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US leads military drills in Kiev

Published: 21 Jul 2015 - 08:29 am | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 03:51 am

US soldiers stand line during the opening ceremony of joint military exercises in Yavoriv training ground, near the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, yesterday. Saber Guardian/Rapid Trident-2015 drill kicked off at the Yavoriv  base, close to the border with Poland. Some 2,000 soldiers from 18 countries including the USA, Poland and the United Kingdom will take part in the training.

Yavoriv: Ukrainian and US troops launched fresh drills yesterday near the war-torn country’s Polish border in a bid to show unity and resolve in the face of an increasingly defiant Kremlin.
The annual Rapid Trident exercises involve 1,800 soldiers from 18 countries and last for just under two weeks.
Their immediate aim is to build morale and cohesion within the ex-Soviet state’s outdated and woefully underfunded armed forces — caught in a 15-month east Ukrainian quagmire battling pro-Russia militias that has claimed more than 6,500 lives.
But they also deliver a transparent message to the Kremlin about Washington and its allies’ determination to thwart any expansionist ambitions Russian President Vladimir Putin may have.
“These joint manoeuvres... display a broad support for Ukraine in its struggle for freedom and sovereignty,” Ukrainian forces commander Oleksandr Syvak told the festive flag-raising ceremony.
His US counterpart Alfred Renzi said the participating countries — most of them Nato members but also including such former Soviet nations as Moldova and Azerbaijan — “will prove an ability to cooperate as one unified force for stability”.
Russia quickly condemned the war games as a threat to an already shaky five-month truce agreement that aims to resolve one of Europe’s bloodiest conflicts in decades by the end of the year.
Nato “should understand that such actions... may threaten to disrupt the visible progress (made) in the peace process concerning the deep internal crisis in Ukraine,” the Russian foreign ministry said.
Putin has always denied charges of orchestrating Ukraine’s separatist revolt to unsettle the pro-Western leadership that rose to power in the wake of last year’s ouster of a Moscow-backed president. But the veteran Russian leader — immensely popular at home for his patriotic fervour while increasingly isolated abroad — has done little to mask his views of eastern Europe being part of Moscow’s traditional sphere of influence.
Russia set nerves jangling across Europe by sending its fighter jets screaming toward the skies of Baltic and Nordic nations with increasing regularity in recent months. Washington and Nato have denounced such steps as both hostile and dangerous to civilian aircraft.
The Kremlin counters that it is only doing what the United States has been for decades — flexing its military muscle in far-off countries to build a “unipolar world.”
The launch of Rapid Trident was quickly followed by the Russian navy’s announcement that one of its warships stationed off Ukraine’s Kremlin-annexed Crimean peninsula would conduct live rocket fire drills on Sunday. AFP