US Secretary of State Antony Blinken unexpectedly spoke briefly with his Russian counterpart while in India for the G-20 foreign ministers meeting, with Russia’s war in Ukraine among the topics. A Russian spokeswoman scoffed that Blinken initiated the encounter with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and “it doesn’t deserve our attention.”
(Bloomberg) — US Secretary of State Antony Blinken unexpectedly spoke briefly with his Russian counterpart while in India for the G-20 foreign ministers meeting, with Russia’s war in Ukraine among the topics. A Russian spokeswoman scoffed that Blinken initiated the encounter with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and “it doesn’t deserve our attention.”
The G-20 officials couldn’t reach agreement on language to describe the war, similar to the outcome of the finance ministers last weekend.
The US warned companies to be on guard for transactions that could help Russia evade western sanctions, especially if they’re linked to China, Turkey and a handful of other nations.
Key Developments
- Putin Denounces Attack Near Border That Ukraine Calls a Set-Up
- Blinken Presses Lavrov on Ukraine in Unexpected Chat at G-20
- G-20 Top Diplomats Fail to Agree on Language on Russia’s War
- EU Leaning Toward More Fiscal Leeway for Defense Spending
(All times CET)
US Warns Companies Against Doing Business With Sanctions Evaders (9:51 p.m.)
An advisory from the US departments of Commerce, Justice and Treasury said companies should be on the lookout for “transshipment points” where goods are legally purchased but then sent on to Russia or Belarus.
Those locations include China, Hong Kong, Macau and Russia’s close neighbors Armenia, Turkey and Uzbekistan, according to the notice.
The advisory amounted to a warning that businesses could be held responsible if parties they transact with turn out to be front companies assisting Russia’s war effort.
US to Provide Ukraine More Military Aid, With Emphasis on Ammunition (9:24 p.m.)
The US will announce a fresh round of military aid to Ukraine on Friday, when President Joe Biden will receive a visit at the White House from German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said that the new US package will include “mostly ammunitions and munitions that the Ukrainians will need for the systems they already have.” Biden and Scholz will discuss ongoing aid to Ukraine, he said.
Russia Says Lavrov ‘Disregarded Blinken’ as Usual at G-20 (8:01 p.m.)
Lavrov “disregarded in his usual manner” what Blinken told him about US views on current crises during a short encounter on the sidelines of G-20 foreign ministers conference, according to Lavrov’s spokeswoman Maria Zakharova.
“It doesn’t deserve our attention. There was nothing interestingm” she said in comments on Russian state television. Blinken approached Lavrov, and “we didn’t push him away,” she said.
Russian Support for Army’s Ukraine Actions Increases, Poll Finds (7 p.m.)
A new poll by the independent Levada Center found 77% of Russians surveyed support the Russian army’s actions in Ukraine, up by 6 percentage points from December. People older than 55, who are exempt from the military mobilization, are much more pro-war than young people ages 18 to 24.
But the poll also suggests a majority of Russians wish for the war to end: 43% favored continued military operations in Ukraine while 50% said Moscow should begin peace negotiations. The share of those who want the war to continue rose by 3 percentage points since December, according to the pollster.
Blinken Presses Lavrov on Ukraine in Unexpected Chat (5:44 p.m.)
During a stop in Tashkent on Wednesday, Blinken said he had “no plans” to meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at the G-20 gathering. Yet Russia’s foreign ministry said it was Blinken who sought out Thursday’s conversation, which it said didn’t qualify as “talks or a meeting,” according to Interfax.
Blinken didn’t respond to a question during his news conference about why he sought the meeting with Lavrov, and State Department spokespeople declined to comment on the matter.
“I told the foreign minister what I and so many others said last week at the United Nations, and what so many G-20 foreign ministers said today: End this war of aggression, engage in meaningful diplomacy that can produce a just and durable peace,” Blinken told reporters after the encounter, referring to a United Nations vote condemning Russia’s invasion.
More Russian Diesel Being Stranded at Sea (4:30 p.m.)
The volume of Russian diesel stranded at sea keeps swelling to new records as sanctions leave the fuel exporter searching for buyers.
As much as 3.2 million barrels of Russian diesel-type fuel have been idling offshore for seven days or more, according to Kpler data compiled by Bloomberg. The surge in so-called floating storage comes as diesel exports from Russia’s Primorsk port hit the highest since at least 2016.
Read more: Russian Diesel Stranded at Sea Keeps Growing With Buyers Scarce
Top Security Officials From NATO’s Eastern Flank Meet (3:51 p.m.)
Top security officials from Turkey, Romania and Poland — the biggest military powers in NATO’s eastern flank — are meeting in Warsaw to discuss the war in Ukraine and strengthening of domestic defense industries, Poland’s National Security Bureau said.
Turkey’s National Security Council General Secretary Seyfullah Hacımüftüoğlu, Romania’s Ion Oprisor, and Poland’s Jacek Siewiera are in the talks, which also include planning for the next NATO summit in Vilnius in July.
Poland Sees Growing Spy Activity at Kaliningrad Border (3:12 p.m.)
Russia is ramping up spying against Poland in the neighboring Kaliningrad exclave in an attempt to escalate tensions at the border, Stanislaw Zaryn, a spokesman for Poland’s security services, said on Thursday.
Moscow has recently intensified its efforts to collect intelligence about Poland, targeting individuals and questioning Polish citizens in Kaliningrad about army movements and access to sensitive security information, Zaryn told reporters in Warsaw.
Poland in recent months has detained nine people suspected of working for Russian and Belarusian secret services, he said.
