Russia's deputy foreign minister said Moscow has warned the U.S. that pouring weaponry into Ukraine is a "dangerous move."
A
top Russian diplomat said Saturday that Moscow has informed U.S.
officials that it views Western arms shipments to Ukraine as "legitimate
targets" for military attacks, heightening fears of a direct confrontation
between the nuclear-armed powers.
"We warned the United States that the
orchestrated pumping of weapons from a number of countries is not just a
dangerous move, it is a move that turns these convoys into legitimate
targets," Sergei Ryabkov, Russia's deputy foreign minister, told a
state television outlet Saturday morning.
Ryabkov added that Moscow emphasized to Washington
"the consequences of the thoughtless transfer to Ukraine of weapons like
man-portable air defense systems, anti-tank missile systems, and so on."
While
U.S. President Joe Biden has vowed not to involve American troops directly in
any conflict with Russia, the administration has been pouring arms and advanced
weaponry into Ukraine for months, shipments that ramped up after Russia launched its
full-scale invasion on February 24.
On
March 4, as the New York Times reported,
"some 14 wide-bodied aircraft transported a bristling array of Javelin
antitank missiles, rocket launchers, guns, and ammunition to an airfield near
Ukraine's border."
"The
top U.S. military adviser to President Biden inspected the weapons transfer
operation in an unannounced trip, meeting with troops and personnel from 22
countries who were working around the clock to unload the armaments for
transport by land to the Ukrainian forces," the Times continued.
"The American weaponry, which included the Javelins as well as small arms
and munitions, was part of a $350 million package that Mr. Biden
authorized."
"Within
two days, one official said, the deliveries were landing at an airfield near
the border that can process 17 airplanes a day," the Times added. "What began as a trickle—with
only two or three planes arriving a day—is now a steady flow, the official
said, with 14 loads from one airfield alone."
The Washington Post reported Friday
that the Biden administration is currently "working with European allies
to expedite more sophisticated air-defense systems and other armaments into the
war zone."
Ryabkov's
remarks Saturday came after NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg warned that
a Russian attack on supply lines of countries providing weapons to
Ukraine—which is not a NATO member—would constitute a dangerous escalation.
"The
allies are helping Ukraine uphold their right for self-defense, which is
enshrined in the U.N. Charter," Stoltenberg said in an interview with CBC News.
"Russia
is the aggressor and Ukraine is defending itself. If there is any attack
against any NATO country, NATO territory, that will trigger Article 5,"
Stoltenberg added, referring to the self-defense clause of NATO's founding
treaty.
The Intercept's Jeremy Scahill argued in
a column on Thursday that the rapid acceleration of arms shipments into Ukraine
represents "a significant escalation of Western involvement" in the
deadly conflict.
"It
is understandable and reasonable that people across the U.S. and Europe are
demanding their governments send more weapons to support Ukraine in resisting
the Russian invasion," Scahill wrote. "Without the Western-supplied
weapons Ukraine already possessed; it is very likely Russia would be in control
of much larger swaths of the country."
"It
is also vital," Scahill added, "that people advocating such a policy
consider whether a sizable increase in U.S. and NATO weapons transfers will
prolong the conflict and result in even more civilian death and
destruction."
Jake Johnson, Common Dreams
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