19 Temmuz 2014 Cumartesi

MH17: Vladimir Putin "must come to feel pain" of sanctions

The Prime Minister insisted that direct military action involving British forces was not on the table but called on European Union leaders to make their influence felt.


In an post launched on Saturday, Mr Cameron said: “If president Putin does not adjust his technique on Ukraine, then Europe and the west need to fundamentally modify our technique to Russia.


“This is not about military action, plainly. But it is time to make our electrical power, influence and assets count.


“We have to establish the full details of what happened. But the growing weight of proof points to a clear conclusion: that MH17 was blown out of the sky by a surface-to-air missile fired from a rebel-held area.


“If it is the situation, then we have to be clear what it indicates: this is a direct end result of Russia destabilising a sovereign state, violating its territorial integrity, backing thuggish militias, and education and arming them.


“We should flip this moment of outrage into a second of action.”


That action should go wider than just bringing people responsible to justice, he mentioned, incorporating: “If president Putin does not adjust his approach on Ukraine, then Europe and the West have to fundamentally adjust our strategy to Russia.


“This is not about military action, plainly. But it is time to make our power, influence and assets count.


“Our economies are sturdy, and growing in strength. And but we sometimes behave as if we require Russia a lot more than Russia demands us and the access we give to European markets, European capital, our expertise and technological skills.


“We will not seek a romantic relationship of confrontation with Russia. But we need to not shrink from standing up for the concepts that govern carry out in between independent nations in Europe, and which in the long run preserve the peace on our continent.”


His intervention comes as European Union foreign ministers prepare to meet this week to discuss the crisis.


Britain is drawing up strategies to use the summit on Tuesday to push for tougher sanctions and sources recommended that if an agreement is reached, Russia could be hit with a lot more punitive measures within days.


A senior British government source stated “attitudes to sanctions are hardening”.


The Prime Minister held telephone calls with Tony Abbott, the Prime Minister of Australia, and Mark Rutte, the Dutch Prime Minister. Variety ten stated afterwards that the leaders had agreed contact on the Protection Council of the United Nations to demand that Russia let crash investigators unhindered access to the web site.


Mr Cameron and Mr Rutte “agreed that the EU will need to reconsider its approach to Russia in light of proof that pro-Russian separatists brought down the plane,” the Downing St spokesman said.


Michael Fallon, the new Defence Secretary, accused Putin of sponsoring terrorism and informed the Russian leader to get out of Ukraine.


‘We have to make it really clear if there is any more interference like this – and it turns out he was behind it – there will be repercussions,” he said in an interview.


“It is sponsored terrorism as far as individuals of east Ukraine are concerned. We really don’t know if somebody mentioned, ‘let’s carry down a civil airliner, wherever it is from’, – but we want to uncover out. They need to have to get out of east Ukraine and leave Ukraine to the Ukrainians.”


Philip Hammond, the Foreign Secretary, warned that President Putin that the “world’s eyes are on Russia to make sure she delivers” on her obligations to the victims killed in the Ukraine plane disaster.


After chairing one more meeting of the government’s Cobra emergency committee, Mr Hammond explained the perpetrators of the assault need to be brought to justice and the victims killed in the catastrophe must be dealt with “with proper dignity and respect”.


“We’re not receiving sufficient help from the Russians,” he explained. “We’re not seeing Russia employing their influence successfully sufficient to get the separatists, who are in handle of the web site, to allow the entry that we need to have.”


Meanwhile, in another day of intense diplomacy, international strain built on President Putin to supply greater cooperation and help for the crash investigators.


Angela Merkel urged President Putin to rein in professional-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine on Saturday, as stress grew for EU states to impose sanctions on Moscow in the wake of the MH17 disaster.


Germany’s chancellor and Russia’s president agreed in a cellphone contact that a thorough investigation was required into the Malaysian Airlines plane crash.


John Kerry, the US secretary of state, also spoke to Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, with the pair determining that “urgent measures” had been needed to end the conflict.


Following a phone phone with Mr Putin the Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte explained: “He has 1 last likelihood to present he means to aid.”


Russia said it was retaliating towards sanctions imposed by the US final week, just prior to the air disaster, by barring entry to unnamed Americans. It also warned of a “boomerang impact” on US organization.



MH17: Vladimir Putin "must come to feel pain" of sanctions

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