EU Admits Its Mistake of Confronting Russia Over Ukraine - Lavrov

© Sputnik / Aleksey Nikolskyi / Go to the mediabankOctober 17, 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin (left), Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (right), German Chancellor Angela Merkel (near center), and French President Francois Hollande (far center) during a meeting in the "Normandy" format on the sidelines of the ASEM Summit
October 17, 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin (left), Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (right), German Chancellor Angela Merkel (near center), and French President Francois Hollande (far center) during a meeting in the Normandy format on the sidelines of the ASEM Summit - Sputnik International
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EU member states admit that confronting Russia on the pretext of the Ukrainian internal crisis is a wrong path, Sergei Lavrov said.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – An overwhelming majority of European Union member states have called confronting Russia over the situation in Ukraine a mistake, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

Last week, the European Union extended economic sanctions against Russia for another six months, citing the failure to fully implement the Minsk peace accords on Ukrainian reconciliation. On Thursday, Brussels said it saw no reason or necessity to expand the "Crimean sanctions" against Moscow.

“Sometimes what they say from the podium contradicts what they tell you one on one when no one’s listening.

Individually, an overwhelming majority of European Union members have told me things I believe to be reasonable that it is a mistake to confront Russia over Ukraine which itself became somewhat of a victim in the European Union’s policy, which attempted to put [Ukraine] in the position of having to make a decision: either-or,” Lavrov told Russia’s Zvezda television channel in an interview.

Following the reunification of Crimea with Russia in 2014 and the escalation of the Ukrainian crisis later that year, Russia's relations with the West began to deteriorate.

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The European Union, along with the United States condemned the reunification and refused to recognize a referendum, in which 96 percent of the local population in Crimea voted in favor of the secession. The West accused Russia of fueling the conflict between Kiev and independence supporters in eastern Ukraine.

As a punitive measure, the West imposed several rounds of sanctions against Moscow, beginning in July 2014.

On Monday, the European Union prolonged its economic sanctions against Russia for another six months. Following the move, the United States extended its anti-Russian sanctions by targeting 34 individuals and entities on Tuesday.

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