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Ekolojik değerleri korumada maksimum düzeyde iddialı olan Anaklia Derin Deniz Limanı inşaatının 2017 sonlarında başlayıp 2019 ‘da tamamlanacağı ve ilk geminin 2020 yılında limana yanaşacağı bildirildi.
Anaklia Kalkınma Konsorsiyumunu oluşturan ABD şirketi Conti Group ile Gürcü TBC Holding yöneticileri ve Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti Valisi yaptıkları açıklamada bölgeye 3400 rszidans inşa edileceğini, limanda 6400 kişilik istihdam sağlanacağını, başlangıç kapasitesi olarak limana 900.000 TEU’luk konteyner ve 100 milyon ton yük taşınacağını, bölgede aynı zamanda serbest bölge kurulacağını, Anaklia Derin Deniz Limanının sadece Gürcistan için değil bölge için de çok önemli bir yatırım olacağını bildirdiler.

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SÜPER LİG HAYAL DEĞİL Gelecek sezon BAL liginde mücadele verecek olan Artvin Hopaspor’a maddi ve manevi her yönden destek çıkılması gerektiğini belirten Trabzon Artvinliler Derneği Başkanı Ahmet Külekçi “Hopaspor’a sahip çıkmak için hepimizin taşın altına elini sokması şart.Biz inanıyoruz ki bu başarıların devamı gelecek.Artvin Hopaspor’un süper lige kadar yükselmesi hayal değil.Yeter ki inanalım ve samimi olarak bir-birimize destek olalım” dedi.

TRABZONSPOR İLE DOSTLUK MAÇI

Gelecek sezon başlamadan Artvin Hopaspor ile Trabzonspor arasında dostluk maçı yapma noktasında girişimlerin sürdüğünü Trabzonspor Başkanı Muharrem Usta’dan bunun sözünü aldıklarını belirten başkan Külekçi “Trabzonspor’u Hopa’da en iyi şekilde ağırlayacağız.İki komşu ilin güzel dostluğuna ve kardeşliğine bu hazırlık karşılaşmasının büyük katkısı olacak. Trabzon Artvinliler Derneği olarak başlattığımız bu girişimi Hopaspor başkanımız Nedim Koyuncu’da destekliyor” dedi.

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Artvin Çoruh Üniversitesi Genç TEMA Topluğu, Orman ve Su Varlıkları için çağrıda bulundu. TEMA Vakfı gönüllüleri, 21 Mart Dünya Ormancılık Günü ve Orman Haftası ile 22 Mart Dünya Su Günü’nü Türkiye’nin çeşitli noktalarında gerçekleştirdikleri etkinliklerle kutluyor. Birleşmiş Milletler (BM) tarafından 2016 Dünya Su Günü’nün teması “Su ve İstihdam”, Dünya Ormancılık Günü’nün teması ise “Ormanlar ve Su” olarak belirlendi. TEMA Vakfı gönüllüleri bu kapsamda “Su Zinciri Farkındalık Yürüyüşleri”, tanıtım ve bilgilendirme stantları ile eğitim etkinlikleri düzenliyor. Farklı şehirlerde gerçekleştirilen etkinliklerde gönüllüler, yaşamın temel kaynağı su ile orman ekosistemlerinin arasındaki etkileşimin önemine dikkat çekiyor.

Bu kapsamda Atapark önünde toplanan Artvin Çoruh Üniversitesi Genç TEMA topluğu üyeleri Cumhuriyet Caddesi üçerinde yürüyerek Orman ve Su varlıkları için vatandaşları harekete geçmeye davet ettiler. Halit Paşa Kavşağı önünde toplanan grup burada basın açıklamasında bulundular. Basın açıklamasını Artvin Çoruh Üniversitesi Genç TEMA topluluğu üyesi Sevgi Kaplan gerçekleştirdi.

Kaplan konuşmasında, bugün dünyada çalışan nüfusun neredeyse yarısını oluşturan 1.5 milyar insanın su ile ilgili ya da tamamen suya bağımlı sektörlerde çalıştığının altını çizdi. Kaplan, BM’nin 2016 yılı teması su ve istihdamla suyun miktarı ve kalitesinin çalışan bireyleri, toplumları ve ekonomileri nasıl etkilediğine dikkat çektiğini ifade etti.

