No Pinoys will be harmed in Ukraine – Locsin
By J.Lo
“Rest assured Filipinos in Ukraine will come to no harm; I will be on top of it personally… I’m done in Cambodia in 2 days; then ASEAN-EU in Paris by 19th… that’s close enough to Ukraine to effect their safe passage out,” Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. assured no Filipinos will be harmed in Ukraine amid reports of imminent Russian invasion.
Locsin is in Phnom Penh, Cambodia to participate in the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting Retreat and Related Meetings on February 16 to 17.
The Foreign Affairs secretary is coordinating with other officials to secure safety of Filipinos in Ukraine.
“It will be a land journey to the closest border; I expect the Americans to keep watch as they did and more discreetly in Libyan evacuations and rescues…this is when we know who are our friends and who are just crybabies,” Locsin said.
The Philippine Embassy in Warsaw earlier was monitoring at least 380 Filipinos living in Ukraine, most of whom are in Kyiv and its environs and are therefore located far from eastern border near Russia.
The embassy said they have reached out to nearly 400 Filipinos in Ukraine and asked them to immediately contact the embassy for any untoward incident in their areas.
US government officials said an attack by Russia on Ukraine “could come within days.”
Jake Sullivan, US President Joe Biden’s national security adviser said there were “signs of Russian escalation, including new forces arriving at the Ukrainian border.” He also said a major assault could be launched “during Olympics,” which is about to end on Feb. 20.
Biden appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin to step back from war with Ukraine. Biden spoke of “needless death and destruction” Russia could cause and international outrage Putin would face.
US President Joe Biden made an impassioned appeal to Russian President Vladimir Putin to step back from war with Ukraine, speaking starkly of “needless death and destruction” Moscow could cause and international outrage Putin would face.
In a nationally televised speech, Biden said United States estimates 150,000 Russian troops now encircle Ukraine, a higher number than previous estimates of about 100,000. He said reports that some forces had withdrawn were welcome, but they were unverified and an invasion remained very much a possibility.
Biden said diplomacy remains live option to wind down crisis and urged Russia to engage. If Russia invades Ukraine, US and its allies are prepared to respond with penalties aimed at exacting economic pain and global isolation, he said.
“The United States is prepared no matter what happens,” he said.
Much of Biden’s remarks were aimed squarely at Putin, who has demanded that NATO not accept Ukraine as a member and stop any further eastward expansion. Biden’s threats of repercussions for Russia have yet to persuade Putin to back down.
“The United States and NATO are not a threat to Russia… Ukraine is not threatening Russia…neither US nor NATO have missiles in Ukraine…we do not, do not have plans to put them there as well…we are not targeting the people of Russia…we do not seek to destabilize Russia,” said Biden.
The American president also appealed directly to Russian citizens.
“To the citizens of Russia: you are not our enemy, and I don’t believe you want a bloody, destructive war against Ukraine,” Biden said.
The human and strategic costs would be “immense” for Russia if it attacks, he said. “The world would not forget that Russia chose needless death and destruction,” Biden said.
The president said US is “not seeking direct confrontation with Russia” and that American soldiers were not going to fight in Ukraine. But, he said if Russia were to attack Americans in Ukraine, “we will respond forcefully.”
He warned that a Russian invasion would cause “consequences here at home,” including energy costs.
The speech came on a day that Ukraine said it had been hit by a cyberattack and appeared to blame Russia.
Biden issued a warning for Russia not to engage in cyberattacks.
“If Russia attacks US or our allies through asymmetric means like disruptive cyberattacks against our companies or critical infrastructure, we’re prepared to respond,” he said.
Biden spoke to Putin earlier and with Ukraine President Volodomyr Zelenskiy on Sunday, and has warned repeatedly of steep costs for Moscow, including sanctions against Russian businesses and oligarchs.
But he has laid out a road map for a peaceful resolution, including talks on missile deployments and military exercises to try to reduce tensions in the region.
US “has put on the table concrete ideas to establish security environment in Europe. We’re proposing new arms control measures, new transparency measures, new strategic stability measures,” that apply to NATO and Russia alike.
In his speech, Biden said US and its NATO allies are prepared for whatever happens.
“We are ready to respond decisively to a Russian attack on Ukraine, which remains very much a possibility,” Biden said.
Reports that Russia had withdrawn some military units “would be good but we have not yet verified that,” he said.
“Indeed, our analysts indicate that they remain very much in a threatening position,” he said, citing “more than 150,000 troops encircling Ukraine and Belarus and along Ukraine’s border.”
“An invasion remains distinctly possible,” Biden concluded.
