Has War With Russia Been Averted? (For Now).... A Deal Has Been Reached On Calming Ukraine Tensions!

I have been busy the last few days continuing with renovations, personal work, and family business... I just started taking a look at what has been happening around the world via the alternative news via the Internet ( I have long ago given up on any of the BS news coming from the Jewish run mainstream media), with much interest in the continuing situation in Ukraine.What I found tonight has been some of the best news over the last while about the ongoing troubling situation in Ukraine....It appears, according to the following report from the Anchorage Daily News website, at www.adn.com, that a new deal has been reached between the Ukraine, the United States, the European Union, and surprisingly Russia, concerning the recent escalating trouble in Ukraine's eastern provinces. This deal will supposedly put a halt to the US puppet government in Kiev unleashing their armed forces in an attempt to crush any push by those citizens wanting to separate from Ukraine itself and join with Russia.  I have that article, entitled: "A Deal Has Been Reached On Calming Ukraine Tensions..For Now" right here for everyone to view for themselves, and I do have my usual thoughts and comments to follow:Deal reached on calming Ukraine tensions _ for now By JOHN HEILPRIN and LARA JAKES The Associated PressApril 16, 2014 GENEVA — In a surprise accord, Ukraine and Russia agreed Thursday on tentative steps to halt violence and calm tensions along their shared border after more than a month of Cold War-style military posturing triggered by Moscow's annexation of Crimea.Russia's pledge to refrain from further provocative actions drew support but also a measure of skepticism from President Barack Obama, who said at a news conference at the White House that the United States and its allies were prepared to ratchet up sanctions if Moscow doesn't fulfill its commitments."I don't think we can be sure of anything at this point," Obama said after Secretary of State John Kerry, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and diplomats from Ukraine and Europe sealed their agreement after hours of talks in Geneva.The abruptly announced agreement, brokered by the West, provides no long-term guide for Ukraine's future nor any guarantee that the crisis in eastern Ukraine will abate. But it eases international pressure both on Moscow and nervous European Union nations that depend on Russia for their energy.Reached after seven hours of negotiations, the deal requires all sides to refrain from violence, intimidation or provocative actions. It calls for disarming all illegally armed groups and returning to Ukrainian authorities control of buildings seized by pro-Russian separatists during protests.Notably, though, it does not require Russia to withdraw an estimated 40,000 troops massed near the Ukrainian border. Nor does it call for direct talks between Russia and Ukraine.The agreement says Kiev's plans to reform its constitution and transfer more power from the central government to regional authorities must be inclusive, transparent and accountable. It gives amnesty to protesters who comply with the demands, except those found guilty of committing capital crimes.The negotiations came against the backdrop of the bloodiest episode to date in the clashes that pit the new government in Kiev against an eastern insurgency the West believes is backed by Moscow.In the eastern Ukraine Black Sea port of Mariupol, authorities said three pro-Russian protesters were killed and 13 injured overnight Wednesday during an attempted raid on a Ukrainian National Guard base.As for the agreement reached in Geneva, monitors with the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe will be tasked with helping Ukraine authorities and local communities comply with the requirements. Lavrov said the OSCE mission "should play a leading role" moving forward.Kerry called the one-page agreement "a good day's work." But, anticipating Obama's remarks a few hours later, he stressed that if Russia does not abide by a pledge to de-escalate the crisis by the end of the upcoming Easter weekend, the West would have no choice but to impose new sanctions as initially planned.In a further sign of impatience on the part of the Obama administration, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the U.S. would send non-lethal assistance to Ukraine's military in light of what he called Russia's ongoing destabilizing actions in the country. The aid will include medical supplies, helmets, water purification units and power generators.In remarks at his own news conference in Geneva, Kerry said, "It is important that these words are translated immediately into actions. None of us leaves here with a sense that the job is done because of words on a paper."Lavrov said the agreement was the product of compromise by the two sides that as recently as a several weeks ago refused to speak, intensifying the crisis and ratcheting up East-West tensions to levels not