Toplam Su Tüketimi Yüzde 40 Artacak

2050 yılında dünya nüfusunun 9 milyarı geçeceğini vurgulayan Kaplan; “2025’ten itibaren 1.8 milyardan fazla insanın su kıtlığına maruz kalacağı tahmin ediliyor. Hala dünyada su tüketiminin yüzde 71’i, Türkiye’de ise yüzde 73’ü tarım sektöründe gerçekleşiyor. 2050 yılına kadar Fırat-Dicle Havzası’nda yüzde 10, Akdeniz Bölgesi Havzalarında yüzde 37, Konya Havzası’nda ise yüzde 70 oranında azalma olabileceği ön görülüyor. 1995 yılında dünyada 253 milyon hektar alanda, 2010 yılında ise 290 milyon hektar alanda sulamalı tarım yapıldı. 2025 yılında sulamalı tarım yapılan alanın 30 milyon hektara ulaşması bekleniyor. Artan sulamalı tarımla birlikte 2050 yılına kadar tarımın ihtiyacı olan su miktarı yüzde 19 oranında artacaktır” dedi.

İklim Değişikliği Nedeniyle Türkiye’yi Kuraklıklar Ve Su Kıtlığı Bekliyor

İklim değişikliği nedeniyle Türkiye’nin içinde bulunduğu bölgede ortalama yağışların azaldığının ve kuraklıkların sıklığının ve yoğunluğunun arttığının altını çizen Kaplan, “Türkiye’nin iklim değişikliğinin su varlıkları etkisine kırılganlığı çok yüksek. Hem tarım, gıda, hayvancılık alanlarında hem de şehirlerimizdeki su kıtlığı riski giderek artıyor. Bu alanda iklim değişikliği etkilerine uyum çalışmalarının acil bir şekilde öncelikle dirilmesi gerekiyor ifadelerinde bulundu.

Türkiye’deki Su Varlıkları Tehdit Altında

Kaplan, TEMA Vakfı’nın bu yılki Dünya Su Günü’ne özel olarak hazırladığı ‘Türkiye Su Varlıklarına Yönelik Tehditler Haritası’ndan da bahsederek; “Bu sene il temsilcilerimiz ile kısa sürede çok önemli bir çalışma gerçekleştirdik. Türkiye’de kirlenme ve kuruma tehdidi altındaki su varlıklarımızı tespit etmeye çalıştık. Şu ana kadar 33 ilden 59 ayrı su varlığına dair tehdit bize bildirildi. Bu tehditlerin 35’i su varlığının niteliğine yönelik; 22 adet akarsu kirlenmesi, 12 adet göl kirlenmesi ve 1 adet biyoçeşitlilikte azalma gibi konuları kapsıyor. Su varlığının miktarına yönelik tehditlerden oluşan 20 adedi ise 16 adet göl kuruması, 2 adet akarsu kuruması ve 2 adet yer altı sularının tükenmesi gibi sorunları içeriyor. Su varlığına erişime engel olacak 4 tehditten 2’si barajlar ve HES’lere ilişkin, diğer 2’si ise sağlıklı içme suyuna erişime dair problemi konu alıyor.

Su varlıklarına yönelik tehditleri haritalandırmaya devam edeceklerini aktaran Karapınar “Tabi ki Türkiye’de yok olma ve kirlenme tehdidi altında olan çok sayıda başka su varlığı da bulunuyor. Bu çalışma sadece küçük bir kısmını belgeliyor. Biz bu çalışmayı temsilcilerimizin ve gönüllülerimizin katkıları ile geliştirmeye devam edeceğiz” şeklinde konuştu.

