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Russia will pay price, warns Hague

Russia will pay price, warns Hague

Tuesday 15 April 2014

Russia will pay price, warns Hague

Tuesday 15 April 2014


Foreign Secretary William Hague is warning Russia that it is in danger of making a "grave miscalculation" if continues its campaign of destabilisation against Ukraine.

With talks due to take place in Geneva on Thursday between Russia, Ukraine, the United States and the European Union, he will say that the crisis sparked by the overthrow of President Viktor Yanukovych in February, has reached a "crucial moment".

"In recent days Russia has deliberately pushed Ukraine to the brink, and created a still greater risk of violent confrontation. We call on Russia to stop these actions and to condemn the lawless acts in eastern Ukraine," he will say, according to an advance extract of his annual Mansion House speech to be given tonight in the City of London.

"Russia must choose whether it is open to diplomacy and de-escalation, and if it decides otherwise, we must be ready for a different state of relations with Russia in the next ten years than in the last 20. Ukraine can be a bridge between East and West and be able to have good relations with Russia. But that does not entitle Russia to send in its armed groups, thinly disguised, to spearhead the occupation of buildings in multiple Ukrainian cities, to try permanently to destabilise the country and dictate the terms of its constitution. My message to Moscow is that if anyone thinks they can do these things without serious long-term consequences they are making a grave miscalculation."

With pro-Moscow activists continuing to occupy a string of police stations and other public buildings across eastern Ukraine, Mr Hague will say that Russia is already paying a "severe price" for its actions. More than 63 billion dollars (£38 billion) in capital has already left the country "as investors draw their own conclusions" about the economic implications, while the EU is preparing a package of far-reaching economic sanctions in the event of any further escalation. European countries are now much more likely to take action to reduce their dependence on Russian energy supplies, he will say, while Moscow's actions have only served to strengthen Nato unity.

At the same time President Vladimir Putin is undermining his own ambition to lock Russia's neighbours into its economic and political orbit by showing the dangers of relying on a "bullying neighbour" with no respect for the sovereignty of others.

"In all these areas the Russian government is now at risk of undermining its own influence, and steadily disconnecting Russia from the international community," he will say. The Russian people stand to lose most of all, if their government continues on this path of the destabilisation of Ukraine."

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