Zürcher Nachrichten - Russian tanks at Belarus-Ukraine border stir up anger ... at US

EUR -
AED 4.317801
AFN 80.979844
ALL 97.610496
AMD 451.483654
ANG 2.103869
AOA 1077.973536
ARS 1479.465695
AUD 1.776779
AWG 2.118917
AZN 2.000015
BAM 1.957005
BBD 2.373671
BDT 143.719072
BGN 1.956779
BHD 0.443056
BIF 3503.971637
BMD 1.175544
BND 1.502031
BOB 8.124104
BRL 6.494993
BSD 1.175629
BTN 101.543933
BWP 15.711738
BYN 3.847384
BYR 23040.653776
BZD 2.361484
CAD 1.600168
CDF 3392.618829
CHF 0.933869
CLF 0.028431
CLP 1115.332118
CNY 8.416576
CNH 8.407905
COP 4751.323716
CRC 593.46781
CUC 1.175544
CUP 31.151904
CVE 110.333381
CZK 24.549461
DJF 209.141397
DKK 7.463932
DOP 71.33421
DZD 152.169837
EGP 57.671811
ERN 17.633153
ETB 162.154177
FJD 2.62817
FKP 0.866346
GBP 0.867493
GEL 3.185648
GGP 0.866346
GHS 12.285719
GIP 0.866346
GMD 84.638761
GNF 10199.321176
GTQ 9.022592
GYD 245.964532
HKD 9.227887
HNL 30.784079
HRK 7.537233
HTG 154.275615
HUF 397.940894
IDR 19154.247989
ILS 3.925393
IMP 0.866346
INR 101.551741
IQD 1540.054471
IRR 49505.078045
ISK 141.993868
JEP 0.866346
JMD 188.225855
JOD 0.833439
JPY 172.213016
KES 151.891991
KGS 102.628129
KHR 4710.91966
KMF 494.318453
KPW 1058.001156
KRW 1609.677651
KWD 0.358588
KYD 0.979707
KZT 638.122772
LAK 25342.922225
LBP 105337.180302
LKR 354.828401
LRD 235.718095
LSL 20.723844
LTL 3.471075
LVL 0.711075
LYD 6.344932
MAD 10.558944
MDL 19.768252
MGA 5183.25649
MKD 61.598176
MMK 2467.272975
MNT 4220.728197
MOP 9.505672
MRU 46.754977
MUR 53.193822
MVR 18.116892
MWK 2038.580781
MXN 21.820205
MYR 4.95551
MZN 75.187471
NAD 20.723844
NGN 1796.958933
NIO 43.266631
NOK 11.868923
NPR 162.470694
NZD 1.942341
OMR 0.451993
PAB 1.175639
PEN 4.180473
PGK 4.944064
PHP 66.592216
PKR 334.024096
PLN 4.255072
PYG 8805.457309
QAR 4.298364
RON 5.07076
RSD 117.126491
RUB 93.282205
RWF 1699.353199
SAR 4.410096
SBD 9.73949
SCR 17.003268
SDG 705.915065
SEK 11.179267
SGD 1.50094
SHP 0.923793
SLE 26.978394
SLL 24650.565321
SOS 671.91643
SRD 42.845082
STD 24331.378279
STN 24.515194
SVC 10.286375
SYP 15284.402596
SZL 20.706745
THB 37.94887
TJS 11.168617
TMT 4.126158
TND 3.426709
TOP 2.753244
TRY 47.56332
TTD 7.989952
TWD 34.513374
TZS 3027.024529
UAH 49.117841
UGX 4218.614547
USD 1.175544
UYU 47.019141
UZS 15004.29913
VES 141.386619
VND 30722.830941
VUV 140.8387
WST 3.231342
XAF 656.363791
XAG 0.030121
XAU 0.00035
XCD 3.176965
XCG 2.118804
XDR 0.814988
XOF 656.363791
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.247453
ZAR 20.685102
ZMK 10581.306424
ZMW 27.420227
ZWL 378.524547
  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    13.5