Her Geçen Saniyede Bir Futbol Sahası Kadar Orman Yok Oluyor

Dünyanın 1990-2015 yılları arasında toplam ormanlık alanının yüzde 3’ünü kaybettiğini, son beş yılda da yıllık 5.8 milyon hektar doğal orman alanının yok olduğunu, orman tahribatının en fazla tropik ve yarı tropik bölgelerde düşük gelirli ülkelerde gerçekleştiğini aktardı. Kaplan konuşmasının devamında; “Bu durum her geçen saniyede bir futbol sahası büyüklüğünde ormanın yok olması anlamına geliyor. Ormanlar sadece bir ağaç topluluğu değil, içerisinde çok sayıda canlının beraber yaşadığı, çevre koşullarıyla canlılar arasında etkileşimin bulunduğu bir ekosistem. Ormanları korumak ağaçlarla birlikte ormanda yaşayan binlerce canlı türünün yaşam alanlarına ve yaşamlarına sahip çıkmak anlamına geliyor. Türkiye’de ise 21.5 milyon hektar orman alanının yüzde 48’i erozyona maruz kalıyor.

Ormanlar Akarsu Rejimlerini Dengeliyor, Su Kalitesini Artırıyor

Dünyadaki temiz suyun yüzde 75’i ormanların beslediği havzalardan geliyor. Ormanlar insan sağlığı ve refahı için önemli ekolojik hizmetler sunuyor. Dünyada 1.6 milyar insan orman alanları sayesinde yaşamını sürdürüyor. Ormanlar dünya genelinde insanların geçim şartlarının iyileştirilmesi ve beslenmeleri gibi konularda önemli rol oynuyor. Kuraklık, yangınlar, ormansızlaşma gibi iklim değişikliğinin olumsuz etkileri, orman ekosistemlerinin işleyişini değiştirerek, sosyal ve ekonomik değişikliklere de sebep oluyor.

Su Ve Orman Varlıkları Korunmalı Ve Geliştirilmeli

TEMA Vakfı olarak doğanın bir parçası olan insanın, su ve orman varlıklarını önce koruması ve ardından geliştirme konusunda çalışması gerektiğini vurguluyoruz” dedi.

Kaplan konuşmasının son bölümünde; “Türkiye’de suya dair 40’ı aşkın yasal düzenleme bulunuyor. Su varlığımızın sürdürülebilirliğini sağlamak için bir Su Yasası’na ihtiyaç olduğu açıkça görülüyor. Türkiye’de üstün ekosistem yararını koruyacak nitelikteki bir Su Yasası çıkarılmasının önemine bir kez daha dikkat çekiyoruz. Öte yandan orman alanları için de gereken hassasiyetin gösterilmesi, doğa haklarının gözetilmesini istiyoruz” ifadelerini kullandı.944971_10208196508383324_1345330266399174640_n 12472415_10208196480862636_4236924213252218776_n 12472662_10208196524543728_6707141246119320497_n 12670487_10208196571744908_4425214105577412566_n 12919834_10208196493382949_6743869324126608834_n 12924430_10208196555864511_6910785235319129313_n 12931209_10208196540264121_1674291799181625942_n

American officials are worried that 50,000 Russian troops being massed near the Ukraine border and within Crimea, the pro-Russian peninsula recently annexed by President Vladimir Putin, aren’t there for just a training exercise

Despite Russian reassurances that Moscow’s troop buildup along Ukraine’s eastern frontier is for a military exercise, its growing scale is making U.S. officials nervous about its ultimate aim.

President Barack Obama on Friday urged Russia to stop “intimidating” Ukraine and to pull its troops back to “de-escalate the situation.” He told CBS that the troop buildup may “be an effort to intimidate Ukraine, or it may be that [Russia has] additional plans.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian troops bordering the former Soviet republic and inside Crimea, recently seized and annexed by Moscow. That estimate is double earlier assessments, and means Russian President Vladimir Putin could order a lighting strike into Ukrainian territory with the forces already in place. The higher troop count was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“We continue to see the Russian military reinforce units on their side of the border with Ukraine to the south and to the east of Ukraine,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday. “They continue to reinforce and it continues to be unclear exactly what the intent there is.”

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf played down the notion that there are as many as 100,000 Russian troops now bordering Ukraine, as Olexander Motsyk, the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S., said Thursday on Capitol Hill. “I hadn’t actually seen the hundred-thousand number,” Harf said. “There are huge numbers of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border. … We are concerned about Russia taking further escalatory steps with whatever number of tens of thousands of troops they have there, and have called on them not to do so.”

