Defence Minister Peter Dutton warns ’thousands of people will die’ if Russia invades Ukraine
Defence Minister Peter Dutton has put ‘bully’ nations on notice ahead of high level talks with the UK amid growing concerns Russia will invade Ukraine.
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Defence Minister Peter Dutton has issued a warning to “bully” nations as he prepares to meet with his UK counterpart.
Amid growing concerns of China’s rise in the Indo-Pacific, Mr Dutton and Foreign Minister Marise Payne are set to discuss increasing defence ties at a meeting of AUKMIN on Friday.
Speaking on Sunrise, Mr Dutton said the UK-Australia relationship was critical to the region.
“If we can bring strong friends together, I think we deter bullies and people who might seek to do harm to a country,” the Defence Minister said.
“The UK’s family as we know, and they are a reliable partner. We have fought alongside them for generations.”
But long-awaited talks are set to be overshadowed by the threat of war in the Ukraine.
Mr Dutton warned the build-up of Russian forcers near Ukraine’s borders is “incredibly concerning”.
“It impacts the whole world when you see Russia act the way they do, it encourages other dictatorships to do the same. Particularly if there is no push back from the rest of the world. As we are seeing with European leaders, they are pushing back,” he said.
“Thousands of people will die, and that is not a circumstance anybody wants to see prevail. The build up of Russian troops is incredibly concerning.”
The United States and its allies on Thursday warned Moscow of grave consequences if “any” of the tens of thousands of troops massed on the border were to cross the border into Ukraine.
Following talks in Berlin with Germany, France and Britain, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken underlined that Russia “cannot match” Western powers’ resoluteness.
Allowing Russia to violate Ukraine’s territorial integrity would “drag us all back to a much more dangerous and unstable time, when this continent, and this city, were divided in two … with the threat of all-out war hanging over everyone’s heads,” he said in the German capital.
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, speaking alongside Mr Blinken, said the West would not shy away from taking action even if that included measures that “could have economic consequences for ourselves”.
Fears are mounting that a major conflict could break out in Europe, and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson cautioned that Russia marching on Ukraine would have repercussions beyond the continent.
“It would be a disaster for the world,” he said.
In a bid to defuse the worst tensions between Russia and the West in decades, Mr Blinken is on a whirlwind diplomatic tour that took him to Berlin on Thursday before his meeting with Russia’s Sergei Lavrov in Geneva on Friday.
Moscow insists it has no plans to invade but has at the same time laid down a series of demands – including a ban on Ukraine joining NATO – in exchange for de-escalation.
Washington has rejected Moscow’s demands as “non-starters” and NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg this week insisted that the alliance “will not compromise on core principles such as the right for each nation to choose its own path”.
Upping the ante, Russia announced new naval drills that will see it deploy to the Atlantic, Pacific, Arctic and Mediterranean “more than 140 warships and support vessels, more than 60 aircraft, 1000 pieces of military equipment, and about 10,000 servicemen”.
The announcement followed an angry condemnation from the Kremlin of what it described as “destabilising” remarks from US President Joe Biden, after the American leader vowed a “severe” response to any invasion of Ukraine.
Russia already held joint military drills Wednesday with forces of ex-Soviet republic Belarus, which also neighbours Ukraine.
A US official said the exercises could presage a permanent Russian military presence involving both conventional and nuclear forces in Belarus.
Meanwhile, Biden sparked controversy as he appeared to indicate that a “minor incursion” might prompt a smaller reaction from NATO allies.
“It’s one thing if it’s a minor incursion, and then we end up having a fight about what to do and not do, et cetera,” he said.
Speaking to the German television channel ZDF on Thursday, Mr Blinken clarified the comments saying that any crossing of the border into Ukraine by Russian soldiers would constitute a very clear aggression, irrespective of whether it was a single soldier of a thousand, according to a German translation of his remarks.
Biden also took pains to calm frazzled nerves, saying that any entry of Russian troops into Ukraine will be treated by the West as “an invasion”.
But smarting from Biden’s Wednesday remark, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky hit back that there was no such thing as “minor incursions”.
“We want to remind the great powers that there are no minor incursions and small nations. Just as there are no minor casualties and little grief from the loss of loved ones,” Zelensky wrote on Twitter.
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Originally published as Defence Minister Peter Dutton warns ’thousands of people will die’ if Russia invades Ukraine