Sunday, March 16, 2014

Moscow wins overwhelming Crimea vote, West readies sanctions

Moscow wins overwhelming Crimea vote, West readies sanctions


Crimea's Moscow-backed leaders declared a 96-percent vote in favour of quitting Ukraine and annexation byRussia in a referendum Western powers said was illegal and will bring immediate sanctions.
As state media in Russia carried a startling reminder of its
power to turn the United States to "radioactive ash", President Barack Obama spoke to Vladimir Putin, telling the Russian president that he and his European allies were ready to impose "additional costs" on Moscow for violating Ukraine's territory.
The Kremlin and the White House issued statements saying Obama and Putin saw diplomatic options to resolve what is the gravest crisis in East-West relations since the Cold War.
But Obama said Russian forces must first end "incursions" into its ex-Soviet neighbour while Putin renewed his accusation that the new leadership in Kiev, brought to power by an uprising last month against his elected Ukrainian ally, were failing to protect Russian-speakers from violent Ukrainian nationalists.
Moscow defended a military takeover of the majority ethnic Russian Crimea by citing a right to protect "peaceful citizens". Ukraine's interim government has mobilised troops to defend against an invasion of its eastern mainland, where pro-Russian protesters have been involved in deadly clashes in recent days.
With three-quarters of Sunday's votes counted in Crimea, a Black Sea peninsula that is home to 2 million people, 95.7 percent had supported annexation by Russia, chief electoral official Mikhail Malyshev, was quoted as saying by local media.
Turnout was 83 percent, he added - a high figure given that many who opposed the move had said they would boycott the vote.
U.S. and European officials say military action is unlikely over Crimea, which Soviet rulers handed to Ukraine 60 years ago. But the risk of a wider Russian incursion, as Putin probes Western weakness and tries to restore Moscow's influence over its old Soviet empire, leaves NATO calculating how to help Kiev without triggering what some Ukrainians call "World War Three".
'RADIOACTIVE ASH'
Highlighting the stakes, journalist Dmitry Kiselyov, who is close to the Kremlin, stood before an image of a mushroom cloud on his weekly TV show to issue a stark warning. He said: "Russia is the only country in the world that is realistically capable of turning the United States into radioactive ash."
On Lenin Square in the centre of the Crimean capital Simferopol, a band struck up even before polls closed as the crowd waved Russian flags. Regional premier Sergei Aksyonov, a businessman nicknamed "Goblin" who took power when Russian forces moved in two weeks ago, thanked Moscow for its support.
The regional assembly is expected to rubber-stamp a plan to transfer allegiance to Russia on Monday before Aksyonov travels to Moscow, although the timing of any final annexation is in doubt. Putin may choose to hold off a formal move as diplomatic bargaining continues over economic and diplomatic sanctions that many EU states fear could hurt them as much as they do Russia.
"Cherish Putin, he is a great, great president!" said Olga Pelikova, 52, as fireworks lit up the night sky and fellow Crimeans said they hoped to share in Russia's oil-fuelled wealth after two decades of instability and corruption in Ukraine.
But many ethnic Tatars, Muslims who make up 12 percent of Crimea's population, boycotted the vote, fearful of a revival of the persecution they suffered for centuries under Moscow's rule.
"This is my land. This is the land of my ancestors. Who asked me if I want it or not?" said Shevkaye Assanova, a Tatar in her 40s. "For the rest of my life I will be cursing those who brought these people here. I don't recognise this at all."
A pressing concern for the governments in Kiev and Moscow is the transfer of control of Ukrainian military bases. Many of the bases are surrounded and under control of Russian forces, even though Moscow formally denies it has troops in the territory beyond facilities it leases for its important Black Sea Fleet.
On Sunday, the Ukrainian and Russian militaries agreed on a truce in Crimea until March 21, Ukraine's government said.
Crimean leaders have said Ukrainian troops can serve Russia or have safe passage out of the region. But some leaders in Kiev have said they expect their forces to defend their positions.
SANCTIONS NOW