Washington got those assurances that the Russian troop buildup was only an exercise from Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu a week ago. But no one in the U.S. government knows if Putin agrees — or if the Russian leader has changed his mind as the West has debated what level of economic and political sanctions might be imposed if Moscow takes an additional chunk of Ukraine beyond Crimea. “They made it clear that their intent was to do exercises and not to cross the border,” Kirby said. “Our expectation is they’re going to live up to that word.”

There is no plan to involve the U.S. military in what is happening in Ukraine, even if Russia takes more territory. Ukraine borders Russia, and Ukraine does not belong to NATO, where an attack on one member is deemed to be an attack on all.

“Should the Russians continue to move aggressively in that region and in the Ukraine, what does that mean—and NATO would have to respond, for example—what would that mean for the United States Army?” Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, asked the Army’s top officer Thursday.

“My responsibility is to make sure that the U.S. Army is prepared to respond as part of a joint force, as part of NATO,” General Ray Odierno, the Army chief of staff, responded. “So what I’m focused on is improving our readiness in combat, combat service support and combat aviation capabilities to make sure we’re ready to respond whether it’s from a humanitarian assistance aspect or any other aspect.”

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American officials are worried that 50,000 Russian troops being massed near the Ukraine border and within Crimea, the pro-Russian peninsula recently annexed by President Vladimir Putin, aren’t there for just a training exercise

Despite Russian reassurances that Moscow’s troop buildup along Ukraine’s eastern frontier is for a military exercise, its growing scale is making U.S. officials nervous about its ultimate aim.

President Barack Obama on Friday urged Russia to stop “intimidating” Ukraine and to pull its troops back to “de-escalate the situation.” He told CBS that the troop buildup may “be an effort to intimidate Ukraine, or it may be that [Russia has] additional plans.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian troops bordering the former Soviet republic and inside Crimea, recently seized and annexed by Moscow. That estimate is double earlier assessments, and means Russian President Vladimir Putin could order a lighting strike into Ukrainian territory with the forces already in place. The higher troop count was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“We continue to see the Russian military reinforce units on their side of the border with Ukraine to the south and to the east of Ukraine,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday. “They continue to reinforce and it continues to be unclear exactly what the intent there is.”

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf played down the notion that there are as many as 100,000 Russian troops now bordering Ukraine, as Olexander Motsyk, the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S., said Thursday on Capitol Hill. “I hadn’t actually seen the hundred-thousand number,” Harf said. “There are huge numbers of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border. … We are concerned about Russia taking further escalatory steps with whatever number of tens of thousands of troops they have there, and have called on them not to do so.”

Washington got those assurances that the Russian troop buildup was only an exercise from Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu a week ago. But no one in the U.S. government knows if Putin agrees — or if the Russian leader has changed his mind as the West has debated what level of economic and political sanctions might be imposed if Moscow takes an additional chunk of Ukraine beyond Crimea. “They made it clear that their intent was to do exercises and not to cross the border,” Kirby said. “Our expectation is they’re going to live up to that word.”

There is no plan to involve the U.S. military in what is happening in Ukraine, even if Russia takes more territory. Ukraine borders Russia, and Ukraine does not belong to NATO, where an attack on one member is deemed to be an attack on all.

“Should the Russians continue to move aggressively in that region and in the Ukraine, what does that mean—and NATO would have to respond, for example—what would that mean for the United States Army?” Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, asked the Army’s top officer Thursday.

Three people have died in clashes in the Ukrainian capital on Wednesday, according to medics on the site, in a development that will likely escalate Ukraine’s two-month political crisis.
Inna Goodman
Senior Writer

American officials are worried that 50,000 Russian troops being massed near the Ukraine border and within Crimea, the pro-Russian peninsula recently annexed by President Vladimir Putin, aren’t there for just a training exercise

Despite Russian reassurances that Moscow’s troop buildup along Ukraine’s eastern frontier is for a military exercise, its growing scale is making U.S. officials nervous about its ultimate aim.

