By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 30, 2014 – Thousands of Russian troops have
pulled back from Ukraine’s border in a move Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
called “promising” yesterday during a media briefing en route to Singapore, one
of the stops on his 12-day trip to Alaska and countries in Asia and Europe.
The secretary said he had not spoken with Russian Defense
Minister Sergei Shoigu about Russians pulling troops back from the Ukraine
border.
“We do know that thousands of Russian troops have been
pulled back and are moving away, but we also know that there are still
thousands of Russian troops there that have not yet moved,” Hagel said.
In early to mid-March, according to news outlets, the
Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Ministry and the Russian Defense Ministry both
announced a buildup of Russian troops on several segments of the eastern
borders between Ukraine and Russia.
At the Pentagon today, Army Col. Steve Warren, a Defense
Department spokesman, confirmed that at least two-thirds of the Russian forces
have repositioned off the border. DOD continues to monitor the situation, he
added.
“The remaining forces appear to be packing up and preparing
to depart the border as well,” and returning to their home bases, Warren said,
noting, “We welcome this.”
But the Pentagon spokesman said it doesn’t change the fact
that for the past several months the Russians have radically destabilized the
situation in Ukraine.
“They still maintain a significant force presence in Crimea,
and we continue to call on them to work to stabilize Ukraine, to prevent
militants from flowing into Ukraine and to help bring a peaceful resolution,”
Warren said.
“The Russians continue to contribute to Ukraine’s
destabilization through their efforts to support Russian-backed separatists and
the fact that they failed to secure their borders so weapons and militants
could flow across the border from Russia and Ukraine,” he added, “so we
continue to call on them to take concrete steps to bring peace throughout the
region.”
On his way to Singapore, Hagel said, “Any time you're moving
troops and equipment and assets away, that's promising. But [the Russians] are
not where they need to be and won't be until all of the troops that they
positioned along that border a couple of months ago are gone.”
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