Kerry: We Won't Recognize Crimea Vote
LONDON
- Secretary of State John Kerry said neither the United States nor the
international community would recognize the outcome of Sunday's Crimea
referendum.
He said there would be "consequences” if Moscow does not find “a way to change course" over the future of Ukraine - a sign that there had been no deal despite six hours of talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in London.
Kerry said the only
concern of the U.S. was the rights of the Ukrainian people. "We are
interested in the people of Ukraine having their country’s sovereignty
and territorial integrity respected," he told a news conference.
Although
the two men posed for the cameras before their meeting, they appeared
separately in front of reporters, underscoring the gap between Moscow
and Washington.
"We do not have a
common vision of the situation," Lavrov earlier told journalists
through an interpreter, adding that the “dialogue was constructive."
Kerry
warned that the referendum could be tantamount to the "backdoor
annexation of Crimea." He added that Putin choosing to wait until after
the referendum to make a decision was "a decision of enormous
consequence with respect to the global community."
"If the referendum takes place there will be some sanctions," he added. "There will be some response, let me put it that way."
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