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NATO releases photos of suspected Russian tanks in Ukraine
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) June 14, 2014


Russia sending tanks, rocket launchers to Ukraine rebels: US
Washington (AFP) June 13, 2014 - The United States on Friday accused Russia of sending tanks and rocket launchers to pro-Moscow rebels in Ukraine.

"We assess that separatists in eastern Ukraine have acquired heavy weapons and military equipment from Russia, including Russian tanks and multiple rocket launchers," State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said in a statement.

The United States had "information that Russia has accumulated tanks of a type no longer used by Russian forces at a deployment site in southwest Russia, and some of these tanks recently departed."

Ukraine alleged Thursday that three tanks had crossed from Russia into its territory, underscoring the growing tensions between Kiev and Moscow.

Ukraine's new President Petro Poroshenko told his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin that the reported crossing of three tanks into his country's separatist east was "unacceptable."

Moscow has denied the allegation, earlier raised by Ukraine's Interior Minister Arsen Avakov, who stopped short of accusing Russia of being behind the reported incursion.

"Russia will claim these tanks were taken from Ukrainian forces, but no Ukrainian tank units have been operating in that area," Harf said in a statement.

"We are confident that these tanks came from Russia."

Earlier, she told reporters that a convoy of "three T-64 tanks, several BM-21 or Grad multiple rocket launchers and other military vehicles" had "crossed from Russia into Ukraine."

Internet videos had shown the same types of the tanks moving through multiple cities in eastern Ukraine, including Snizhne, Torez, and Makiyivka, Harf said.

The same type of rocket launchers was seen traveling through Lugansk.

Russia alleged that two Ukrainian tanks crossed the border into its territory before being intercepted by the border patrol.

NATO released photographs Saturday of what it said were suspected Russian tanks in eastern Ukraine, having warned earlier that confirmation of their presence would mark a "serious escalation" of the crisis.

The US-led military alliance said the photographs showed Russian tanks stationed close to the Ukraine border in early June, then their subsequent movement, some of them being removed as part of Moscow's troop withdrawal.

On Thursday, it noted that the Kiev government had reported that three main battle tanks and several armoured vehicles had crossed into eastern Ukraine via Dovzhansky, and were later said to have been sighted near Donetsk.

"The tanks do not bear markings or camouflage paint like those used by the Ukrainian military," NATO said. "In fact, they do not have markings at all, which is reminiscent of tactics used by Russian elements that were involved in destabilising Crimea."

It said the images raised "significant questions concerning Russia's role in facilitating instability in eastern Ukraine and its involvement in the movement of military equipment from Russian territory into Ukraine."

NATO head Anders Fogh Rasmussen had warned Friday that if confirmed, reports of pro-Russian groups in eastern Ukraine acquiring heavy weapons from Russia, including tanks, would mark a "serious escalation" in the crisis which took a turn for the worse Saturday with the shooting down of a Ukrainian military transport plane.

All 49 troops and crew on board died in the biggest single loss of life in the two-month insurgency which has now claimed some 320 dead.

On Friday, the Kremlin for its part claimed that two Ukrainian tanks had crossed into Russia before being intercepted by a border patrol.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, cited by the Interfax news agency, said President Vladimir Putin "told the foreign ministry to contact the Ukrainian side on the issue of the border violation by Ukrainian troops."

The NATO statement and photographs can be seen on the Internet at http://www.aco.nato.int/statement-on-russian-main-battle-tanks.aspx

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