President Barack Obama on Friday urged Russia to stop “intimidating” Ukraine and to pull its troops back to “de-escalate the situation.” He told CBS that the troop buildup may “be an effort to intimidate Ukraine, or it may be that [Russia has] additional plans.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian troops bordering the former Soviet republic and inside Crimea, recently seized and annexed by Moscow. That estimate is double earlier assessments, and means Russian President Vladimir Putin could order a lighting strike into Ukrainian territory with the forces already in place. The higher troop count was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“We continue to see the Russian military reinforce units on their side of the border with Ukraine to the south and to the east of Ukraine,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday. “They continue to reinforce and it continues to be unclear exactly what the intent there is.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf played down the notion that there are as many as 100,000 Russian troops now bordering Ukraine, as Olexander Motsyk, the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S., said Thursday on Capitol Hill. “I hadn’t actually seen the hundred-thousand number,”

Harf said. “There are huge numbers of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border. … We are concerned about Russia taking further escalatory steps with whatever number of tens of thousands of troops they have there, and have called on them not to do so.”

Washington got those assurances that the Russian troop buildup was only an exercise from Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu a week ago. But no one in the U.S. government knows if Putin agrees — or if the Russian leader has changed his mind as the West has debated what level of economic and political sanctions might be imposed if Moscow takes an additional chunk of Ukraine beyond Crimea. “They made it clear that their intent was to do exercises and not to cross the border,” Kirby said. “Our expectation is they’re going to live up to that word.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

As a result of all this, two important things happened. First, Ukraine became a country in a meaningful way. In the 23 years since it became independent from the USSR, Ukraine could not decide whether it was going to become a law-abiding, European nation of shopkeepers like its Western neighbor (and some-time ruler), Poland – or take its place alongside Belarus and Kazakhstan in a revived Russian Empire of kleptocratic dictatorships.

Lawmakers suggested that the world is abandoning Ukraine. “It appears to me Ukraine was left defenseless over the last two decades,” said Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio.

Vladimir Putin settled that question once and for all. Without the Russian-speaking population of Crimea, Donetsk and Lugansk, there will never again be a pro-Moscow government in Kiev. At the end of October strongly pro-European parties swept to power in the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament. At the same time the European Union and Nato found – for the time being at least – the mettle to agree on sanctions in Russia and economic and logistical support for Ukraine.

The war for the East continues. The economy teeters. The ultra-nationalists may not have done well in recent elections but they are armed and organized into self-governing “patriotic battalions” fighting independently of the government’s command. A recipe for disaster of Yugoslav proportions, perhaps. And yet most Ukrainians remain surprisingly hopeful. “We found out who we are. And who are aren’t,” says Ruslana Khazipova, a young singer with the band Dakh Daughters. “We are free. And we aren’t Russia’s bitch any more.”

American officials are worried that 50,000 Russian troops being massed near the Ukraine border and within Crimea, the pro-Russian peninsula recently annexed by President Vladimir Putin, aren’t there for just a training exercise

Despite Russian reassurances that Moscow’s troop buildup along Ukraine’s eastern frontier is for a military exercise, its growing scale is making U.S. officials nervous about its ultimate aim.

President Barack Obama on Friday urged Russia to stop “intimidating” Ukraine and to pull its troops back to “de-escalate the situation.” He told CBS that the troop buildup may “be an effort to intimidate Ukraine, or it may be that [Russia has] additional plans.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian troops bordering the former Soviet republic and inside Crimea, recently seized and annexed by Moscow. That estimate is double earlier assessments, and means Russian President Vladimir Putin could order a lighting strike into Ukrainian territory with the forces already in place. The higher troop count was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“We continue to see the Russian military reinforce units on their side of the border with Ukraine to the south and to the east of Ukraine,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday. “They continue to reinforce and it continues to be unclear exactly what the intent there is.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf played down the notion that there are as many as 100,000 Russian troops now bordering Ukraine, as Olexander Motsyk, the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S., said Thursday on Capitol Hill. “I hadn’t actually seen the hundred-thousand number,”

Harf said. “There are huge numbers of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border. … We are concerned about Russia taking further escalatory steps with whatever number of tens of thousands of troops they have there, and have called on them not to do so.”