The White House said in a statement on the call with Putin that Obama "emphasised that Russia's actions were in violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity and that, in coordination with our European partners, we are prepared to impose additional costs on Russia for its actions".
The European Union will raise the stakes on Monday by slapping sanctions on officials. EU diplomats were haggling over a list of people in Crimea and Russia who will be hit with travel bans and asset freezes for actions which "threaten the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine."
An initial list of 120 to 130 names will be whittled down to "tens or scores" before EU foreign ministers take the final decision in Brussels on Monday, diplomats said. Ministers are also expected to cancel an EU-Russia summit scheduled for June in Sochi, where Putin last month hosted the Winter Olympics.
The EU is working to revive a trade and aid deal with Ukraine which ousted president Viktor Yanukovich rejected in November in favour of cash from Moscow, triggering protests that led to bloodshed in Kiev and his flight to Russia last month.
The risk of Europe becoming locked in a damaging spiral of economic retaliation with Moscow, from which it buys much of its energy, depended on Russia, Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans said ahead of the EU meeting in Brussels: "I would do anything possible to avoid sanctions, because I believe everybody will suffer if we get into sanctions," he said.
The U.S. administration is also preparing to identify Russians to punish with visa bans and asset freezes that Obama authorised this month. It, too, is likely to act on Monday.
INVASION RISK
The Kremlin statement again highlighted concerns, largely dismissed by Kiev and its Western allies, that Russian-speakers who make up a sizeable minority of Ukraine's 46 million people were facing violence and intimidation since Yanukovich fell.
"Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin drew attention to the inability and unwillingness of the present authorities in Kiev to curb rampant violence by ultra-nationalist and radical groups that destabilise the situation and terrorise civilians, including the Russian-speaking population," it said.
Putin suggested European security monitors should be sent to all parts of Ukraine because of the violence, it said.
There were pro-Russian rallies in several Ukrainian cities on Sunday, including one in Kharkiv where protesters burned books at a Ukrainian cultural centre where two pro-Russian activists were shot dead on Friday in a fight with members of Right Sector, a nationalist group that emerged during battles with riot police amidst the pro-European protests in Kiev.
In Donetsk, heart of the industrial east where a Ukrainian nationalist was killed in a clash last week, some welcomed the outcome in Crimea and hoped they too might vote to join Russia.
"This is a total victory. A 100 percent win," said one man who gave his name as Roman. "We here in Donetsk support Crimea. We don't support the Kiev authorities that are ruling today."
In Kiev and the Ukrainian-speaking west of the country the mood was sombre. "This isn't a referendum - it's a show for the Russians to legitimise taking over," said Kyrylo Sergeev in the capital. Another man in Kiev, Vasyl Olinyk, said: "This could be war, not between Ukraine and Russia but maybe World War Three."
As Ukrainian television channels played patriotic songs over images of tanks rolling in to reinforce the eastern border, where the president says Russia has massed troops ready to invade, the head of the national security council said a Moscow plot, codenamed "Russian Spring", to foment violence and justify invasion was failing to garner significant support.
"The plan has failed," Andriy Paruby said. "Despite all the Kremlin's technical powers, we have managed to keep control."
The Interior Ministry, possibly responding to reported threats by nationalist militants to attack pipelines carrying Russian gas exports to the EU across Ukraine, said its forces had taken control of the country's vital pipeline network.
A Western official briefed on security discussions suggested NATO governments were taking the risk of invasion seriously.
"Putin would be mad to invade Ukraine," he said, forecasting a quick victory over Ukraine's armed forces being followed by a long insurgency and civil war. "He is much better playing it long, fomenting rebellion among the ethnic Russians and waiting until the very weak Ukrainian government collapses.

