NATO: Russia still has 1000 troops in Ukraine, 20000 more along border – ABC15.com (KNXV

Russia still has about 1,000 troops inside eastern Ukraine, a NATO military officer said Thursday, a week after Ukraine’s government and pro-Russia rebels agreed to a ceasefire aimed at ending months of conflict.

NATO also sees 20,000 more Russian troops aligned along the border, the NATO officer told CNN. He was not named according to standard practice in the organization.

NATO believes that these numbers amount to a large and effective military force, the officer said. In addition to the troop numbers, NATO continues to see the presence of sophisticated Russian military equipment in Ukraine.

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NATO remains concerned by the situation and urges Russia to engage with the international community and Ukraine to find a political solution to the crisis, the officer said.

Moscow has consistently denied allegations by Kyiv and the West that Russia has troops in Ukraine, and that it has armed and supported the rebels.

On Wednesday, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said some 70% of the Russian troops believed to have been in Ukraine had withdrawn back across the border, according to the national news agency Ukrinform.

Information released by Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council on Thursday indicated that the rebel forces currently control a strip of eastern Ukraine running from the city of Luhansk down to the Sea of Azov.

‘Very fragile’ ceasefire

The truce was signed Friday following talks in Minsk, Belarus, between representatives of Ukraine, the rebels and Russia.

But more substantive talks on issues including the decentralization of power and constitutional reform in Ukraine must still take place before a lasting resolution can be found.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich told a briefing Thursday that the ceasefire was “very fragile” and that both sides must implement the framework agreed to in Minsk

“There is mounting evidence of the Kyiv government strengthening its military groups in different areas, regions; there are eyewitness reports to prove it,” he said, “though Ukrainian authorities keep on reassuring us that they’re not planning a military operation.”

Lukashevich said Russia was also surprised by NATO’s announcement of plans to hold joint military exercises with Kyiv in Ukraine later this year.

“This might cause the escalation (of the situation) and put the progress in peaceful settlement of the crisis in Ukraine under threat,” he warned.

He said the deadly crash in July of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 — which Kyiv and the West believe was shot down from rebel-held territory using a Russian-made missile launcher — was being used to justify the imposition of wide-reaching Western sanctions against Russia.

A preliminary report into the crash released this week by Dutch investigators did not apportion blame for the crash but said the plane was brought down by “high energy objects” from outside.

A new round of European Union sanctions against Russia over its actions in Ukraine will come into force Friday, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said Thursday. EU officials will review the implementation of the ceasefire before the end of the month, he said, after which the sanctions could be amended or lifted.

Russia has warned it will respond to any additional measures.

Aid convoy

Lukashevich also said there had not yet been a “breakthrough” allowing a new Russian aid convoy to start moving into Ukraine in the next few days.

“We hope that the delivery will be carried out with participation of Ukraine’s border guards and customs officers as well as officials from the International Committee of the Red Cross,” he said. “We hope, however, that the coordination would not be dragged out.”

A previous convoy carrying aid for civilians caught up in the fighting in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions was sent over the border by Russia without permission from Ukrainian authorities.

The Presidents of Russia and Ukraine are “broadly satisfied” with the status of the ceasefire, Kremlin foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov told Russia’s Interfax news agency on Wednesday.