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Ukraine assured ahead of Helsinki meeting
Journal Staff Report

KYIV, June 9 - Ukraine has secured U.S. assurances that President Donald Trump will not betray its interests when he holds his first bilateral summit meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Helsinki on July 16, Reuters reported.

But Trump is known for his spontaneous and sometimes erratic style of doing diplomacy, and Kiev fears that behind closed doors he may prove susceptible to Putin's efforts to win U.S. acceptance of Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.

Trump and Putin will discuss a range of issues including arms control, Syria and U.S. economic sanctions against Moscow at their summit, which could potentially prove a game-changer for Ukraine.

"We received clear assurances from the American side that Ukrainian interests will be confirmed and protected (at the summit)," said a Ukrainian diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

"It is important for us that no nasty surprise happens behind our backs, and we received assurances (from the U.S. side) that this will not happen."

Kyiv has counted on U.S. diplomatic and financial support in its standoff with Moscow since the annexation of Crimea and the outbreak of Russian-backed separatist fighting in eastern Ukraine that has killed more than 10,000 people despite a notional ceasefire.

Kyiv and Washington accuse Russia of sending troops and arms to Ukraine's eastern Donbass region, which Moscow denies.

Ukraine hopes Trump will push Putin to scale back Moscow's support for the separatists in eastern Ukraine and to soften his position regarding the deployment of a peacekeeping mission to that region.

Some comments Trump made on the presidential election campaign trail in 2016 made Ukrainians nervous about a Trump presidency, but such worries have proved premature.
Kiev has continued to enjoy strong bilateral support from the United States, and sanctions imposed against Russia after the Crimea annexation have been strengthened, not, as some feared, lifted.

In Kurt Volker, Washington appointed a hawkish special envoy to the Ukraine conflict after Trump's election victory, and went as far as providing military aid to Ukraine, a step Trump's predecessor Barack Obama had shied away from taking.

Also, any concession Trump might want to make to Putin would likely meet resistance in the U.S. Congress.
But Trump's unpredictability and capacity to cause ructions among Washington's allies will give Ukraine pause for thought.

Asked in June if the United States would recognize Crimea as part of Russia, Trump said: "We're going to have to see." A White House spokesman later stressed Washington would not recognize the Crimea annexation. (rt/ez)




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