(Reuters) - The
European Union and the United States on Tuesday announced further
sanctions against Russia, targeting its energy, banking and defense
sectors in the strongest international action yet over Moscow's support
for rebels in eastern
Ukraine.
The measures mark the
start of a new phase in the biggest confrontation between Moscow and the
West since the Cold War, which worsened dramatically after the downing
of Malaysian flight MH17 over rebel-held territory on July 17 by what
Western countries say was a Russian-supplied missile.
"If Russia continues on this current path, the costs on Russia will continue to grow," President
Barack Obama said in Washington.
"Russia's actions in
Ukraine and the sanctions that we've already imposed have made a weak Russian
economy even weaker," he said.
In
Brussels, diplomats said ambassadors from the 28-member European bloc
agreed to restrictions on trade of equipment for the oil and defense
sectors, and "dual use" technology with both defense and civilian
purposes. Russia's state run banks would be barred from raising funds in
European capital
markets. The
measures would be reviewed in three months.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, who had been reluctant to step up sanctions
before the crash because of her country's trade links with Russia, said
the latest EU measures were "unavoidable".
Previously
Europe had imposed sanctions only on individuals and organizations
accused of direct involvement in threatening Ukraine, and had shied away
from wider "sectoral sanctions" designed to damage its biggest energy
supplier.
The new measures
were coordinated with Washington in the hope that Russian President
Vladimir Putin will back down from a months-long campaign to seize
territory and disrupt Ukraine, whose pro-Moscow leader was toppled in
February.
But Putin has
shown no sign of backing down. Indeed, despite the international
condemnation following the downing of the airliner, Western countries
say the Kremlin has stepped up support for separatists by sending them
more heavy weaponry.
Moscow denies it is arming the rebels, protestations that are ridiculed in the West.
On
the ground on Tuesday, intense fighting between government troops and
pro-Russian rebels killed dozens of civilians, soldiers and rebels over
the past 24 hours, as Kiev pressed on with an offensive to defeat the
Moscow-backed revolt.
Shells
hit the center of Donetsk, a city with a pre-war population of nearly a
million people where residents fear they will be trapped on a
battlefield between advancing Ukrainian troops and Russian-backed rebels
who have vowed to make a stand.
Ukrainian
forces have been pushing rebel units back toward their two main urban
strongholds of Donetsk and Luhansk and have sought to encircle them in
several places.
The
government says its forces have retaken several villages in the rolling
countryside near where the airliner crashed, killing all 298 passengers,
most of them Dutch.
"DEATH ROW"
In
Donetsk, the body of a dead man lay in rubble behind a badly damaged
10-storey residential building close to the city center, hit by
shelling. Rebels at the scene placed body parts on a nylon sheet and
carried it on a stretcher to a green van.
"There,
that's their 'separatists'. That's their 'rebel commander'," said a
distressed woman in her 60s, gesturing toward the body. "They are
killing neighbors. They are killing people, ordinary people."
Another middle-aged woman, who gave her name as Katarina, charged out of the building next door carrying two bags.
"No more! I cannot live in this death row any more!" she said. "I am leaving! I don't know where!"
Donetsk officials said two people were killed in the shelling of the city.
Municipal
officials said up to 17 people, including children, were killed in
fighting on Monday evening in the town of Horlivka, a rebel stronghold
north of Donetsk that saw fierce battles between the rival forces in the
last few days.
In the city of Luhansk, officials said five civilians were killed when shelling hit a retirement home.
"The
enemy is throwing everything it has into the battle to complete
encirclement of the DNR," Igor Strelkov, a Muscovite rebel commander,
told journalists in Donetsk on Monday evening, referring to the
self-proclaimed "Donetsk People's Republic".
A
rebel source in Donetsk said reinforcements including military
equipment and fighters had arrived across the border from Russia.
Reuters was not able to confirm that independently.
A
spokesman for Ukraine's Security Council, Andriy Lysenko, blamed Russia
for shelling a Ukrainian border crossing point and military positions
from across the border to help the rebels. Moscow has also accused
Ukraine of firing across the frontier.
Washington says the airliner was almost certainly shot down accidentally by rebels using a Russian missile.
BANKING, TECHNOLOGY, ARMS
Leaders
of the United States and major European powers agreed in a
teleconference on Monday to impose sanctions on Russia's banking,
technology and arms sectors.
The
U.S. Treasury imposed sanctions on more Russian banks, targeting VTB,
the Bank of Moscow, and the Russian Agriculture Bank, as well as the
United Shipbuilding Corp.
Winning
support from the EU for sanctions was the trickier task, because the
European bloc does more than 10 times as much trade with Russia as the
United States does and its 28 member states must agree unanimously on
any measures.
To mitigate the impact on Europe's own
economy, the new sanctions will not affect previous contracts, which means
France
will be allowed to go ahead with delivery of a naval helicopter carrier
it has already sold to Russia. Russia's oil industry has been targeted
but its
natural gas, which powers European industry and lights its cities, has been spared.
Russia is the world's biggest exporter of
natural gas and second biggest exporter of oil.
Still,
some European countries and companies will face real pain. British
energy giant BP, the biggest foreign investor in Russia with a near 20
percent stake in Russia's biggest oil company Rosneft, complained its
business could be hurt.
London's
financial services hub could face disproportionate harm from measures
against Russian banks. German manufacturing firms could lose customers.
European banks and other creditors that are owed money by Russians may
face a greater risk that clients will have trouble refinancing or
repaying their loans.
"These
sanctions are harder than anything we have ever had before," said James
Nixey of British think tank Chatham House. "It will hurt a little bit
but it's a down payment on the future security of Europe. It's a
question of Western credibility."
Meanwhile
on the ground, fighting has only intensified since the air crash, with
Ukrainian government forces trying to press on with an offensive that
saw them push rebels out of their bastion of Slaviansk at the start of
the month.
Rebels who
retreated from Slaviansk to Donetsk say they will make a stand inside
the city. Fighting has also intensified in towns and villages near the
border, where the government aims to block rebel reinforcements and arms
shipments from Russia.
Ukraine
military spokesman Lysenko said 10 Ukrainian soldiers were killed over
the last 24 hours. Rebel commander Strelkov said his side had lost 30
fighters killed and wounded.
Plans to open a humanitarian corridor in Luhansk to allow residents to flee the fighting failed. The
United Nations says more than 100,000 people have already fled the east so far.
Violence
in the region also frustrated international experts' efforts to access
the plane crash site for a third day. A Dutch police mission said it
abandoned plans to travel there on Tuesday because of fighting along the
route.
Fighting has
impeded recovery of some of the remains from flight MH17 and made it
impossible to reach the site to investigate the cause of the crash. Kiev
and the rebels accuse each other of fighting in the area to keep
inspectors away.
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