"However ... Putin may decide to go for the jugular ... He has the means and he may decide to exploit events as they unfold to achieve his long-term strategic end: re-establishment of Russian power in its 'near abroad'."

Friday, March 7, 2014

Japan's Leader Stands With U.S. on Ukraine

Japan's Leader Stands With U.S. on Ukraine

President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan spoke Thursday and agreed that Russia's actions in Ukraine threaten world peace and security, the White House said.
The statement said the two leaders "emphasized the importance of preserving Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity."
It said the Obama and Abe also pledged to work through the International Monetary Fund to support Ukraine's government.
Obama is set to visit Japan in April on a trip that will also take him to South Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines. He was forced to skip a trip to Malaysia and the Philippines last fall because of the government shutdown.
Abe visited Sochi last month for the opening of the Winter Olympics and met with Russian President Vladimir Putin then.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Ukraine crisis: Obama urges Putin to pursue diplomacy

Ukraine crisis: Obama urges Putin to pursue diplomacy



US President Barack Obama has urged President Vladimir Putin to seek a diplomatic solution to the crisis in Ukraine, in a lengthy telephone call.
In their hour-long conversation, the Russian leader said Moscow-Washington relations should not suffer.
Russian troops have taken de facto control of Crimea following the fall of Ukraine's pro-Moscow president.
The crisis has led to a boycott by many foreign dignitaries of the Sochi Winter Paralympics, which open on Friday.
Solution
President Obama stressed to Russia's president that his country's actions in Crimea were a violation of Ukrainian sovereignty, the White House said in a statement.
He said there was a solution available that suited all parties, involving talks between Kiev and Moscow, international monitors in Ukraine and Russian forces returning to their bases.
For his part, President Putin said US-Russian "relations should not be sacrificed due to disagreements over individual, albeit extremely significant, international problems," the Kremlin said.
It was the two leaders' second telephone call concerning Ukraine in less than a week.
A Ukrainian serviceman (rear) looks at uniformed men, believed to be Russian servicemen, standing guard at a Ukrainian military base in a village outside Simferopol, Crimea, 6 March 2014A Ukrainian soldier looks on pro-Russian gunmen patrol a military base outside Simferopol in Crimea
Russia's President Vladimir Putin chairs a government meeting in his Novo-Ogaryovo residence, outside Moscow on 5 March 2014.Russia's President Putin is due to open the Sochi Paralympic Games on Friday
It comes after the EU and US joined Ukraine's government in condemning as "illegal" a move by the Crimea region to set up a referendum to endorse joining Russia.
The Crimean parliament on Thursday said it had decided "to enter into the Russian Federation with the rights of a subject of the Russian Federation" and asked President Putin "to start the procedure".
MPs in Crimea - whose population is mostly ethnic Russian - earlier set a date of 16 March for a referendum on the issue.
'Territorial integrity'
The EU, meeting in Brussels on Thursday, threatened "serious consequences" if Russia did not act to de-escalate the crisis.
Before the Brussels summit, some EU members - led by Germany - had indicated they preferred mediation with Russia to try to solve the crisis, rather than any stronger measures.
But correspondents say the Crimean MPs' move has clearly toughened the line taken.
The BBC's Christian Fraser describes the tense atmosphere on board a blockaded Ukrainian warship
In a statement, the EU said it was suspending talks with Moscow on easing travel restrictions on Russians entering the EU.
It said that if Russia did not move to de-escalate the situation quickly, it would "decide on additional measures, such as travel bans, asset freezes and the cancellation of the EU-Russia summit".
Speaking after the MPs' vote in Crimea, President Obama said the referendum would "violate the Ukrainian constitution and international law".
The US had earlier issued visa restrictions on a number of unnamed Ukrainian and Russian officials and individuals "to deny visas to those responsible for, or complicit in, threatening the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine".
UK Prime Minister David Cameron said the situation remained "highly precarious, the slightest miscalculation could see it spiral out of control".
But correspondents say it may still be difficult for the EU to agree on tougher sanctions as most member states are keen to avoid economic conflict with Russia.


'Illegitimate and unnecessary'
Several countries including the US and the UK have already pulled delegations out of the Sochi Paralympic Games in Russia in response to its military's movement inside Ukraine.
Officials from the Ukrainian delegation will reveal whether the team will participate in the Games in a news conference at about 09:30 GMT on Friday.
In a televised address, Ukraine's Interim President Olexander Turchynov denounced the Crimea referendum as "illegitimate and unnecessary, it contradicts the will of the Ukrainian people".
He cited Article 73 of the Ukrainian constitution which says issues relating to borders must involve a "referendum across the whole of Ukraine".
But Crimea's First Deputy PM Rustam Temirgaliev said Crimea viewed the new authorities in Kiev as illegitimate and that Crimea was now in Russia.
Pro-Russian gunmen had moved in to seize strategic sites in Crimea after Viktor Yanukovych was ousted as the president of Ukraine following months of protests in Kiev.
The demonstrations - by Ukrainians seeking closer ties with the West - turned violent in mid-February with more than 90 people killed in clashes with police.

