Berliner Boersenzeitung - US, Russia diplomats to talk as tensions over Ukraine rise

EUR -
AED 3.824989
AFN 71.402285
ALL 97.627614
AMD 406.436125
ANG 1.885525
AOA 951.312422
ARS 1045.555022
AUD 1.601982
AWG 1.877095
AZN 1.792548
BAM 1.944948
BBD 2.112314
BDT 125.022417
BGN 1.95415
BHD 0.392523
BIF 3090.415867
BMD 1.041384
BND 1.405883
BOB 7.228735
BRL 6.044613
BSD 1.046163
BTN 88.392
BWP 14.28265
BYN 3.423796
BYR 20411.134706
BZD 2.108833
CAD 1.457595
CDF 2988.773459
CHF 0.925666
CLF 0.036821
CLP 1015.74547
CNY 7.547747
CNH 7.560467
COP 4570.896582
CRC 531.832553
CUC 1.041384
CUP 27.596687
CVE 109.654219
CZK 25.355594
DJF 186.300506
DKK 7.457947
DOP 63.038268
DZD 139.856872
EGP 51.722338
ERN 15.620766
ETB 130.374134
FJD 2.369514
FKP 0.821982
GBP 0.832337
GEL 2.83779
GGP 0.821982
GHS 16.634346
GIP 0.821982
GMD 73.938043
GNF 9017.770456
GTQ 8.076016
GYD 218.88082
HKD 8.106803
HNL 26.437866
HRK 7.428465
HTG 137.356236
HUF 410.848543
IDR 16577.798642
ILS 3.868967
IMP 0.821982
INR 87.938151
IQD 1370.572407
IRR 43847.491348
ISK 145.460334
JEP 0.821982
JMD 166.150118
JOD 0.73844
JPY 160.751742
KES 134.855838
KGS 90.075475
KHR 4219.537432
KMF 489.086083
KPW 937.245587
KRW 1464.275008
KWD 0.320534
KYD 0.871848
KZT 518.822617
LAK 22916.13564
LBP 93689.742622
LKR 304.391597
LRD 188.840865
LSL 18.930456
LTL 3.074937
LVL 0.629923
LYD 5.110485
MAD 10.46312
MDL 19.050703
MGA 4898.784029
MKD 61.522855
MMK 3382.375986
MNT 3538.624216
MOP 8.387422
MRU 41.607245
MUR 48.78866
MVR 16.089607
MWK 1814.121361
MXN 21.290157
MYR 4.652385
MZN 66.542097
NAD 18.930547
NGN 1761.064649
NIO 38.291823
NOK 11.553218
NPR 141.426922
NZD 1.783773
OMR 0.400907
PAB 1.046163
PEN 3.973927
PGK 4.211541
PHP 61.381801
PKR 290.794744
PLN 4.336537
PYG 8211.184342
QAR 3.814254
RON 4.975319
RSD 117.003721
RUB 107.225744
RWF 1437.513665
SAR 3.909599
SBD 8.715887
SCR 14.183524
SDG 626.39872
SEK 11.548105
SGD 1.403286
SHP 0.821982
SLE 23.519696
SLL 21837.315606
SOS 597.889811
SRD 36.870228
STD 21554.555025
SVC 9.154055
SYP 2616.509459
SZL 18.938783
THB 35.940782
TJS 11.142091
TMT 3.655259
TND 3.309764
TOP 2.439029
TRY 35.987528
TTD 7.101478
TWD 33.93278
TZS 2767.332256
UAH 43.193134
UGX 3865.469096
USD 1.041384
UYU 44.582103
UZS 13386.996842
VES 48.187714
VND 26482.405897
VUV 123.635251
WST 2.907119
XAF 652.332861
XAG 0.033321
XAU 0.000386
XCD 2.814394
XDR 0.798066
XOF 652.317288
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.243298
ZAR 18.792105
ZMK 9373.707307
ZMW 28.849032
ZWL 335.32536
  • BCC

