Mr Boris Johnson’s response came as allies sought to punish Moscow after the Kremlin ordered troops into two breakaway regions of eastern Ukraine, allegedly to carry out “peacekeeping” duties.
According
to report, Russian president Vladimir Putin appears “bent on a full-scale
invasion” of Ukraine, Boris Johnson warned as he vowed to swiftly introduce the
“first barrage” of sanctions against Russia.
The Prime
Minister said on Tuesday that the Russian president had “completely torn up
international law” and is seemingly intent on capturing the capital of Kyiv.
The
dramatic escalation came after Mr Putin recognised the Donetsk and Luhansk
regions in the Donbas as independent states.
After
chairing an early morning emergency meeting of the Cobra committee, Mr Johnson
said he would later reveal sanctions against entities in Russia and the Donbas.
“This is I
should stress just the first barrage of UK economic sanctions against Russia
because we expect I’m afraid that there is more Russian irrational behaviour to
come,” he told broadcasters.
“I’m afraid
all the evidence is that President Putin is indeed bent on a full-scale
invasion of the Ukraine, the overrunning, the subjugation of an independent,
sovereign European country and I think, let’s be absolutely clear, that will be
absolutely catastrophic.”
In a sign
the situation could deteriorate even further, Russia said its recognition of
independence for the areas in east Ukraine also extends to territories
currently held by the forces of the Kyiv government.
Mr Johnson
said that if Mr Putin continues down on the path to “encircling Kyiv itself,
which is what he seems to be proposing to do, capturing the Ukrainian capital”
then it is vital his efforts “should not succeed and that Putin should fail”.
He said he
would set out economic sanctions that “will hit Russia very hard” and target
the “economic interests that have been supporting Russia’s war machine” in the
Commons later in the day, warning that they will only worsen “in the event of
an invasion”.
The Prime
Minister said the UK was looking at what further support could be given to
Ukraine, having already provided “lethal but defensive assistance”, including
anti-tank weaponry.
German
Chancellor Olaf Scholz took the significant step of blocking the certification
of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that would have supplied gas directly from Russia
to Germany.
Earlier,
Health Secretary Sajid Javid told Sky News that from Moscow’s actions “you can
conclude that the invasion of Ukraine has begun”.
The Cobra
meeting followed an emergency session of the UN Security Council where the UK’s
ambassador, Dame Barbara Woodward, said Russia has “brought us to the brink”,
warning that the country’s actions “will have severe and far-reaching
consequences”.
She said
an invasion would unleash “the forces of war, death and destruction” on the
people of Ukraine.
“The
humanitarian impact will be terrible on civilians fleeing the fighting. We know
that women and children will suffer most,” she added.
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