Staples to close 225 stores by 2015

Staples to close 225 stores by 2015

Mike Blake/Reuters - Staples, the largest U.S. office supplies retailer, forecast a fall in current-quarter sales as it loses customers to mass market chains and e-retailers, and the company said it would close up to 225 stores in North America by 2015.
Staples joins the list of retailers that are shrinking their physical footprint to focus on online sales.
The office supplies giant said Thursday that it plans to close 225 stores in the United States and Canada by 2015 as part of a $500 million cost-cutting program. Staples reported a heavy fourth-quarter sales loss and forecast weaker sales in the current quarter.
More business news

Staples to close 225 stores by 2015

Staples to close 225 stores by 2015
The office supplies chain joins the list of retailers shrinking their physical footprint to focus on online sales.

Mortgage rates fall following weak economic data

Mortgage rates fall following weak economic data
The 30-year fixed rate reverses course, dropping to 4.28 percent. It has remained below 4.5 percent for the past eight weeks.

Group pledges to lend $1B in support of Obama initiative

The “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative aims to boost the life chances of young African and Hispanic men.

The Massachusetts-based company has faced the same issues affecting most retailers, such as competition from behemoths like Walmart and Amazon. Staples closed 109 stores in North America and Europe in 2013, the company said. It operates 1,515 stores in the United States, 331 in Canada and more than 2,200 worldwide.
“With nearly half of our sales generated online today, we’re meeting the changing needs of business customers and taking aggressive action to reduce costs and improve efficiency,” Ron Sargent, Staples’ chairman and chief executive officer, said in a statement.
The retailer’s fourth-quarter sales fell 4 percent to $5.9 billion, compared with a year ago. Same-store sales were down 7 percent in the fourth quarter, Staples said, but online sales increased by 10 percent in the same period. Staples’ share price fell about 12 percent to $11.76 in early morning trading.
Earlier this week, RadioShack said it was closing 1,100 stores as it tries to cut costs and modernize its brand. Macy’s, J.C. Penney and other retailers have also announced plans to close stores.
The holiday season was tough for retailers as Americans stayed away from stores, the weather worsened and retailers over-discounted, hurting their own bottom lines. This year has not been very different so far.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

St. Clair County begins accepting applications for same-sex marriage licenses

St. Clair County begins accepting applications for same-sex marriage licenses


St. Clair County is accepting applications for same-sex marriage licenses after Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan said there was no reason to wait for a June 1 law allowing the unions.
Clarity from Madigan was sought by the Macon County clerk’s office after a federal court ruling last month that allowed same-sex couples in Cook County to begin applying for licenses.
In her letter to Macon County Clerk Stephen Bean on Tuesday, Madigan said the federal court ruling was not limited to the state’s most populous county and encouraged county clerks across Illinois to make the licenses available.
The letter by Madigan caught county clerks across the state off guard and led to varying reactions.
“We are at this time taking applications that will be reviewed by our state’s attorney and he will determine whether we have the legal authority,” St. Clair County Clerk Tom Holbrook said Wednesday.
It is “pretty clear” based on other legal challenges around the state that same-sex marriage licenses will be issued in the Metro East before June 1, he said.
Cook and Champaign counties have already started issuing licenses; McLean County will start March 24.
Holbrook said his office had received several calls from gay couples wanting to know what St. Clair County planned to do.
“We might as well get the process ready because it’s coming,” he said. “We think it’s better to be proactive.”
In Madison County, Clerk Debra D. Ming-Mendoza said her office was proceeding as if June 1 remained the date.
She said her office did not have new forms that offered appropriate options for the names of the applicants. Current marriage license applications have “bride” and “groom” on them.
Taking a current form, crossing out a title and writing in what the couple would prefer “is not professional and doesn’t look legal.”
She said she had fielded a few calls from people interested in getting married in Madison County.
“They seemed to understand,” Ming-Mendoza said. “One woman asked: ‘If we go to Cook County, will our marriage be recognized in Madison County?’ I said: ‘Of course, it would be.’ ”
Monroe County Clerk Dennis Knobloch said he was telling couples calling his office to check back later.
“We’re looking at what it will take to institute” the changes in the county’s computer system for same-sex marriage forms, Knobloch said.
“I’m sure it will take a little time to do that.”
Bean, the Macon County clerk in central Illinois, said he would begin issuing the licenses, perhaps as soon as Friday, along with a warning to couples that marriages before June 1 could come with legal risks.
“A court could determine we really didn’t have the power to do this and the marriage is void,” Bean said.
In November, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed into law the recognition of same-sex marriages. Because the final House vote on the bill was too close to win the “supermajority” necessary for immediate implementation of the law, it was set to go into effect in June.
But after couples in Cook County filed suit, U.S. District Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman in Chicago ruled last month that there was no reason to delay the “fundamental right” of gay couples to marry.

