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Ukraine hosts US-led military drills as truce teeters on the brink

US-led military exercises began in Ukraine as fighting rumbled between government forces and pro-Russian rebels, despite a 10-day-old ceasefire.

Civilian casualties were reported in heavy shelling around the rebel stronghold of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine on Sunday, with Kiev accusing the separatists of jeopardising the truce by intensifying attacks against government positions.


In a show of solidarity for the pro-Western leadership in Kiev, soldiers from 15 nations including the United States began military exercises dubbed "Rapid Trident 14" near the western city of Lviv on Monday, about 620 miles (1,000 kilometres) from the conflict in Donetsk.

A Pro-Russian rebels tank is driven at speed in the town of Luhansk, eastern Ukraine, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2014. Photo: Getty
A Pro-Russian rebels tank is driven at speed in the town of Luhansk, eastern Ukraine, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2014. Photo: Getty

The United States was expected to send around 200 troops, the first such deployment since the pro-Moscow uprising erupted across eastern Ukraine in April.

Defence Minister Valeriy Geletey said Sunday that NATO member states were sending weapons to Ukraine, although this has been previously been denied.

A NATO official said he could neither confirm nor deny the claim "as any such delivery would be done on a bilateral basis".

Ukraine's new leaders have nevertheless announced they want to begin taking steps to join the Western military alliance, a red line for Kiev's former Soviet masters in Moscow.

The conflict in industrial eastern Ukraine has sent ties between Russia and the West plunging to their lowest point since the Cold War and raised the prospect of a wider confrontation on Europe's eastern flank.

A pro-Russian gunman guards a monument to Soviet security police founder Felix Dzerzhinsky in the town of Luhansk, eastern Ukraine, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2014. Photo: Getty
A pro-Russian gunman guards a monument to Soviet security police founder Felix Dzerzhinsky in the town of Luhansk, eastern Ukraine, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2014. Photo: Getty

The warring sides signed up to a 12-point ceasefire in the Belarussian capital Minsk on September 5, but there have been reports of violations almost daily.

President Petro Poroshenko and German Chancellor Angela Merkel "expressed concern" about the breaches in a telephone call late Sunday, his office said.

It also said Merkel backed Poroshenko's plans to introduce legislation in parliament this week, offering limited self-rule for the eastern regions that form the economic backbone of Ukraine, a key provision of the truce.

The pan-European security body the OSCE, which brokered the accord, said its monitors witnessed shelling in a district of Donetsk on Sunday and that rebels had reported four people killed.

Donetsk city council also said there had been civilian casualties but gave no further details.

"The terrorist actions are threatening the realisation of the Ukrainian president's peace plan," said Volodymyr Polyovy, a spokesman for the national security and defence council in Kiev.

He also took aim at comments by two rebel leaders who both signed the truce deal but who declared Sunday they were mere "observers" at the talks.

A Pro-Russian rebels bike arranged with a communist flag, left and Russian motorcycle club
A Pro-Russian rebels bike arranged with a communist flag, left and Russian motorcycle club

Sunday's fighting appeared to be heaviest near Donetsk airport where the Ukrainian military said it had driven back an assault by insurgent fighters on Friday.

But the separatists accused Kiev's forces of failing to halt fire.

"From our side, nobody is shooting but they are breaking the rules, everybody in the world knows it," said a rebel commander defending a checkpoint near a village south of Donetsk.

The ceasefire is seen as a first step in efforts to draw up a longer term peace deal to end a conflict that has cost more than 2,700 lives and sent at least half a million fleeing battered towns and cities across the east.

The truce halted a rebel surge across the southeast last month with the alleged support of Russian paratroopers and heavy weaponry, turning the tide against Ukrainian forces.

NATO and Kiev say at least 1,000 Russian soldiers and possibly many more remain on Ukrainian soil. The Kremlin denies this, although it has said that regular army members taken prisoner in Ukraine were simply lost on the border, while a rebel official said other Russian soldiers had come on "holiday."

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, right, talks with Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2014. Photo: Getty
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, right, talks with Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2014. Photo: Getty

Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk echoed deep Western suspicions about Moscow's ultimate territorial ambitions when he accused President Vladimir Putin on Saturday of seeking to "eliminate" Ukraine as an independent country.

Poroshenko heads to Washington this week to meet President Barack Obama, seeking to secure a "special status" with the United States as he steers Ukraine further out of Russia's orbit.

Obama has rejected direct military involvement but unveiled tougher economic sanctions on Moscow that -- together with similar EU measures -- effectively lock Russia out of Western capital markets and hamstring its crucial oil industry.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused Washington of trying to use the crisis to "break economic ties between the EU and Russia".

The punitive measures and an accompanying East-West trade war have left Russia's economy facing possible recession, and the ruble tumbled again Monday to a new low.


Morning news break - Monday 14th September