Barack Obama calls six world leaders about Ukraine crisis: White House

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March 9, 2014

The US President has held talks with key European allies over Russian action in Crimea

Key Largo: President Barack Obama placed a series of calls to six world leaders on Saturday as tensions rose in Ukraine's Russian-occupied Crimean region, the White House said.

March 9, 2014

The US President has held talks with key European allies over Russian action in Crimea

Key Largo: President Barack Obama placed a series of calls to six world leaders on Saturday as tensions rose in Ukraine's Russian-occupied Crimean region, the White House said.

Obama made his third call this week about the crisis to British Prime Minister David Cameron and his second call in a week to French President Francois Hollande.

Obama, who is on a weekend vacation with his family at a lush Florida resort, also called Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, his first call about Ukraine to the NATO member, the White House said. On Friday night, Obama also telephoned German Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss the situation in Ukraine.

Obama convened a conference call about the situation with Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite, Latvian President Andris Berzins, and Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said in a statement.

It was the first time he has spoken with the leaders of the three Baltic states about the crisis. The countries are NATO members with strong economic ties to Russia, and have expressed nervousness about President Vladimir Putin's actions in Ukraine.

The United States has moved to reassure its NATO allies, sending six more F-15 fighter jets this week to NATO's policing mission over the Baltic States. The jets are on call to respond to any violations of Baltic airspace.

Putin's justification for intervening in Ukraine to protect Russian speakers in Crimea has alarmed many in the Baltics, which used to be part of the Soviet bloc and have their own ethnic Russian minorities whose rights Moscow says are being undermined.


Courtesy: Reuters