White House 'very concerned' by Russian troop movements
Heavily armed Russian troops force their way into a Ukrainian marine base in Crimea
By : DC Correspondent
Update: 2014-03-24 16:13 GMT
The Hague: The White House is "very concerned by the potential for escalation" after Russia massed its troops on the border with Ukraine, a close aide to US President Barack Obama said Monday.
"We are watching very closely, we believe that Russia stands an enormous amount to lose" from any escalation, Deputy National Security advisor Ben Rhodes told journalists as leaders gathered in The Hague to discuss a response to the crisis.
On Monday morning Russian troops used stun grenades to force their way into a Ukrainian marine base in Crimea early, overrunning one of the last symbols of resistance left after Moscow wrestled the peninsula away from Kiev, Ukrainian officials said.
The Russians fired weapons as they charged into the compound in the port city of Feodosia, and Ukrainian officers were taken away for questioning, a soldier inside and a Ukrainian military official told reporters.
Ukrainian flags were taken down inside the base two days after Russian forces used similar tactics to take a Ukraine's Belbek airbase in Crimea.
Russia's seizure of Crimea after the ousting of Ukraine's pro-Russian president by mass protests in Kiev has triggered the worst East-West crisis since the Cold War.
The United States and the European Union have targeted some of Putin's closest long-time political and business allies with personal sanctions.
Russian forces had already captured part of the Feodosia base, used by the 1st Separate Marine Battalion, Ukraine's top military unit, earlier this month.
But Ukrainians had previously appeared to be in control of the armory, the barracks and other facilities in the compound.
Ukrainian army officer, First Lieutenant Anatoly Mozgovoy, told Reuters by phone from inside the compound on Monday that the Russians had fired shots and the Ukrainian soldiers were unarmed. Asked if the base had been taken over, he said: "Yes".
"The invading troops were using stun grenades and also firing automatic weapons. The interior of the compound is full of Russian troops," said Vladislav Seleznyov, a Ukrainian military spokesman in Crimea.
Seleznyov said Russian forces were taking away all Ukrainian officers from the base to another location in the city for questioning.
Russian troops used armored vehicles, automatic gunfire and stun grenades to take the Ukrainian Belbek airbase on Saturday. Ukrainian forces also abandoned a naval base after attacks by pro-Russian protesters, and had to surrender two flagship vessels to Russian forces over the recent days.
Moscow formally annexed Crimea on March 21, five days after the region overwhelmingly voted in a referendum to join Russia, in a move not recognized by Kiev and the West.