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Kremlin Warns Ukraine's New Leader Against Calls for More Russia Sanctions


Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a meeting with the lawmakers in Kiev, Ukraine, May 21, 2019.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a meeting with the lawmakers in Kiev, Ukraine, May 21, 2019.

The Kremlin on Tuesday warned Ukraine's new President Volodymyr Zelensky against asking Washington for more sanctions against Russia, suggesting it would not help his efforts to end the war in the east.

President Vladimir Putin's spokesman made the comments after US Secretary of Energy Rick Perry said in Kiev that Washington intends to impose sanctions on companies involved in the Moscow-led Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline project.

On Monday, Zelensky was sworn in as Ukraine's president and said his priority was ending the conflict with Russia-backed insurgents in the east, which has claimed some 13,000 lives since 2014.

In a meeting with US officials including Perry on Monday, Zelensky called on Washington to introduce more sanctions against Moscow.

"This is the rhetoric that will not help Ukraine to sort out the problem of the southeast," said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, referring to the separatist conflict in the ex-Soviet country's industrial east.

Zelensky had told the US delegation that also included US Senator Ron Johnson that Washington should keep "increasing sanctions" against Moscow.

"We will not be able to overcome Russian aggression in Donbass and Crimea alone," Zelensky was quoted as saying by his office in reference to the eastern regions and Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014.

Peskov said Ukraine should stick to the Western-brokered "Minsk" peace plan — which is largely moribund — if it wanted to settle the conflict.

"The US cannot fulfill a list [of requirements] of the Minsk agreements. Russia cannot fulfill them either," he said. "It is Kiev which can and must fulfill them."

The Kremlin has refused to congratulate Zelensky on his landslide election victory last month or the inauguration.

Nord Stream sanctions

Speaking in Kiev earlier Tuesday, US Secretary of Energy Perry said Washington was moving towards imposing restrictions on the companies involved in the Nord Steam 2 pipeline to Germany.

"The opposition to Nord Stream 2 is still very much alive and well in the United States," Perry said in comments released by the US embassy in Kiev.

Perry said he expected the US Senate and House to approve a bill on the planned measures "over the course of the not too distant future," later sending it to US President Donald Trump.

The bill will "have very, very onerous restrictions on companies that continue to do business with Nord Stream 2," Perry said.

Henning Kothe, chief project officer at Nord Stream 2, said the situation remained unchanged for now.

"We have seen many similar steps before. So far sanctions risk has had no effect, none of our partners have left the project," he told AFP.

The controversial 11-billion-euro ($12-billion) energy link between Russia and Germany is to run under the Baltic Sea and set to double Russian gas shipments to the EU's biggest economy.

Kiev and Washington are opposed to the pipeline, fearing it will increase Europe's reliance on Russian gas.

Peskov dismissed the planned sanctions.

"The project has largely been implemented," he said.

Last week, Putin said Russia would finish the pipeline, which is currently scheduled to be completed by the end of this year.

"I believe we will see its logical completion," he said.

If Washington moves forward with the bill, "it will put the #US on direct confrontation path with the #EU, particularly #Germany," tweeted Elina Ribakova, deputy chief economist at the Washington-based Institute of International Finance.

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