US accuses Russia after Putin warning on gas supplies to Europe

US accuses Russia after Putin warning on gas supplies to Europe

MOSCOW / WASHINGTON - Reuters

Russia's President Putin attends a meeting with members of the All-Russian People's Front group at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside Moscow, April 10. REUTERS Photo

President Vladimir Putin warned on April 10 that Russian gas supplies to Europe could be disrupted if Moscow cuts the flow to Ukraine over unpaid bills, drawing a U.S. accusation that it is using energy "as a tool of coercion."

In a letter to the leaders of 18 European countries, Putin made clear that his patience would run out over Kiev's $2.2 billion gas debt to Russia unless a solution could be brokered urgently.

Russia has nearly doubled the gas price it charges Ukraine, whose economy is in crisis, since pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovich was overthrown two months ago. Russia then annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea, provoking the biggest confrontation with the West since the Cold War.

Putin said Russian exporter Gazprom would demand advance payment for gas supplies to Ukraine and "in the event of further violation of the conditions of payment will completely or partially cease gas deliveries."

That could have knock-on effects for European Union countries, much of whose Russian gas flows in pipelines across Ukraine. "We fully realise that this increases the risk of (Ukraine) siphoning off natural gas passing through Ukraine's territory and heading to European consumers," the letter said.

Russia meets 30 percent of Europe's natural gas demand and half of this goes through Ukraine. The United States accused Moscow of using its vast energy reserves to pressure the former Soviet republic. "We condemn Russia's efforts to use energy as a tool of coercion against Ukraine," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

State-controlled Gazprom stopped pumping gas to Ukraine during price disputes in the winters of 2005-2006 and 2008-2009, leading to reduced supplies in European countries.

Russian officials say gas dealings with Ukraine are purely commercial and it was forced to move after Kiev failed to meet a deadline on Monday to pay for its March supplies.

EU set to help Ukraine pay gas bills: Oettinger
    
European Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger is working on a plan to help Ukraine pay some of its gas bills to Russia, he told Austria's ORF radio on Friday, saying there was "no reason to panic" about Russian gas supplies to Europe.
  
 "We are in close contact with Ukraine and its gas company to ensure that Ukraine remains able to pay and the debts that the gas company has to Gazprom do not rise further," he said, adding he would meet Ukraine's energy and foreign ministers on Monday.
   
"I am preparing a solution that is part of the aid package that the IMF, the European Union and the World Bank is giving to Ukraine and from which payment for open bills will be possible."

Rebel amnesty

In Ukraine, pro-Russian separatists occupying two official buildings in the eastern cities of Donetsk and Luhansk rejected a government offer of an amnesty in exchange for laying down their weapons.

That raised fears that the authorities could follow through on a threat to use force to clear the buildings which have been occupied since last weekend.

Protesters wearing bullet-proof vests and armed with Kalashnikov rifles in a former KGB headquarters in Luhansk said they would lay down their weapons only if Kiev agreed to hold a referendum on the future of the largely Russian-speaking region.

Crimea voted last month for union with Russia in a referendum held after Moscow's forces had already taken control of the Black Sea peninsula. Kiev has rejected holding a similar vote in the east, saying the occupations are part of a Russian-led plan to dismember the country.

"We are trying to find a compromise, but the demands put forward by the occupiers are unacceptable. Our aim is to avoid the use of force, but that option remains in place," Deputy Interior Minister Serhiy Yarovy told journalists.

Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk is to travel to Donetsk on April 11 to discuss the crisis. NATO raised Moscow's ire by publishing satellite pictures it said showed a Russian military buildup on the Ukrainian border. Moscow said they had been taken last year.

"The alliance is trying to use the crisis in Ukraine to rally its ranks in the face of an imaginary external threat to NATO members and to strengthen demand for the alliance," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, visiting Prague, said the threat was real. "Russia is stirring up ethnic tensions in eastern Ukraine and provoking unrest," he told a news conference.

"And Russia is using its military might to dictate that Ukraine should become a federal, neutral state. That is a decision which only Ukraine as a sovereign state can make."

A Pentagon representative confirmed that the destroyer USS Donald Cook arrived in the Black Sea on April 10 for exercises with ships from Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey.

U.S. President Barack Obama discussed the Ukraine situation in a telephone call on Thursday with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the White House said.