Nato agrees on new `spearhead` force amid Ukraine crisis

  05 September 2014    Read: 1056
Nato agrees on new `spearhead` force amid Ukraine crisis
The Nato military alliance has agreed on a new "spearhead" force amid growing concern at the Ukraine crisis and the rise of Islamic State militants.

The move was announced at a meeting of Nato leaders in Wales.

Talks on a ceasefire in eastern Ukraine have begun, but more clashes were reported close to the city of Mariupol.

Ukraine, Russia and pro-Russia rebels are attending the talks in Belarus, while Western countries ponder further sanctions on Russia.

The West accuses Russia of sending arms and troops to back the rebels in eastern Ukraine. Moscow denies this.

More than 2,600 people have died during the five-month conflict.

The enhanced sanctions are expected to target Russian banking, energy and defence, as well as what British sources call "Putin cronies".

But the UK says the sanctions will probably go ahead whether or not a ceasefire is agreed at the talks in the Belarus capital, Minsk.

"There is a great degree of scepticism about whether this action will materialise, whether the ceasefire will be real," UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said.

"We can always take the sanctions off afterwards. I don`t think we want to be distracted from our determination to impose further sanctions in response to Russia`s major military adventure into Ukraine by these noises off about a possible ceasefire."

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko told the BBC he was "absolutely not confident" that peace could be achieved at the Minsk talks but "Ukraine as a state and me as Ukrainian leader are doing everything possible to have peace."

A continuation of the conflict would lead to "humanitarian catastrophe", he said.

On Wednesday, Russia`s President Vladimir Putin announced a seven-point plan, including a halt to "active offensive operations" by the Ukrainian military and pro-Russia rebels, international ceasefire monitoring, unconditional prisoner exchanges and humanitarian aid corridors.

`Turbulent times`
At the Nato summit, Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the new force - part of Nato`s Readiness Action Plan - would number several thousand and would be able to deploy anywhere in the world in a matter of days.

"In these turbulent times, Nato must be prepared to undertake the full range of missions and protect allies against the full range of threats," he said.

"Should you even think of attacking one ally you will be facing the whole alliance."

Nato member countries bordering Russia have watched Russia`s involvement in Ukraine with growing concern.

The UK has offered to contribute 1,000 personnel to the new force, which will have naval, air and special forces capability.

Mariupol shelling
As the peace talks in Minsk got under way, fighting in eastern Ukraine continued.

Ukrainian government forces and volunteers are trying to hold on to Mariupol on the Azov Sea. The BBC`s Fergal Keane, in Mariupol, tweeted that pro-Russia forces seemed to be hitting Ukrainian positions some 4km (2.5 miles) outside the city.

Large plumes of smoke could be seen as Ukrainian artillery fired back, he says. Ukrainian fighter jets also hit rebel positions.

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