President Joe Biden said a Russian invasion of Ukraine was still possible.
President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that Russia is ready to talk with US, NATO on security issues.
Ukraine websites experienced a cyberattack on Tuesday.
President Joe Biden delivered his first comments about the situation in Ukraine directly to the American people on Tuesday.
Biden spoke from the East Room of the White House during a day of continued negotiations and developments over the pending crisis.
“We are ready with diplomacy,” Biden said. “And we are ready to respond decisively to a Russian attack on Ukraine, which is still very much a possibility.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow is ready for talks with the U.S. and NATO on limits for missile deployments and military transparency, a second signal Tuesday of a potential tension release in the conflict between Russia and the West over Ukraine.
Just hours earlier, Russia said it would send home some troops from military exercises, which have raised fears of an invasion of Ukraine.
President Joe Biden addressed the developing situation from the White House on Tuesday afternoon, starting at 3:30 p.m. ET.
Speaking after talks with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Putin said that while the U.S. and NATO rejected Moscow’s demand to keep Ukraine and other ex-Soviet nations out of NATO, halt weapons deployments near Russian borders and roll back alliance forces from Eastern Europe, they have agreed to discuss some security measures already suggested by Russia.
Putin said Russia is ready to engage in talks on limiting the deployment of intermediate range missiles in Europe, transparency of drills and other confidence-building measures but emphasized the need for the West to heed Russia’s main demands.
Russia-Ukraine explained:Inside the crisis as US, allies await next move
Biden: Invasion still ‘distinctly possible’
Biden said the United States cannot trust the Russian defense members claims Tuesday that troops that had been taking part in military exercises near Ukraine’s border are being pulled back.
“That would be good,” Biden said. “But we have not yet verified that.”
Biden said the U.S. analysis indicates that the troops remain in a threatening position.
“Invasion remains distinctly possible,” he said.
— Maureen Groppe
Blinken to Lavrov: U.S. needs to see ‘verifiable, credible, meaningful de-escalation’
The United States needs to see “verifiable, credible, meaningful de-escalation” of Russian action toward Ukraine, Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in a call Tuesday.
Blinken also said he is still waiting for Russia’s written response to last month’s proposal from the U.S. and NATO about “concrete areas for discussion,” according to State Department spokesman Ned Price.
Blinken noted that Lavrov said a response “would be transmitted within the coming days,” according to Price.
Price also said Blinken emphasized that the U.S. is still looking for a diplomatic solution to “the crisis Moscow has precipitated” but remains concerned that Russia has the capacity to launch an invasion of Ukraine at any moment.
Ukraine’s information security center said Tuesday that the country’s ministry of defense and at least two banks had come under cyberattack, shutting down websites and access to information and accounts.
The Ukrainian Centre for Strategic Communications and Information Security did not attribute the attacks in an online posting, but suggested that Russia was responsible.
“It is not ruled out that the aggressor used tactics of little dirty tricks because its aggressive plans are not working out on a large scale,” said the center, which is part of Ukraine’s culture ministry and works with U.S., British and NATO officials in Kyiv.
“During the last few hours, Privatbank has been under a massive DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attack. Privat24 users report problems with payments and the application in general. Some users do not manage to log in to Privat24 at all, others do not have displayed the balance and recent transactions,” according to the Ukrainian Center’s website.
It said Oschadbank also has failures, and internet banking is down, and that the websites of the Ministry of Defense and the Armed Forces of Ukraine were also attacked.
In a statement, Privatbank said it had “managed to eliminate the consequences of the DDOS attack and restore the stable operation of systems.”
U.S. cybersecurity experts warned that a Russia cyberattack against Ukraine could take many forms, from full-scale takedowns to low-grade distributed denial-of-service attacks like those targeting the banks. DDoS attacks disrupt the normal flow of Internet traffic by overwhelming a target or its broader network.
Russia has used such DDoS attacks prior to some form of military action for more than a decade, including against Georgia in 2008 and, later, against Ukraine. Often, they are done prior to more aggressive cyberattacks, or as a way to disrupt communications prior to an invasion.
