Ukraine separatists vow to mobilize 100000 fighters

The United States mulls sending weapons to Kyiv’s outgunned force

A Ukrainian soldier stands watch on a road between Debaltseve and the Ukrainian-controlled town of Artemivsk, in the Donetsk region, on February 2, 2015 ( Manu Brabo (AFP) )

Pro-Russian separatists vowed Monday to mobilize up to 100,000 fighters for their latest east Ukraine offensive as the United States mulled sending weapons to Kyiv’s outgunned forces after the latest truce bid collapsed.

The pledge to dramatically escalate a nine-month conflict that has already left at least 5,100 people dead came as the rebels battled to encircle the beleaguered transport hub of Debaltseve.

“There will be general mobilization in the (separatist) Donetsk People’s Republic in 10 days’ time, we plan on mobilizing up to 100,000 men,” rebel leader Alexander Zakharchenko told the separatist news agency DAN.

Russian President Vladimir Putin was quoted by TASS news agency as saying he was “extremely concerned” by the situation.

Ukrainian army spokesman Andriy Lysenko said the rebel call-up meant they “don’t have the human resources and haven’t achieved their objectives, that is taking the strategic town” of Debaltseve.

Des combattants prorusses dans une rue de Makiivka dans la banlieue de Donetsk  l'Est de l'Ukraine le 1er fvrier 2015 ( Dominique Faget (AFP) )

Kyiv authorities announced at the end of January that they also were calling up 50,000 troops in the face of the latest rebel offensive.

Fighting in Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland has intensified in recent days, with five Ukrainian soldiers and seven civilians killed in the last 24 hours.

Rebel leaders said Monday that 92 of their fighters were killed and 411 injured in January, while 242 civilians perished.

The conflict escalated after the latest attempt at truce talks collapsed in acrimony in the Belarussian capital Minsk on Saturday.

The rebels say they want to redraw the demarcation line agreed in a September ceasefire deal to include gains they have made since ripping up the shaky truce and pushing further into Ukrainian territory.

“We are ready to stop, but only if we remain where we are now,” Zakharchenko told a press conference later Monday in Donetsk.

– Call-up skepticism –

Prime Minister of the Pro-Russian self proclamed

Kyiv military spokesman Lysenko said the center of Debaltseve, which lies around 70 kilometers (43 miles) northeast of Donetsk, had been shelled and that government reinforcements had launched a counter-attack to stop rebels encircling the town.

Over the past three days Ukrainian forces have evacuated 1,872 people from the three towns worst hit by the fighting, including Debaltseve.

In the self-proclaimed rebel capital Donetsk, military-age males met the separatist leader’s call-up announcement with skepticism.

“I wouldn’t give it too much credence,” said Alexander, a 28-year-old transport manager, who supports the rebels but felt that Zakharchenko was “losing the backing of those who supported him.”

Web designer Vitaly, 24, said the call-up would lead nowhere.

“Every day, I feel a little bit more a hostage” of the separatist authorities, he said.

– Lethal assistance –

Picture taken through the rear windscreen of a car shows a tank crew driving along the road near the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on Febuary 2, 2015 ( Dominique Faget (AFP) )

The surge in fighting comes as Washington and NATO’s military commander appear to be moving towards supplying arms to Ukrainian forces, The New York Times reported Sunday.

President Barack Obama’s administration was considering whether to provide “lethal assistance”, in addition to the non-lethal aid such as body armor and medical equipment which it already supplies to Kyiv, it said.

“A comprehensive approach is warranted, and we agree that defensive equipment and weapons should be part of that discussion,” a Pentagon official told the Times.

US Secretary of State John Kerry is set to fly to Kyiv on Thursday to pledge Washington’s support during talks with President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

Western governments and Ukraine have accused Russia of sending troops and arms to bolster the rebels and spearhead the latest onslaught — claims Moscow has repeatedly denied.

The rebels, however, are equipped with the heavy weaponry of a regular army, hardware they claim to have captured from fleeing Ukrainian forces.

– ‘Not prepared for truce’ –

Ukrainian servicemen unload humanitarian aid brought by volonteers in the town of Avdiyivka, in the eastern Donetsk region, on January 31, 2015  ( Oleksandr Ratushniak (AFP/File) )

The latest attempt at a negotiated ceasefire collapsed on Saturday, with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which is involved in the talks along with Russia, saying the rebels “were not even prepared to discuss implementation of a ceasefire and withdrawal of heavy weapons.”

The 28-nation European Union last week extended through September a first wave of targeted sanctions it had slapped on Moscow and Crimean leaders in the wake of Russia’s March seizure of the Black Sea peninsula from Ukraine.

But deep divisions within the EU meant that there was no agreement on expanding broad sanctions targeting Russia’s economy.

(AFP)