Russian Troops Start Pulling Back from Ukrainian Border

Russian troops began pulling back to their permanent bases Friday after a massive buildup that caused Ukrainian and Western concerns.
On Thursday, Russian Defense
Minister Sergei Shoigu declared the sweeping maneuvers in Crimea and wide
swaths of western Russia over, and ordered the military to pull the troops that
took part in them back to their permanent bases by May 1.
At the same time, he ordered their
heavy weapons kept in western Russia for another massive military exercise
called Zapad (West) 2021 later this year. The weapons were to be stored at the
Pogonovo firing range in the southwestern Voronezh region, 160 kilometers (100
miles) east of the border with Ukraine.
The concentration of Russian
troops amid increasing violations of a cease-fire in the conflict in eastern
Ukraine raised concerns in the West, which urged the Kremlin to pull its forces
back.
The US and NATO have said the
buildup was the largest since 2014, when Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean
Peninsula and threw its support behind separatists in Ukraine’s eastern
industrial heartland of Donbas.
Moscow has rejected Ukrainian and
Western concerns about the troop buildup, arguing that it’s free to deploy its
forces anywhere on Russian territory. But the Kremlin also sternly warned
Ukrainian authorities against trying to use force to retake control of the
rebel east, saying it could intervene to protect civilians there. More than
14,000 people have been killed in seven years of fighting between Ukrainian
troops and Russia-backed separatists in Donbas.
Asked if the Kremlin thinks that
the Russian troop pullback could help ease tensions with the United States,
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said that the
issues aren’t connected.
“It's not an issue for Russia-US relations,”
Peskov said in a call with reporters. “We have said that any movement of
Russian troops on Russian territory doesn't pose any threat and doesn't
represent an escalation. Russia does what it thinks is necessary for its
military organization and training of troops.”
The Russian Defense Ministry said
its forces that took part in the massive drills in Crimea were moving Friday to
board trains, transport aircraft and landing vessels en route to their
permanent bases.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy has welcomed the Russian pullback.