Ukraine crisis updates: What to know international tensions surrounding Ukraine
High-stakes diplomacy continued on Friday in a bid to avert a war in Eastern Europe. The urgent efforts come as 100,000 Russian troops are massed near Ukraine's border and the Biden administration worries that Russian President Vladimir Putin will mount some sort of invasion within weeks.
Here are things to know about the international tensions surrounding Ukraine.
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A diplomatic deadlock
Russia鈥檚 top diplomat said Friday that Moscow will not start a war but that it also wouldn鈥檛 allow the West to trample on its security interests.
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said there is little room for compromise after the West rejected Russia鈥檚 key demands that NATO never accept Ukraine as a member and that it roll back deployments in Eastern Europe.
Lavrov said that 鈥渨hile they say they won鈥檛 change their positions, we won鈥檛 change ours.鈥�
He noted, however, that the U.S. 鈥� in a recent written response to Russian demands 鈥� has suggested the two sides could talk about other issues of importance. Those include limits on the deployment of intermediate-range missiles, restrictions on military drills and rules to prevent accidents between warships and aircraft.
He emphasized that those issues are secondary to Russia鈥檚 main demands.
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The French connection
French President Emmanuel Macron spoke for over an hour to his Russian counterpart in hopes that diplomacy can avert a war.
Macron鈥檚 call with Putin had two aims, French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said earlier this week: 鈥渢o continue dialogue鈥� and to 鈥減ush Russia to clarify its position and the aim of (military) maneuvering.鈥�
Macron 鈥渋s at the heart of efforts towards de-escalation,鈥� Attal added.
Macron is also due to speak to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the evening.
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Russia suspends military inspections
Germany expressed regret that Russia has suspended mutual military inspections at a time of heightened tensions between Moscow and NATO.
The inspections are intended as confidence-building measures among members of the Organizations for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
A spokesman for Germany鈥檚 Foreign Ministry said Russia recently announced it would suspend the inspections until the end of February, citing the spread of the omicron variant.
鈥淏ecause of this an inspection on Russian territory in the border region of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia, which Russia had previously agreed to, won鈥檛 currently be possible,鈥� said the spokesman, Christofer Burger.
鈥淲e expressly regret this step because particularly in the current situation anything which creates greater transparency would help reduce tensions,鈥� he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we are calling on Russia to voluntarily and extensively inform OSCE member states about its activities.鈥�
Burger said Russia had also unilaterally canceled inspections it was due to conduct in Germany.
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Exposing disinformation, but are there risks?
In a break from the past, the U.S. and its allies are increasingly revealing their intelligence findings as they confront Russian preparations for invading Ukraine, looking to undercut Putin鈥檚 plans by exposing them and deflecting his efforts to shape world opinion.
The White House in recent weeks publicized what it said was a developing Russian 鈥渇alse-flag鈥� operation to create a pretext for an invasion.
Britain named specific Ukrainians it accused of having ties to Russian intelligence officers plotting to overthrow Zelenskyy. The U.S. also released a map of Russian military positions and detailed how officials believe Russia will try to attack Ukraine with as many as 175,000 troops.
But the release of information isn鈥檛 without risks. Intelligence assessments carry varying degrees of certainty, and beyond offering photos of troop movements, the U.S. and its allies have provided little other proof. Moscow has dismissed Washington鈥檚 claims as hysteria and invoked past American intelligence failures, including false information put forward about Iraq鈥檚 weapons programs.
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What about those German howitzers?
German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit says a decision had not yet been reached on whether to approve Estonia鈥檚 request to transfer artillery guns to Ukraine.
Germany originally owned the howitzers and sold them to Finland which then sold them to Estonia.
Hebestreit on Friday warned against pursuing what he called a 鈥渕ilitary logic鈥� amid demands for German approval to deliver the howitzers to Ukraine.
鈥淲hen push comes to shove that wouldn鈥檛 be a real solution either,鈥� Hebestreit said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 no game-changer now.鈥�
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Will Russian gas keep flowing?
The German government spokesman says Russia remains a reliable natural gas supplier, but Berlin was preparing for all scenarios.
Spokesman Steffen Hebestreit made the remark on Friday amid concerns that Russia might turn off natural gas supplies to Europe.
鈥淚n our view, the Russian gas supply contracts are being fulfilled everywhere so far and we strongly assume that this will remain the case and Russia will continue to be a reliable contractual partner,鈥� Hebestreit said.
鈥淎t the same time it鈥檚 clear that one needs to prepare for all eventualities, and this is what the German government is doing,鈥� he added, declining to elaborate.
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How is the UK bolstering its cyber defenses?
The U.K.鈥榮 National Cyber Security Centre is urging businesses to strengthen measures to protect computer networks amid the ongoing crisis in Ukraine.
The center said Friday that it is investigating recent reports of 鈥渕alicious cyber incidents鈥� in Ukraine and that these attacks are similar to a pattern of Russian behavior seen during earlier conflicts.
While authorities aren鈥檛 aware of any specific threats against the U.K., the center is encouraging large organizations to bolster online defenses to protect computer networks against potential attacks. The center is part of GCHQ, Britain鈥檚 signals intelligence agency.
鈥淲e are monitoring the situation closely and it is vital that organizations follow the guidance to ensure they are resilient,鈥欌� said Paul Chichester, NCSC Director of Operations. 鈥淥ver several years, we have observed a pattern of malicious Russian behavior in cyberspace.鈥�
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Are tensions hurting foreign investment?
The chief executive of Italian bank UniCredit has decided not to pursue a possible takeover bid for Russian bank Otrkitie due to rising tensions over Ukraine.
CEO Andrea Orcel said in a media call Friday that UniCredit had started due diligence on an offer, but 鈥済iven the geopolitical environment, we decided to withdraw."
UniCredit already operates the AO UniCredit Bank in Russia, the 12th largest bank in the country with 70 branches and 400 employees. The plan would have been to merge the two.
Orcel said the bank is 鈥済enerally happy" and 鈥渃ommitted" to its Russian operations, adding that they represent less than 5% of the bank鈥檚 equity activities, so of negligible risk.
Orcel was on the list of attendees for a video conference earlier this week of Italian business leaders and Putin. The bank would not confirm if Orcel participated.
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Associated Press writers Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow, Frank Jordans in Berlin, Colleen Barry in Milan and Danica Kirka in London contributed.