Kyiv, Sept 20 (Reuters) – Russian leaders in four occupied parts of Ukraine have drawn up plans for a referendum to join Russia, a move Ukraine dismissed on Monday as a blow to Moscow on the Russian side After trying to retract the initiative’s stunt. battlefield.
“The Russians can do whatever they want. That doesn’t change anything,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kouleba said in response to a question from reporters during a meeting with U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield.
He added in a tweet: “Russia has been and remains an aggressor who illegally occupied parts of Ukraine. Ukraine has every right to liberate its territories and will continue to liberate them no matter what Russia says.”
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U.S. National Security Adviser Jack Sullivan said Washington and its allies would reject any such referendum, which he said would do Russia no favors on the battlefield.
In an apparently concerted move, Russia-backed officials announced a referendum planned for September. 23-27 In the provinces of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporozhye, about 15% of the territory of Ukraine or about the size of Hungary.
Russia already considers Luhansk and Donetsk, which together make up the Donbas region that Moscow partially occupied in 2014, as independent states. Ukraine and the West believe that all parts of Ukraine controlled by Russian forces are illegally occupied.
Denis Pushilin, the self-proclaimed leader of the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), wrote in a social media post to Putin: “If the referendum has a positive decision, I will ask you as soon as possible – we There is no doubt about it – consider incorporating the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea into Russia.”
Some pro-Kremlin figures see the referendum as an ultimatum to the West to accept Russia’s territorial gains or risk an all-out war with a nuclear-armed foe.
Dmitry Medvedev, a former Russian president and now a hawkish vice-chairman of Putin’s security council, said on social media: “Violating Russian territory is a crime that allows you to use all means of self-defense.”
Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of the pro-Kremlin RT TV station, wrote: “The referendum today, the recognition of part of the Russian Federation tomorrow, the attack on Russian territory the day after tomorrow becomes Ukraine and NATO and Russia, loose in every way. Open the hands of Russia.”
Redefining fighting in occupied territory as an attack on Russia could also give Moscow reason to mobilize its 2 million-strong military reserve. Despite mounting losses in what it calls limited “special military operations” rather than war, Moscow has so far resisted the move.
Sullivan said Washington was aware of reports Putin might be considering ordering a mobilization, which Sullivan said would not diminish Ukraine’s ability to repel Russian aggression.
Vehicles drive past billboards, including those displaying pro-Russian slogans, during the Russian-Ukrainian conflict in Luhansk, Ukraine, on September 20, 2022.REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Kuleba also mentioned a possible Russian mobilization plan, tweeting: “A fake ‘referendum’ will not change anything. Neither will any mixed ‘mobilization’.”
‘loud and clear’
Estonian Prime Minister Kayakaras tweeted: “If Russia conducts a fake referendum on occupied Ukrainian territory, let me say it loud and clear: We will never admit it. Ukraine has every right to reclaim its territory. “
Since the defeat of its invading forces on the outskirts of Kyiv in March, Russia has declared the occupation of all Luhansk and Donetsk provinces as the main objective of its “special military operation”.
It now owns about 60 percent of Donetsk and, after months of heavy fighting, had slowly advanced nearly all of Luhansk by July. But those gains are now under threat after Russian troops were expelled this month from neighboring Kharkiv province, losing control of most of the main supply lines on the Donetsk and Luhansk fronts.
The referendum was announced a day after Ukraine said its troops had retaken their stronghold in Luhansk, the village of Bilokhorivka, and were ready to advance across the province.
The Ukrainian Defense Ministry mocked Moscow, claiming it had abandoned the front lines in Kharkiv to “regroup” to fight elsewhere. “Why did the chicken cross the street?” Ukraine’s foreign ministry tweeted. “Because it’s regrouping.”
Russia controls most of Zaporozhye, but not its regional capital. In Kherson, the region’s capital and the only major city Russia has so far fully occupied since the invasion, Ukraine launched a major counteroffensive.
Unconfirmed footage on social media shows Ukrainian troops stationed in Bilohorivka, an area just 10 kilometers (6 miles) west of the city of Lysychansk, during some of the heaviest fighting in the war in July It fell into the hands of the Russians a few weeks later.
“Every centimeter will be fought,” Sergei Gede, the governor of Ukraine’s Luhansk governor, wrote on Telegram. “The enemy is preparing their defenses. So we’re not going to simply march.”
Pro-Russian officials said the referendum could be conducted electronically. Eight years ago, Russia held a referendum in Crimea before announcing its annexation. Western countries consider such voting illegal and fraudulent.
To support Russia’s military in Ukraine, Russia’s parliament on Tuesday also approved a bill that would increase penalties for a range of crimes, such as desertion, damage to military property and disobedience, if committed in situations of military mobilization or fighting.read more
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Reporting in the Reuters Bureau; Writing by Andrew Osborne and Alex Richardson; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Peter Graff
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