China Tells Russia – Again – That It Supports Peace Talks (2:57 p.m.)
China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang held a meeting with Russian counterpart Lavrov on sideline of the G-20 foreign minister’s meeting in India and exchanged views on Ukraine, according to a readout from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Read more: China Reiterates to Russia It Supports Peace Talks on Ukraine
McDonald’s to Reopen in Odesa, Dnipro (1:11 p.m.)
The US fast-food giant said it plans to reopen stores in Odesa at the end of March and in Dnipro at the end of April. Dnipro “needs a little more time to secure supply chains and logistics process,” McDonald’s Ukraine said on Twitter.
The chain has in recent months reopened dozens of restaurants in Kyiv and the surrounding area, including in Bucha, and in western Ukraine.
Russian Tank Exhibit Spurs Tension in the Baltics (12:29 p.m.)
A display of Russian tanks captured by Ukrainian forces and shipped to the Baltics backfired after supporters of Russian troops began laying flowers on the vehicles.
A fight broke out between two men after one laid a flower at one of the heavily damaged T-72 tanks and another tried to remove it.
Read more: Captured Russian Tank Exhibits Spur Tensions in the Baltics
G-20 Top Diplomats Fail to Agree on Language on Russia’s War (12:45 p.m.)
The foreign ministers of the G-20 couldn’t reach agreement on language to describe Russia’s war in Ukraine, India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar told reporters after a meeting of the grouping. The two-day gathering will issue an outcome document instead of a formal joint statement, Jaishankar added.
A similar meeting of G-20 finance ministers and central bank heads over the weekend failed to reach a consensus on the language to describe Russia’s aggressions in Ukraine, forcing host India to issue a chair’s summary instead of a traditional joint communiqué. Russia and China had deviated from the Bali formula, objecting to the use of the word “war.”
Putin’s Domestic Trip Canceled Amid Reports of Border Attack (12:10 p.m.)
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the president was receiving regular reports on the events from top security officials. Russian state news agencies offered conflicting accounts of the events in the border area near Ukraine on Thursday, with some reporting casualties among civilians blamed on unidentified attackers, who numbered in the dozens.
Ukraine dismissed the claims as a Russian “provocation” aimed at building public support for the invasion. Ukraine’s Northern Military Command warned Feb. 23 that intelligence reports showed sightings of troops without insignia and wearing uniforms similar to Ukrainian ones in Russia’s Bryansk region close to the border.
Poland’s Orlen Won’t End Russian Oil Contract, CEO Says (12:05 p.m.)
PKN Orlen SA, Poland’s largest oil company, won’t terminate a supply contract with a Russian exporter after shipments via the Druzhba pipeline were halted last week, Chief Executive Officer Daniel Obajtek told PAP newswire.
State-controlled Orlen has argued that it needed the European Union sanctions to be able to terminate the Russian contract, which accounts for 10% of the country’s oil usage, without being exposed to contractual penalties. The company is yet to comment whether it expects the oil flows to resume. Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said earlier this week that Orlen wouldn’t get any Russian oil in February and March.
Russia May Run Out of Money in 2024, Deripaska Warns (10:55 a.m.)
Billionaire Oleg Deripaska said Russia could find its coffers empty already next year and needs investment from “friendly” countries to break the hold of sanctions on the economy. “There will be no money already next year,” Deripaska said at the Krasnoyarsk Economic Forum in Siberia. “We will need foreign investors.”
Funds are now running low and “that’s why they’ve already begun to shake us down,” said Deripaska, founder of United Co, Rusal International PJSC, the biggest aluminum producer outside China. His comments are among the most outspoken by a prominent business leader as the government looks to turn the screws on large companies after ending last year with a record fiscal deficit and the budget still deep in the red to start 2023.
Billionaire Deripaska Warns Russia May Run Out of Money in 2024
Moldova’s New Premier Sees No Risk of Military Escalation From Russia (10:10 a.m.)
Moldova’s new Prime Minister Dorin Recean said Russia doesn’t have the necessary resources to escalate its military conflict and invade the tiny nation, because of the distances involved and Ukrainian forces separating it from Moscow’s armed units.
The nation bordering Ukraine has enough capacity to handle a potential escalation from the breakaway region of Transnistria, which hosts Russian military units, but which is now “very much aligned with” the Moldovan government’s peace and security goals, Recean told Romanian state television late Wednesday.
Moldova has come under rising pressure from Russia over the past year, with missiles aimed at Ukraine crossing its airspace, domestic protests, and accusations that Moscow seeks to overthrow its pro-European government.
Scholz Cautions China Against Giving Arms to Russia (9.35 a.m.)
Scholz told the lower house of parliament in Berlin he’s frustrated that China has dropped what he called “a clear condemnation of the Russian attack” agreed by leaders at a Group of 20 summit in Bali last year. “My message to Beijing is clear: Use your influence in Moscow to press for the withdrawal of Russian troops,” Scholz said. “And,” he added, “do not supply weapons to the aggressor Russia.”
The US has warned China not to help arm Russia and US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said last week that any weapons support to Moscow would come with “real costs.”
Russia Hits Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia with Missiles (8:10 a.m.)
Russia launched missiles at the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, hitting a residential four-storey building in the city center at night, police said. Four people were killed and six wounded by a Russian S-300 missile, the prosecutor general’s office said, citing preliminary information. Five people, including a child, were still missing.
More than 10 apartments were destroyed, the police said. “The terrorist state wants to turn every day for our people into a day of terror,” Zelenskiy said in a statement on Telegram addressing the attack.
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