In Georgia in 2008, cybersecurity experts say, the attacks on its Internet infrastructure began days or even weeks before Russia’s military incursion, with coordinated barrages of millions of DDoS requests that overloaded and essentially shut down Georgian servers. The website of then-Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, for instance, was knocked out of service for more than a day by multiple DDoS attacks.
– Josh Meyer and Karina Zaiets
Biden to address nation on Ukraine
President Joe Biden will briefly address the situation in Ukraine in afternoon remarks, the White House announced.
Biden will not announce new policy, according to White House press secretary Jen Psaki. Instead, he will provide an update to the standoff.
“He will speak about the situation on the ground, the steps we have taken, the actions we are prepared to take, what’s at stake for the US and the world and how this may impact us at home,” Psaki tweeted.
Biden will reiterate that the United States is still looking for a diplomatic resolution, pointing to “multiple diplomatic off-ramps” already offered Russia by the U.S. and its allies.
“The United States continues to believe diplomacy and de-escalation are the best path forward, but is prepared for every scenario,” the White House said in a statement.
Biden is scheduled to speak from the East Room at 3:30 p.m.
– Maureen Groppe
More:Where is Ukraine? Where are NATO members? A guide to post-Soviet eastern Europe
Blinken speaks with Lavrov as Biden talks to Macron
Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, on Tuesday morning, as efforts to de-escalate the military situation around Ukraine picked up.
The call with Russia’s foreign minister came hours after Moscow said it started pulling back some troop units taking part in military exercises near Ukraine’s border.
A senior State Department official provided little information on the call, other than that Blinken and Lavrov agreed to stay in touch when they last spoke.
Around the same time of Lavrov call, President Joe Biden spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron from 10:11-11 a.m., according to the White House.
– Maureen Groppe
Russia announces troops will return to bases
Russia’s defense ministry claimed Tuesday that it started pulling back some troop units taking part in military exercises near Ukraine’s border, but it gave no specific details on where the troops were pulling back from, or how many.
Ukrainian officials said it was too early to tell whether the announcement reflected a genuine change of tone from Moscow following weeks of tensions over fears of a Russian invasion.
“As with all things Russia, actions speak louder than words,” Deputy National Security Adviser Daleep Singh told CNBC on Tuesday morning. “We’re going to monitor everything that we see on the ground very carefully. And of course, our goal is peace and to uphold the principle that you can’t redraw borders by force.”
“If there’s a troop or a tank that crosses the border, we’re ready to impose the most severe sanctions ever levied on Russia in lockstep with our allies and partners,” he said.
The apparent development came a day after Russia’s foreign minister indicated the country was ready to keep talking about the security grievances that led to the Ukraine crisis – Europe’s worst East-West standoff in decades – and western officials warned the attack could come at any time, signaling Wednesday as a possible invasion day.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has repeatedly accused the West of causing undue panic over Russia’s invasion threat, saying Ukraine’s intelligence did not indicate an imminent threat. The fears of an invasion grew from the fact that Russia has massed more than 130,000 troops near Ukraine. Russia denies it has any invasions plans.
Biden threatens devastating sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine. Here’s what that might look like.
Ukraine’s leaders expressed skepticism about Russia’s reported pullback.
“Russia constantly makes various statements,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said. “That’s why we have the rule: We won’t believe when we hear, we’ll believe when we see. When we see troops pulling out, we’ll believe in de-escalation.”
Moscow wants guarantees that NATO will not allow Ukraine and other former Soviet countries to join the military alliance. It also wants the alliance to halt weapons deployments to Ukraine and roll back its forces from Eastern Europe.
The Kremlin has cast the U.S. warnings of an imminent attack as “hysteria” and “absurdity,” and many Russians believe that Washington is deliberately stoking panic and fomenting tensions to trigger a conflict for domestic reasons.
Zelenskyy declared Wednesday would be a “day of national unity,” calling on the country to display the blue-and-yellow flag and sing the national anthem.