US anchor for Russia Today quits over Crimea 'invasion'

US anchor for Russia Today quits over Crimea 'invasion'

Date
An American news anchor for television station Russia Today has announced her resignation during a live broadcast, saying that she cannot be part of an organisation "funded by the Russian government that whitewashes the actions of [Russian President Vladimir] Putin".
The dramatic resignation of Liz Wahl, who is based in the Washington bureau of the Kremlin-funded channel, comes just a day after it was revealed another Russia Today anchor would be sent by the broadcaster to Crimea to "better her knowledge" after she spoke out against what she called Russia's military invasion in Ukraine.
In a live broadcast on Wednesday, US time, Wahl began by referring to the controversial stance taken by her colleague, Abby Martin, also based in Washington, who had shocked mostly pro-Russian viewers earlier in the week by announcing that "Russia was wrong" in sending its troops to Crimea
Quit live on air: Liza Wahl.
"Last night, Russia Today made international headlines when one of our anchors went on the record and said Russian intervention in Crimea was wrong," Wahl began.
"Indeed, as a reporter on this network, I face many ethical and moral challenges."
Wahl explained that her grandparents had fled Soviet oppression during the Hungarian revolution and arrived in the US as refugees.
Her other grandparents had witnessed the "daily grind of poverty", she said.
"I'm the daughter of a veteran," Wahl said.
"My partner is a physician at a military base, where he sees every day the first-hand accounts of the ultimate prices that people pay for this country, and that is why personally I cannot be part of a network funded by the Russian government that whitewashes the actions of Putin.
"I'm proud to be an American and believe in disseminating the truth, and that is why after this newscast I'm resigning."
The English-language Russia Today is widely perceived as the voice of the Kremlin, and Reporters Without Borders describes it as a "step of the state to control information".
It is often anti-American in its coverage and has been accused of ignoring a number of human rights abuses in the country, as well as controversial issues such as the prison sentences given to punk band Pussy Riot.
Earlier in the week, Martin had addressed the camera in unscripted remarks at the end of the station's Breaking the Set segment.
"Just because I work here, for RT, doesn't mean I don't have editorial independence and I can't stress enough how strongly I am against any military intervention in sovereign nations' affairs," she said.
"I will not sit here and apologise or defend military aggression."
However, later in the 75-second clip, she admitted gaps in her knowledge, saying: "I don't know as much as I should about Ukraine's history or the cultural dynamics of the region, but what I do know is that military intervention is never the answer."
Russia Today's official statement in relation to Martin's stance said: "Contrary to the popular opinion, RT doesn't beat its journalists into submission, and they are free to express their own opinions, not just in private but on the air. This is the case with Abby's commentary on the Ukraine.
"We respect her views, and the views of all our journalists, presenters and program hosts, and there will be absolutely no reprimands made against Ms Martin.
"In her comment Ms Martin also noted that she does not possess a deep knowledge of reality of the situation in Crimea. As such we'll be sending her to Crimea to give her an opportunity to make up her own mind from the epicentre of the story."
Martin told the Telegraph: "I am not going to Crimea despite the statement RT has made."

