WASHINGTON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and US President Joe Biden are to meet late on Friday in Washington to discuss whether to let Ukraine fire Western-provided long-range missiles into Russia, an option that has sent tensions soaring with Moscow.
The meeting comes with Kyiv with pushing hard for permission to use the weapons, and President Volodymyr Zelensky accusing the West of being “afraid” to even help Ukraine shoot down incoming missiles as it has done with Israel.
But Russia´s President Vladimir Putin has warned that lifting the restrictions on Ukraine would mean Nato was “at war” with Moscow.
In a sign of increasing tensions, Russia revoked the credentials of six British diplomats whom it accused of spying in what London termed “baseless” allegations.
British and US media reported that a wary Biden was ready to let Ukraine deploy British Storm Shadow missiles and similar French munitions using US technology -- but not US-made ATACMS missiles themselves.
The White House played down the chances of any immediate decision coming from his talks with Starmer, who´s making his second visit to the US since taking office in July.
“I wouldn´t expect any major announcement in that regard coming out of the discussions, certainly not from our side,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters.
Kirby said there was “no change to our policy with respect to the long-range strike capability inside Russia” and added that “and I wouldn´t expect that to change today.”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin´s message was unambiguous: “We have no doubt that this statement has reached its recipients.”
Russia´s UN ambassador Vassily Nebenzia warned separately that letting Ukraine use long-range weapons would plunge Nato into “direct war with... a nuclear power.”
Responding to Putin´s warning, Starmer told UK media travelling with him that “Russia started this conflict. Russia illegally invaded Ukraine. Russia can end this conflict straight away.”
The talks come with Biden on his way out of office and November´s US election a toss-up between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump.
Trump has repeatedly praised Putin, and refused to take sides on the war during a debate with Harris on Tuesday, saying only: “I want the war to stop.”
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