Russia moves to consolidate control over Crimea

Russian President Vladimir Putin signs the final decree completing the annexation of Crimea in Moscow on Friday, March 21, as Upper House Speaker Valentina Matviyenko, left, and State Duma Speacker Sergei Naryshkin, right, watch. Russia's military activities in Crimea and its move to annex the region have been condemned by Ukraine's interim government in Kiev, the European Union and the United States. The standoff has sparked an international crisis, reviving concerns of a return to Cold War relations.

Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- A Ukrainian military base in Crimea was stormed by pro-Russian self-defense forces and was under Russian control, a Ukraine Defense Ministry spokesman said Saturday.


Ukrainian forces on the Novofederoskoe base threw smoke bombs during the incident and retreated to the base's headquarters, according to Defense Ministry spokesman Vladislav Seleznev in a Facebook posting.


The base's aviation brigade then sang the Ukrainian national anthem, lowered the Ukrainian flag and left the base, Defense Ministry spokesman Vladislav Seleznev said.


The incident occurred as international observers were set to arrive in Ukraine to monitor the security and human rights situation in a posting expected to last at least six months.


But they will not enter the contested region of Crimea, a statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry said, because this 'became part of Russia.'


Moscow annexed the territory this week following a controversial snap referendum there that produced an overwhelming majority of votes in favor of leaving Ukraine to join Russia.


The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe will eventually deploy a total of 100 observers throughout Ukraine in hopes of 'reducing tensions and fostering peace, stability and security.' They will also check that the rights of ethnic minorities are being protected.


Advance teams will be deployed within 24 hours, the OSCE said Friday.


The regional security organization may widen the mission to include 400 more monitors, and extend it for a second six-month period if requested by the Kiev government.


Russia, which is one of the OSCE's 57 member states, approved the mission, according to state-run Russian news agency, RIA Novosti.


Russia's Foreign Ministry said it hoped the observers' work would 'help to overcome the internal Ukrainian crisis, stop rampant nationalist banditry, eradicate ultra-radical tendencies, help achieve national reconciliation and social respect, political, linguistic, educational, cultural and religious rights of the people in all regions of Ukraine.'


Russia has previously said it reserves the right to enter Ukrainian territory to protect ethnic Russians from what it says is a threat from ultra-nationalists and fascists.


Meanwhile, European leaders have demanded that independent monitors be granted access to the Crimean peninsula, which Russia now calls its own territory.


OSCE monitors made multiple attempts to enter Crimea during the height of the crisis when pro-Russian militias took control of the region. But armed men at the borders turned them back.


Ukraine, the United States and other Western powers maintain that the Black Sea peninsula is still a part of Ukraine.


'We must not allow a new division of Europe,' German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Saturday in Kiev, where he met with with Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk and acting President Oleksander Turchinov.


Kiev going West

Yatsenyuk signed the political elements of a trade pact with the European Union on Friday as Russian lawmakers finalized annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region.


The signing in Brussels signaled Europe's solidarity with Ukraine and carries additional symbolic force. It was the decision by Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych in November to ditch the trade pact in favor of closer ties with Russia that triggered the protests that led to his ouster in February and spiraled into the current crisis.


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Russian President Vladimir Putin, flanked by the speakers of both houses of parliament, signed a treaty Friday finalizing the accession to Russia of the Crimea region and its port city of Sevastopol.


Russia's Black Sea fleet is based in Sevastopol, making it highly strategically important to Moscow. The region also has a majority ethnic Russian population and long historical ties to Russia.


Although Russia insists that its actions are legitimate, Ukraine's interim government has said Kiev will never stop fighting for Crimea.


The Ukrainian Naval Fleet's sole submarine has been taken over by the Russians, a spokesman for Ukraine's Defense Ministry said Saturday.


The Zaporizhia was taken over and placed under the flag of the Russian naval fleet when its commander abandoned it after deciding not to join with Russian forces, spokesman Vladislav Seleznev told CNN.


The incident occurred near Sevastopol, in Striletska Bay.


The Soviet-era diesel-electric submarine is more than 40 years old, but was upgraded by Russian engineers a couple of years ago, according to the state-run news agency Ria Novosti.


Fighting for Crimea

Moscow has doggedly pursued its own course even as Western leaders have denounced its actions as violations of Ukraine's sovereignty and a breach of international law.


President Barack Obama plans to meet with leaders of the G7 group of industrialized nations next week to discuss Ukraine.


Russia has been excluded from the talks on the sidelines of a nuclear summit in the Netherlands.


A planned EU-Russia summit has also been canceled, as the West seeks to increase Moscow's isolation over its actions in Ukraine.


And a spokesman for the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, said Friday he had canceled a planned high-level trade visit to Moscow in October.


That step followed a new round of sanctions imposed by EU leaders Thursday against 12 individuals. Those sanctions brought to 33 the total number of people facing EU asset freezes and travel bans.


Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich dismissed the latest move by EU leaders in a statement posted to the Foreign Ministry website Saturday.


'It is a pity that the European Council adopted a decision which is divorced from reality,' he said. 'Russia reserves the right to give an adequate response to the undertaken action.'


The United States announced its own new round of sanctions on Thursday against 20 individuals and a bank which U.S. officials say is linked to Putin and senior Russian officials. Washington had already announced sanctions on 11 individuals.


Further sanctions which would target Russia's economic interests are threatened by both the European Union and the United States if Moscow does not act to deescalate the situation.


Travel warning

The United States is keeping a close eye on the large scale drills Russia's military are conducting near Ukraine's eastern border with the country.


U.S. National Security Adviser Susan Rice said Friday it's 'not clear' what is signaled by Russia massing its forces near the border -- and suggested Washington is wary.


'The Russians have stated that they are intending military exercises,' she said. 'Obviously, given their past practice and the gap between what they have said and what they have done, we are watching it with skepticism.'


Rice also praised the Ukrainian people and government for their 'enormous restraint in the face of obvious provocation.'


She added, 'They've made clear that their interest is in a unified, democratic future that is ... in an existence at peace with both Russia and with western Europe and the United States.'


The U.S. State Department also issued a travel warning for Ukraine Friday.


It cautioned U.S. citizens 'to defer all non-essential travel to Ukraine and to defer all travel to the Crimean Peninsula and eastern regions of Kharkiv, Donetsk and Lugansk due to the presence of Russian military forces in the Crimean Peninsula.'


While the transition to a new government has been largely peaceful, some clashes have broken out in eastern regions, the State Department said, and 'groups advocating closer ties to Russia have taken on a more strident anti-American tone, especially in Crimea.'


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CNN's Gul Tuysuz, Ivan Watson reported from Kiev, Frederik Pleitgen reported from Moscow and Laura Smith-Spark wrote and reported from London. CNN's Radina Gigova, Ben Brumfield, Tom Watkins, Alla Eshchenko, Nina Dos Santos, Alexander Felton, Damien Ward and Susannah Palk contributed to this report.


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