "These are hard choices. The prime minister feels the pressure. But as long as they're moving forward, they're not alone."

Based on reporting by AP and AFP
06:20 14.7.2015

Russia Seeking Ukraine’s Economic ‘Collapse,’ Biden Says

By RFE/RL

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden has accused Russia of trying to destabilize Ukraine “by any means it can,” saying the Kremlin wants to see the economy of its ex-Soviet neighbor crumble.

"Russia’s trying to undermine the stability and the sovereignty of Ukraine by any means it can, including its attempt to create conditions that will cause Ukraine to economically collapse,” Biden told U.S. and Ukrainian officials and business leaders in Washington on July 13.

"That’s [Russia’s] first preference," Biden added. "But we can’t let that strategy succeed."

Biden delivered the comments in a speech to the inaugural U.S.-Ukraine Business Forum, an event co-hosted by the U.S. Commerce Department aimed at fostering U.S. investment in the Ukrainian economy, which has been ravaged by Kyiv’s war with Russian-backed separatists in the east of the country.

Biden repeated allegations by Kyiv, Washington, and their allies in Brussels that Moscow is backing the rebels, saying Ukraine is “now under siege.”

"Russia is building military outposts on Ukrainian soil," Biden said. "It relentlessly continues to send Russian troops, Russian hired thugs and mercenaries, Russian tanks, and Russian missiles into numerous parts of Ukraine, but particularly the Donbas."

The Kremlin denies it is supporting the separatists, despite mounting evidence of Russia military involvement in the conflict, which has killed more than 6,500 since the fighting erupted in April 2014.

Biden also urged Ukraine to enact reforms, crack down on endemic corruption, and improve transparency in order to lure investors to the country, saying the leadership in Kyiv has a small window of opportunity to secure greater integration with the West.

"This may be the last genuine opportunity the people of Ukraine have to establish a democratic republic in a way that is economically prosperous and fully integrated within Europe," he told the forum.

The audience included senior Ukrainian officials, including Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Finance Minister Natalie Jaresko, a U.S. citizen, both of whom addressed the forum earlier in the day.

Ukraine has been locked in tense negotiations with creditors as it seeks to restructure its debt. Kyiv has threatened to halt payments on its international debt if creditors refuse to agree to a writedown on the holdings.

Addressing the forum, Yatsenyuk called on the creditors to "be cooperative and collaborative." He also said the Ukrainian government is taking concrete steps to tackle corruption, while conceding that graft remains a deeply rooted problem in the country.

"Please, American investors, jump in. We are happy to see you in Ukraine," Yatsenyuk said.

Biden told the audience that Kyiv must “confront the corruption that has kept this country from taking advantage of the tremendous human capital it possesses.”

"To attract the type of investment that will allow Ukraine to survive and thrive, the changes being enacted now have to be real and have to be lasting," Biden said. "They cannot just be reforms on paper. They have to be tangible for businesspeople, for civil society, and for ordinary citizens on the street for any of it to work."

With reporting by VOA and Bloomberg
19:17 13.7.2015

That concludes our live-blogging of the Ukraine crisis for Monday, July 13. Check back here tomorrow morning for more of our continuing coverage. Thanks for reading.

19:16 13.7.2015

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