Pentagon sending fighter jets to boost NATO presence amid Ukraine crisis

Pentagon sending fighter jets to boost NATO presence amid Ukraine crisis0

The U.S. military is boosting its NATO presence in a bid to support the defenses of U.S. allies in Europe in response to Russia's takeover of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula. 
After Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel first alluded to the effort during testimony on Capitol Hill earlier Wednesday morning, a Defense official confirmed that the U.S. will send six additional F-15s and one KC-135 to "augment the mission" in Baltic countries. 
The U.S. currently provides four F-15s to what's known as the Baltic Air Policing rotation. The additional aircraft will be sent from a base in Britain to Siauliai Air Base in Lithuania, the official said. 
"This action comes at the request of our Baltic Allies and further demonstrates our commitment to NATO security," the official said. 
In addition, the official said the Pentagon is now "consulting" with Polish allies on "increasing activities" in connection with a separate detachment mission in that country. Poland currently hosts 10 U.S. Air Force personnel as part of joint aviation training work. 
Speaking during a press conference in Paris, Secretary of State John Kerry described these decisions as "concrete steps to reassure our NATO allies." Obama administration officials continue to urge Russian President Vladimir Putin to "de-escalate" and have not confirmed that any military options are on the table at this point. 
In his remarks earlier Wednesday, Hagel focused on U.S. diplomatic and aid efforts since Moscow's invasion into Ukrainian territory. He said he'd speak later Wednesday with Ukraine's new defense minister; Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey spoke to his Russian counterpart earlier in the day. Neither Hagel nor Dempsey mentioned military options. 
"I urge continued restraint to reserve room for a diplomatic solution," Dempsey told the Senate panel. 
While the hearing was supposed to focus on the military's budget, both witnesses quickly addressed the ongoing events in Ukraine. 
Since last weekend, Russian troops have taken control of much of the peninsula in the Black Sea, where Russian speakers are in the majority. Moscow doesn't recognize the Ukrainian leadership that came to power after protesters ousted the country's pro-Russian president last month. It has cited strategic interests as well as the protection of ethnic Russians in making its case for intervention. 
Hagel said the U.S. was reaffirming its commitment to allies in Central and Eastern Europe, some of whom spent decades in the last century under Soviet domination. European countries are grappling with their own response to the crisis, fearful about moves reminiscent of Russia's Cold War policy of regional hegemony but equally concerned about damaging trade and energy partnerships vital to their economies. 
The United States assumed control over NATO's air policing duties over Baltic countries Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in January. Belgium previously had the four-month rotating duty. The mission "not only protects the integrity of NATO airspace, it illustrates the alliance's core function of collective defense," the 28-nation bloc said in a statement at the time. 

Monday, March 3, 2014

Ukrainian soldiers in Crimea reject Russian demands of allegiance

Ukrainian soldiers in Crimea reject Russian demands of allegiance

Russia ratchets up pressure on Ukrainian forces in Crimea, as it continues to defy international calls that it withdraw its troops.