What is a false flag? US says Russia may use the tactic to justify Ukraine invasion
Contributing: Courtney Subramanian, USA TODAY; Associated Press
Uber, Lyft safety: I’m mom of three. I need to know I’ll make it home.
Uber, Lyft made safety improvements, but many of those protect riders more than drivers. But drivers are also in danger.
Naomi Ogutu
Opinion contributor
I’ve been a rideshare driver in New York City for six years, and I take pride in my job and helping my passengers get where they need to go safely. But my safety is not a guarantee. I’m a mom of three. I need to know that I’ll make it home to my kids at the end of each night.
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Russians fear toll of sanctions triggered by Putin’s Ukraine invasion
Harsh sanctions from Western nations on Russia have reminded citizens of the country’s 1998 debt crisis.
By Anna Nemtsova
USA TODAY
McDonalds and other American businesses have closed in Russia amid its invasion into Ukraine.
One expert estimates more than 200,000 Russians have left the country since the start of the war.
To counter economic turmoil, Putin has demand “unfriendly” countries pay for natural gas exports in rubles.
The once bustling corner of Moscow’s central Tverskaya Street looked deserted on Wednesday, as Russia’s first-ever McDonald’s franchise – opened in 1990 in a move that symbolized the Soviet Union’s opening to the West – shut its doors.
A large mural depicting a giant, Soviet-era medal – the Order of Victory, the highest military decoration awarded in World War II — loomed over over the empty sidewalk.
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The lone No. 1 seed still alive heading into the Elite Eight, Kansas needs only a win against No. 10 Miami (Fla.) to book a spot in the Final Four.
No. 2 Duke and coach Mike Krzyzewski can make one last Final Four and chase one final national championship by beating No. 4 Arkansas.
No. 2 Villanova can reach the national semifinals for the third time in six tournaments by winning what should be a defense-dominated brawl against No. 5 Houston.
And after beating No. 4 UCLA in the Sweet 16, No. 8 North Carolina is one win from reaching the Final Four under first-year coach Hubert Davis.
If everything goes according to plan, this year’s Final Four will consist of some of the biggest names in the history of the sport.
But the last week has taught us that this year’s NCAA Tournament will inevitably deviate from the script.
So look for the Jayhawks to be shocked in the Elite Eight, as the Bill Self collection of tournament collapses adds another painful chapter. Based on how things have gone through three rounds, Arkansas is a lock to send Krzyzewski into retirement one game shy of the Final Four. Villanova may be a two-time champion under Jay Wright, but the Wildcats will be smothered by Houston.
And, of course, the Tar Heels will lose to the team that embodies the wackiness and uncertainty of this entire tournament.
Saint Peter’s stands at the precipice of another outlandish achievement: being the first No. 15 seed — the first seed lower than No. 11, in fact — to reach the Final Four.
The Peacocks will be the underdog once again come Sunday, when they’ll match against a deeper and more talented opponent with decades of history to more than overshadow the Peacocks’ three-game run.
But beating another college basketball giant will simply take what we already know the Peacocks can bring to the table: Saint Peter’s reached the Elite Eight with energy, aggressiveness and composure, following the model set by unflappable coach Shaheen Holloway, and that same combination will give the Peacocks a chance at etching themselves into an even more permanent place in NCAA Tournament history.
“We’re happy but don’t mistake, we’re not satisfied, we’re not satisfied at all,” said guard Doug Edert. “The job is not finished. We feel like we belong and the more games we win the more confidence we build.”
That sounds like bad news for the Tar Heels, who might’ve righted the ship after a poor start to ACC play but could be the latest blueblood to the Peacocks’ formula.
At some point, the magic has to run out — for Saint Peter’s, which somehow keeps stacking upsets of higher-ranked opponents, and for the tournament at large, which has been wackier than ever but could suddenly snap back to the status quo.
But this March has not gone according to plan. Several big names lost early. Others failed to get out of the second round. The story of this year’s tournament has been upsets, shockers, letdowns, unpredictable officiating and unpredictability, period — why should the next two days be any different?
Follow colleges reporter Paul Myerberg on Twitter @PaulMyerberg