    +1.48%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.43

    -0.18%

  • RBGPF

    0.9700

    68

    +1.43%

  • BTI

    0.1500

    52.37

    +0.29%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    64.62

    +0.45%

  • GSK

    1.0100

    38.03

    +2.66%

  • BP

    0.1900

    32.71

    +0.58%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • NGG

    -1.6300

    72.65

    -2.24%

  • AZN

    2.5200

    73

    +3.45%

  • SCS

    0.2100

    10.68

    +1.97%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.3

    -0.18%

  • RELX

    0.4100

    53.09

    +0.77%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.21

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.89

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    88.35

    +1.36%

  • BCE

    0.2200

    24.6

    +0.89%

Russian tanks at Belarus-Ukraine border stir up anger ... at US
Russian tanks at Belarus-Ukraine border stir up anger ... at US

Russian tanks at Belarus-Ukraine border stir up anger ... at US

Ukrainian pensioner Lidiya Silina would take her trash out on the Belarusian side of the border opposite the twisty stream. That was until trouble started and the Russian tanks came.

Text size:

But the 87-year-old has a clear idea about who is to blame for the most dangerous standoff between the Kremlin and the West since the Cold War.

"The Ukrainians could start something, thanks to the Americans and the British, who brought all their weapons here," she says in the green wooden shack she calls home.

"For them, Ukraine is just a field of battle with Russia."

Silina's snow-covered vegetable garden starts on the northern edge of Ukraine and ends at what has become one the world's most militarised frontiers, and the western edge of Russia sits just 20 kilometres (12 miles) east of her picket fence.

The Kremlin says it is pulling back some of its forces and winding down weeks of war games –- a crucial part of which was staged just across the 420-kilometre border between Ukraine and Belarus.

But Silina is not too bothered that Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko have decided to rattle their sabres by her backyard.

She says both men have their good sides.

"Lukashenko is a dictator, but look at how well they live in Belarus. Many don't like Putin, but at least they have some semblance of order in Russia," she said.

"The Ukrainians, Belarusians and the Russian people –- they don't want war. Only our government does," she said of Kyiv's Western-backed administration.

- 'Used to it' -

Washington does not accept Russia's claims it has started to withdraw the troops its has amassed around Ukraine, including 30,000 which took part in the exercise in Belarus.

US officials say Russia is deploying more forces while moving others around over small distances to support its claims that a planned drawdown has begun.

Some NATO allies have supplied weapons to the Ukrainian government, but say they are to deter Russian aggression against its smaller neighbour.

Washington's worst-case scenario projects Russia launching a lighting strike aimed at seizing the capital Kyiv within two days.

The shortest path to Kyiv not involving a run through the radioactive fields of Chernobyl's stricken power plant would take the Russians down a nicely paved highway starting on the edge of Silina's rusted gate.

But the locals have been hearing about the Russian danger ever since it kicked off a first wave of exercises in March 2021.

Some seem more exhausted than frightened by all the war talk.

"A year ago we had the same situation. It got very heated," said truck driver Ruslan Muratov.

"I don't know, perhaps we've just gotten used to it, that there are constantly these escalations." he shrugged.

"Of course you still want this all to end as soon as possible."

- 'Three sisters' -

Ukraine's border with Belarus closed after Lukashenko accused Kyiv of funnelling arms to protesters rising up against his authoritarian rule last July.

That forced Silina to find a new place to toss her garbage.

It also severed links between friends and families whose ties stretch back to the days when the three countries were part of the Soviet Union and opposed to the West.

These familial links still lead some Ukrainians living in the frontier region trust to the Russian and Belarusian leaders more than those in the West.

"We watch the news and they tell us that Russia is attacking Ukraine. It's all a lie! It's a provocation. There will be no war and I don't want to believe there will be one," said retiree Nadezhda Bronfilova.

"They are just spreading lies, that Putin will attack Ukraine. It could never happen in this lifetime. Why would he attack us? Honestly, if you think about it, why?" she demanded.

Her friend Lidiya Titova paused for thought while reclining on her beat-up bicycle and agreed.

"We need to live like three sisters -- Ukraine, Belarus and Russia," she said.

Y.Keller--NZN