    2.7050

    143.065

    +1.89%

  • JRI

    0.0490

    13.279

    +0.37%

  • BCE

    0.0750

    26.755

    +0.28%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5000

    59.69

    -0.84%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    13.18

    +1.06%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    24.7

    +0.24%

  • NGG

    0.8696

    62.95

    +1.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    6.79

    +2.65%

  • CMSD

    0.0280

    24.473

    +0.11%

  • RIO

    -0.3700

    62.2

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    37.16

    +0.48%

  • VOD

    0.0973

    8.695

    +1.12%

  • BP

    -0.0350

    29.485

    -0.12%

  • GSK

    0.1800

    33.88

    +0.53%

  • RELX

    0.8250

    46.585

    +1.77%

  • AZN

    1.8050

    66.065

    +2.73%

US, Russia diplomats to talk as tensions over Ukraine rise
US, Russia diplomats to talk as tensions over Ukraine rise

US, Russia diplomats to talk as tensions over Ukraine rise

Washington's and Moscow's top diplomats will hold fresh talks Tuesday on the Ukraine crisis as Western officials say Russia continues to build a massive military force on the ex-Soviet state's border.

Text size:

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is to speak by phone with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, a day after the two sides lashed out at each other in a heated discussion on Ukraine at the UN Security Council.

The two are expected to speak mid-morning Washington time, a State Department official said.

Ahead of the call late Monday, Moscow sent a letter to Washington on its views, in response to written communications laying out the two sides' positions that were exchanged over the past two weeks.

A State Department spokesperson confirmed Moscow's letter.

"It would be unproductive to negotiate in public, so we'll leave it up to Russia if they want to discuss their response," the official said.

"We remain fully committed to dialogue to address these issues and will continue to consult closely with our Allies and partners, including Ukraine."

- Letter exchange -

The call between Lavrov and Blinken comes as Western officials say Russia continues to add to the more than 100,000 troops and a wide range of war-making equipment already in place on Ukraine's borders, including inside Moscow ally Belarus.

US officials say Moscow is set up to invade Ukraine, though a final decision has not been made by President Vladimir Putin.

US President Joe Biden said Monday that Russia faces "swift and severe consequences" if it does so.

"Today in the United Nations, we laid out the full nature of Russia's threat to Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, as well as (to the) core tenets of the rule-based international order," Biden said in the Oval Office.

"We continue to urge diplomacy as the best way forward, but with Russia continuing its build-up of its forces around Ukraine, we are ready no matter what happens."

The call Tuesday will be the first time that Lavrov and Blinken speak directly since the United States and NATO handed over their written responses to Russia's demands last week.

Both rejected Moscow's demand for a guarantee that Ukraine will not join the US-led NATO alliance, and rebuffed its insistence that the United States remove its strategic weapons from Europe.

But the US letter, Blinken said last week, also set out to Moscow a "serious diplomatic path" to resolve the confrontation.

While he made clear joining NATO was a choice for Ukraine alone, he said Washington "addressed the possibility of reciprocal transparency measures regarding force posture and Ukraine, as well as measures to increase confidence regarding military exercises and maneuvers in Europe."

At the UN Security Council meeting Monday, Russia's ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said no Russian official had threatened to invade and accused the United States of "whipping up tensions and rhetoric and provoking escalation."

"The discussions about a threat of war is provocative in and of itself. You are almost calling for this, you want it to happen," he charged.

- Johnson headed to Kyiv -

But US officials say the Russian threat is real. On Monday, both London and Washington warned that among measures that could be taken to punish Russia if it does invade are harsh sanctions on the billionaire oligarchs close to Putin.

"There will be nowhere to hide for Putin's oligarchs," British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss told Sky News.

On Tuesday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will travel to Kyiv for talks with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky on the crisis.

"It is the right of every Ukrainian to determine how they are governed. As a friend and a democratic partner, the UK will continue to uphold Ukraine's sovereignty in the face of those who seek to destroy it," Johnson said in a statement.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)