Washington got those assurances that the Russian troop buildup was only an exercise from Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu a week ago. But no one in the U.S. government knows if Putin agrees — or if the Russian leader has changed his mind as the West has debated what level of economic and political sanctions might be imposed if Moscow takes an additional chunk of Ukraine beyond Crimea. “They made it clear that their intent was to do exercises and not to cross the border,” Kirby said. “Our expectation is they’re going to live up to that word.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

As a result of all this, two important things happened. First, Ukraine became a country in a meaningful way. In the 23 years since it became independent from the USSR, Ukraine could not decide whether it was going to become a law-abiding, European nation of shopkeepers like its Western neighbor (and some-time ruler), Poland – or take its place alongside Belarus and Kazakhstan in a revived Russian Empire of kleptocratic dictatorships.

Lawmakers suggested that the world is abandoning Ukraine. “It appears to me Ukraine was left defenseless over the last two decades,” said Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio.

Vladimir Putin settled that question once and for all. Without the Russian-speaking population of Crimea, Donetsk and Lugansk, there will never again be a pro-Moscow government in Kiev. At the end of October strongly pro-European parties swept to power in the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament. At the same time the European Union and Nato found – for the time being at least – the mettle to agree on sanctions in Russia and economic and logistical support for Ukraine.

The war for the East continues. The economy teeters. The ultra-nationalists may not have done well in recent elections but they are armed and organized into self-governing “patriotic battalions” fighting independently of the government’s command. A recipe for disaster of Yugoslav proportions, perhaps. And yet most Ukrainians remain surprisingly hopeful. “We found out who we are. And who are aren’t,” says Ruslana Khazipova, a young singer with the band Dakh Daughters. “We are free. And we aren’t Russia’s bitch any more.”

American officials are worried that 50,000 Russian troops being massed near the Ukraine border and within Crimea, the pro-Russian peninsula recently annexed by President Vladimir Putin, aren’t there for just a training exercise

Despite Russian reassurances that Moscow’s troop buildup along Ukraine’s eastern frontier is for a military exercise, its growing scale is making U.S. officials nervous about its ultimate aim.

President Barack Obama on Friday urged Russia to stop “intimidating” Ukraine and to pull its troops back to “de-escalate the situation.” He told CBS that the troop buildup may “be an effort to intimidate Ukraine, or it may be that [Russia has] additional plans.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian troops bordering the former Soviet republic and inside Crimea, recently seized and annexed by Moscow. That estimate is double earlier assessments, and means Russian President Vladimir Putin could order a lighting strike into Ukrainian territory with the forces already in place. The higher troop count was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“We continue to see the Russian military reinforce units on their side of the border with Ukraine to the south and to the east of Ukraine,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday. “They continue to reinforce and it continues to be unclear exactly what the intent there is.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf played down the notion that there are as many as 100,000 Russian troops now bordering Ukraine, as Olexander Motsyk, the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S., said Thursday on Capitol Hill. “I hadn’t actually seen the hundred-thousand number,”

Harf said. “There are huge numbers of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border. … We are concerned about Russia taking further escalatory steps with whatever number of tens of thousands of troops they have there, and have called on them not to do so.”

Washington got those assurances that the Russian troop buildup was only an exercise from Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu a week ago. But no one in the U.S. government knows if Putin agrees — or if the Russian leader has changed his mind as the West has debated what level of economic and political sanctions might be imposed if Moscow takes an additional chunk of Ukraine beyond Crimea. “They made it clear that their intent was to do exercises and not to cross the border,” Kirby said. “Our expectation is they’re going to live up to that word.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

As a result of all this, two important things happened. First, Ukraine became a country in a meaningful way. In the 23 years since it became independent from the USSR, Ukraine could not decide whether it was going to become a law-abiding, European nation of shopkeepers like its Western neighbor (and some-time ruler), Poland – or take its place alongside Belarus and Kazakhstan in a revived Russian Empire of kleptocratic dictatorships.

