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“Moscow Accuses U.S. of Working on Military 'Scenarios' Near Russia's Borders”
by The Age   
October 17th, 2014

Moscow: Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu accused the United States on Thursday of working on military "scenarios" near Russia's borders that he said were a source of grave concern.

Interfax news agency quoted Mr Shoigu as expressing surprise at a speech on Wednesday in which US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel said US armed forces "must deal with a revisionist Russia - with its modern and capable army - on NATO's doorstep".

Russia's relations with the West have reached a post-Cold War low over the conflict in Ukraine, with Moscow denying accusations that it has supplied weapons and troops to back pro-Russian separatists in the east of the former Soviet republic.

A statue of Prince Dmitry Pozharsky and Kuzma Minin, who gathered an all-Russian volunteer army to expel Polish-Lithuanian forces Commonwealth from Moscow in 1612, in front of St Basil's Cathedral in Red Square. Moscow has expressed concern that the US military is working on military "scenarios" near its borders.

A statue of Prince Dmitry Pozharsky and Kuzma Minin, who gathered an all-Russian volunteer army to expel Polish-Lithuanian forces Commonwealth from Moscow in 1612, in front of St Basil's Cathedral in Red Square. Moscow has expressed concern that the US military is working on military "scenarios" near its borders. Photo: Getty Images

"Chuck Hagel's thesis on the necessity for the American army to 'deal' with 'modern and capable' Russian armed forces on NATO's doorstep is of grave concern," Shoigu said, according to Interfax.

"This testifies to the fact that the Pentagon is working on scenarios for operations at the borders of our country."

Mr Shoigu did not say what he thought the US military was planning.

Washington has been open about its deployment of additional troops to Central and Eastern Europe, including Poland and the Baltic states, on manoeuvres intended to signal its commitment to nervous NATO allies.

Since the collapse of Communism, NATO has expanded eastward to take in three former Soviet republics and a clutch of ex-communist states once dominated by Moscow, in what Russia views as a serious threat.

Mr Shoigu said an "impartial dialogue" was needed with Russia's Western partners on all aspects of relations, instead of "pumping up tension".

His comments marked Moscow's second forceful intervention in two days on the topic of relations with the United States.

In an interview published on Wednesday, President Vladimir Putin warned Washington that a "spat between major nuclear powers" over the Ukraine crisis could threaten global stability, and said Russia would not be "blackmailed" by Western sanctions. 

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