US President, Joe Biden has called on all American citizens remaining in Ukraine to leave the country immediately, citing increased threats of Russian military action.
Mr. Biden said he would not send troops to rescue Americans if Moscow invades Ukraine.
He warned that “things could go crazy quickly” in the region.
Russia has repeatedly denied any plans to invade Ukraine despite massing more than 100,000 troops near the border. But it has just begun massive military drills with neighbouring Belarus, and Ukraine has accused Russia of blocking its access to the sea. The Kremlin says it wants to enforce “red lines” to make sure that its former Soviet neighbour does not join NATO.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Thursday, February 10, 2022, that Europe faced its biggest security crisis in decades amid the tensions.
The US State Department urged Americans in Ukraine to leave immediately.
“American citizens should leave now,” Mr. Biden said.
“We’re dealing with one of the largest armies in the world. It’s a very different situation and things could go crazy quickly.”
Former US President, Joe Biden
When asked whether there was a scenario that could prompt him to send troops to rescue fleeing Americans, Mr Biden replied saying: “There’s not. That’s a world war when Americans and Russia start shooting at one another. We’re in a very different world than we’ve ever been.”
![Ukraine tensions: Joe Biden Orders US Citizens to Leave Ukraine 2 Joe Biden](https://thevaultznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Joe-Biden.jpg)
Meanwhile, world leaders continued their diplomacy to defuse the current crisis over Ukraine.
Russia and Ukraine announced late on Thursday, February 10, 2022, that they had failed to reach any breakthrough in a day of talks with French and German officials aimed at ending the separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine.
The current tensions come eight years after Russia annexed Ukraine’s southern Crimea peninsula. Since then, Ukraine’s military has been locked in a war with Russian-backed rebels in eastern areas near Russia’s borders.
Earlier, the UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, said he hoped “strong deterrence” and “patient diplomacy” could find a way through the crisis but the stakes were “very high”.
In a joint news conference in Brussels with NATO Secretary-General, Jens Stoltenberg, Mr. Johnson said he did not believe Russia had yet taken a decision on whether to invade Ukraine but the UK’s intelligence “remains grim”.
Moscow says it cannot accept that Ukraine, a former Soviet republic with deep social and cultural ties with Russia, could one day join the Western defence alliance, NATO and has demanded that this be ruled out.
Russia has been backing a bloody armed rebellion in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region since 2014. As a resulted, some 14,000 people, including many civilians, have died in fighting since then.
There is some suggestion that a renewed focus on the so-called Minsk agreements, which sought to end the conflict in eastern Ukraine, could be used as a basis to defuse the current crisis.
Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany backed the accords between 2014-2015.
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