Ukrainian soldiers in Ukraine reject Russian demands for allegiance
Russian soldiers stand outside a Ukrainian military base in Perevalnaya, in Ukraine's Crimea region. The facility, under siege by Russian forces for three days, faced demands that it give up its weapons. 
BAKHCHISARAY, Ukraine — The Russian soldiers outside an army base in this Crimean city had demands Monday for the Ukrainian soldiers inside: Pledge allegiance to the Russian military or put their weapons in storage, abandon their post and go home.
The Ukrainians refused.
"They must know that should they attempt to storm the base, we will fight back until the last drop of our blood," Col. Sergei Stashenko, the site's Ukrainian commander, told The Times. "Whatever they are up to, we will not allow them to get hold of our weapons."
Outside the base, armed Russian soldiers strolled around on a sunny afternoon, petting stray dogs and joking with a couple of young women in a nearby park. Over the barbed wire, armed Ukrainian soldiers watched their movements through binoculars.
Of the Russian demands, Stashenko was adamant: "This is absurd and totally unacceptable to us. We remain committed to the oath we took before our country and the Ukrainian people."
Throughout Ukraine's Crimea region Monday, Russia ratcheted up its pressure on Ukrainian forces, demanding their virtual surrender, even as Moscow continued to defy international demands that it withdraw its troops. A Ukrainian coastal defense unit in the town of Perevalnaya, under siege by Russian forces for three days, faced demands that it give up its weapons.
Russian naval forces, which have long leased a base in Crimea, blockaded two Ukrainian navy vessels in the port of Sevastopol and issued what was becoming a familiar demand to the sailors: Surrender and swear allegiance. The Interfax news agency in Moscow denied that the ultimatum had come from the Kremlin.
Russian troops also seized control of the commercial port of Kerch, on the far eastern point of the diamond-shaped peninsula, and shored up patrols of military installations throughout the region.
Moscow has defended the chokehold its forces have put on the region — which so far has not led to a shooting war — as necessary to protect Russian citizens and military installations in Crimea after the ouster late last month of Ukraine's pro-Russia president. But the intervention has spurred outrage in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, and throughout the international community.
After an emergency meeting in Brussels of European Union foreign ministers, the 28-nation bloc issued a statement condemning the incursion and warning that Western Europe's "ambitions" for closer relations with Russia had been put in doubt. Several countries have already announced they will not attend an upcoming meeting in Sochi, Russia, of theGroup of 8 industrialized nations.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague, in Kiev on Monday, warned that the tense standoff over Crimea constitutes "the biggest crisis in Europe in the 21st century" and that Russia would face "other consequences and other costs" if it did not back down. U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry was en route to Kiev for meetings Tuesday to show support for Ukraine's interim leaders.
Russian officials have cast the tumultuous leadership change in Ukraine last month, which drove their ally President Viktor Yanukovich from power, as a "bandits' coup." Their arguments have stirred fears among Ukraine's Russian speakers, who are a minority in the country but a majority in the east, that their rights and safety are at risk under the former opposition politicians now in power.
The demands being issued by the expanding Russian forces are an alarming sign that they might be in Crimea to stay, one analyst said.
"It means that Ukraine is steadily losing the Crimea to Russia and it will be extremely difficult to get it back, as the Ukrainian army is incapable of opposing Russia," said Kost Bondarenko, head of the Ukrainian Policy Institute, a Kiev-based think tank.
One glimmer of hope emerged but appeared to gain little traction. During a phone call from German Chancellor Angela Merkel late Sunday, Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly agreed to a fact-finding mission under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
In the towns and cities of Crimea, meanwhile, soldiers and civilians alike expressed fears that the confrontation will turn into a shooting war.
Here in Bakhchisaray, the ancient capital of Tatar rulers, not all of the Russian soldiers seemed committed to the threat to storm the Ukrainian military strongholds unless the troops surrendered.
"We don't need their weapons," said a young Russian soldier who refused to give his name and rank. "I am not going to fight with my brothers and shoot at them. I have many relatives and friends in Ukraine.
"We are here only to prevent the bases' weapons from getting into the hands of fascists and extremists," he said, echoing Moscow's description of Ukraine's new leaders and their supporters.
Close to the gates of the coastal defense unit in Perevalnaya, women who work at the base or have relatives within were gathered, tense and agitated.
"What Russia is doing here is extremely ugly," said Svetlana Gorbacheva, 50, a librarian for the unit and a mother-in-law of one of its officers. "We are extremely scared that some lunatic may make the first shot and the whole situation will deteriorate into bloodshed, if not a real war between our fraternal peoples."
A shot had already been fired Monday morning by a Ukrainian soldier guarding a military air base in Belbek, near Sevastopol, the port leased by Russia's Black Sea fleet. The soldier fired in the air when Russian servicemen threw stun grenades at Ukrainian troops.
After the warning shot, the Russians retreated. But one Ukrainian officer was hospitalized after being lightly wounded by a stun grenade, said Vladislav Seleznev, spokesman for Ukraine's Defense Ministry.
"So far this conflict has claimed no deaths," Seleznev told The Times, expressing fear that any miscalculation could change that. "Russians are using dishonest and unfair arguments. No one is encroaching upon the lives of Russian nationals in Crimea and no one is threatening the lives of Russian navy personnel stationed here."
Denis Berezovsky, the Ukrainian rear admiral who defected to Russian forces Sunday, appeared at the gates of the Ukraine naval headquarters and sought to persuade other Ukrainian officers to cross to the Kremlin's side, Seleznev said.
The officers gathered in a courtyard of the base responded, he said, by singing the Ukrainian national anthem.