seen since the Cold War."Most important is that all participants recognize the fact that Ukrainians should assume leadership and ownership of settlement of the crisis in all aspects, be that resolving the issue in all aspects," Lavrov said.He repeated Moscow's statement that it does not intend to intervene militarily in Ukraine.However, Russian President Vladimir Putin offered slightly less assuring words. He reserved the right to act to protect ethnic Russians and Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine, but said he hoped it wouldn't be necessary to send in troops to do so.Ukraine Foreign Minister Andrii Deshchytsia called the agreement "a test for Russia to show that it is really willing to have stability in this region."The U.S. and EU were prepared to broaden their list of Russian and Ukrainian officials and oligarchs whose assets and Western travel have been frozen if Thursday's talks hadn't shown movement.Even more punishing sanctions against Moscow's energy and banking sectors have been threatened. The EU is Russia's biggest trading partner and oil and gas client, and it has been reluctant to push ahead with penalties that would undercut its own citizens.The EU instead has chastised Russia for threatening to cut off gas deliveries to Ukraine — a route for pipelines to Europe.In a letter Thursday, EU President Jose Manuel Barroso told Putin that Russia would risk its reputation as a reliable supplier should Ukraine's gas supplies be cut off. Moscow had threatened to end the deliveries to force Kiev to pay debts.In Ukraine, meanwhile, the interior ministry described a mob in Mariupol of about 300 people armed with stun grenades and firebombs — following the pattern of battle-ready militia bearing sophisticated weapons that have been involved in seizing government offices in the country's eastern regions.Ukraine also began stringent checks for Russian citizens seeking to enter the country, and Russian airline Aeroflot reported a ban on Russian men between the ages of 16 and 60 visiting except when traveling with family or to funerals of relatives.In a four-hour nationally televised call-in show in Moscow, Putin insisted that Russian special forces were not fomenting unrest in Ukraine, as Kiev and the U.S. claim.But Putin also seemed to keep the door open for Russia to recognize Ukraine's presidential election set for May 25, softening his previous demand that it must be postponed until the fall and preceded by a referendum on broader powers for the regions.Ukraine has asked for military assistance from the U.S., a request that was believed to include lethal aid such as weapons and ammunition. Obama administration officials have said they were not actively considering lethal assistance for fear it could escalate an already tense situation.The U.S. has already sent Ukraine other assistance, such as pre-packaged meals for its military.In Brussels, NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the military alliance would increase its presence in Eastern Europe, including flying more sorties over the Baltic region west of Ukraine and deploying allied warships to the Baltic Sea and the eastern Mediterranean. NATO's supreme commander in Europe, U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, told reporters that ground forces also could be involved at some point, but he gave no details.---AP Diplomatic Writer Matthew Lee, National Security Writer Robert Burns and Special Correspondent David Espo in Washington contributed to this report.  Follow Lara Jakes at https://twitter.com/larajakesAPRead more here: http://www.adn.com/2014/04/16/3428978/ukraine-us-to-alternately-cajole… Notes:  I am not sold on the idea that this "deal" will end the violence in eastern Ukraine, especially considering that the US led puppet regime in Kiev is fomenting the violence there and the criminal government presently occupying Kiev been shooting their own citizens in the process...It is also a fact that the US has been provoking much of this violence because the sick leadership in Washington is seriously pushing for a confrontation with Russia itself, especially over Russia no longer wanting to tie its international trade to the falling US dollar.... The lunatics in the US are wanting war as their means of preserving the US dollar as the world's reserve currency, and they are actually thinking of war on Russia to keep their fraud US dollar ponzi scheme going a bit longer....I do wonder how long this deal will hold before more violence occurs and the Russians or the Ukrainians taking the deal off the table as a result.... Honestly, I would like to see this deal hold and the violence reduced, but considering the criminals in the US government have been the ones behind the coup, the rising tensions in Ukraine, and behind the economic and political disintegration of Ukraine itself, I doubt if it will last long.... Therefore the first few days after the deal is signed will be very interesting indeed.....The problems in Ukraine are therefore not over by a longshot...More to comeNTS