Lawmakers suggested that the world is abandoning Ukraine. “It appears to me Ukraine was left defenseless over the last two decades,” said Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio.

Vladimir Putin settled that question once and for all. Without the Russian-speaking population of Crimea, Donetsk and Lugansk, there will never again be a pro-Moscow government in Kiev. At the end of October strongly pro-European parties swept to power in the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament. At the same time the European Union and Nato found – for the time being at least – the mettle to agree on sanctions in Russia and economic and logistical support for Ukraine.

The war for the East continues. The economy teeters. The ultra-nationalists may not have done well in recent elections but they are armed and organized into self-governing “patriotic battalions” fighting independently of the government’s command. A recipe for disaster of Yugoslav proportions, perhaps. And yet most Ukrainians remain surprisingly hopeful. “We found out who we are. And who are aren’t,” says Ruslana Khazipova, a young singer with the band Dakh Daughters. “We are free. And we aren’t Russia’s bitch any more.”

American officials are worried that 50,000 Russian troops being massed near the Ukraine border and within Crimea, the pro-Russian peninsula recently annexed by President Vladimir Putin, aren’t there for just a training exercise

Despite Russian reassurances that Moscow’s troop buildup along Ukraine’s eastern frontier is for a military exercise, its growing scale is making U.S. officials nervous about its ultimate aim.

President Barack Obama on Friday urged Russia to stop “intimidating” Ukraine and to pull its troops back to “de-escalate the situation.” He told CBS that the troop buildup may “be an effort to intimidate Ukraine, or it may be that [Russia has] additional plans.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian troops bordering the former Soviet republic and inside Crimea, recently seized and annexed by Moscow. That estimate is double earlier assessments, and means Russian President Vladimir Putin could order a lighting strike into Ukrainian territory with the forces already in place. The higher troop count was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“We continue to see the Russian military reinforce units on their side of the border with Ukraine to the south and to the east of Ukraine,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday. “They continue to reinforce and it continues to be unclear exactly what the intent there is.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf played down the notion that there are as many as 100,000 Russian troops now bordering Ukraine, as Olexander Motsyk, the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S., said Thursday on Capitol Hill. “I hadn’t actually seen the hundred-thousand number,”

Harf said. “There are huge numbers of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border. … We are concerned about Russia taking further escalatory steps with whatever number of tens of thousands of troops they have there, and have called on them not to do so.”

Washington got those assurances that the Russian troop buildup was only an exercise from Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu a week ago. But no one in the U.S. government knows if Putin agrees — or if the Russian leader has changed his mind as the West has debated what level of economic and political sanctions might be imposed if Moscow takes an additional chunk of Ukraine beyond Crimea. “They made it clear that their intent was to do exercises and not to cross the border,” Kirby said. “Our expectation is they’re going to live up to that word.”

Pentagon officials say they believe there could be close to 50,000 Russian

As a result of all this, two important things happened. First, Ukraine became a country in a meaningful way. In the 23 years since it became independent from the USSR, Ukraine could not decide whether it was going to become a law-abiding, European nation of shopkeepers like its Western neighbor (and some-time ruler), Poland – or take its place alongside Belarus and Kazakhstan in a revived Russian Empire of kleptocratic dictatorships.

Lawmakers suggested that the world is abandoning Ukraine. “It appears to me Ukraine was left defenseless over the last two decades,” said Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio.

Vladimir Putin settled that question once and for all. Without the Russian-speaking population of Crimea, Donetsk and Lugansk, there will never again be a pro-Moscow government in Kiev. At the end of October strongly pro-European parties swept to power in the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament. At the same time the European Union and Nato found – for the time being at least – the mettle to agree on sanctions in Russia and economic and logistical support for Ukraine.

The war for the East continues. The economy teeters. The ultra-nationalists may not have done well in recent elections but they are armed and organized into self-governing “patriotic battalions” fighting independently of the government’s command. A recipe for disaster of Yugoslav proportions, perhaps. And yet most Ukrainians remain surprisingly hopeful. “We found out who we are. And who are aren’t,” says Ruslana Khazipova, a young singer with the band Dakh Daughters. “We are free. And we aren’t Russia’s bitch any more.”