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A meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin will not happen until Moscow engages
with US proposals to tackle the crisis in Ukraine, US Secretary of State John Kerry
has said. Mr Kerry told his Russian counterpart Sergei
Lavrov that Moscow's military intervention in Crimea had made any negotiations extremely
difficult. US officials say there will be little to talk
about if the referendum on Crimea's future goes ahead.
The referendum is to be held on Sunday. Ukraine and the the West say that the vote
is illegal. Russia said on Monday it was drafting counter-proposals
to a US plan for a negotiated solution to the crisis.
Moscow has condemned Ukraine's new Western-backed government as an unacceptable "fait accompli"
- it says that Russian-leaning parts of the country have been turned into havens of lawlessness.
Meanwhile Russian forces have strengthened their control over Crimea.
In a televised briefing with President Putin on Monday, Mr Lavrov said proposals made by
Mr Kerry for a negotiated solution to the crisis are "not suitable" because they take
"the situation created by the coup as a starting point", referring to the overthrow of Ukraine's
pro-Russian President, Viktor Yanukovych. Washington says that there has been no official
response yet to a set of questions Mr Kerry gave Mr Lavrov at the weekend, asking in particular
whether Moscow is prepared to meet officials from the new Ukrainian government.
"The United States needs to see concrete evidence that Russia is prepared to engage on the diplomatic
proposals we have made to facilitate direct dialogue between Ukraine and Russia and to
use international mechanisms like a contact group to deescalate the conflict," State Department
spokeswoman Jen Psaki said in a recent written statement.
"Kerry made clear to Foreign Minister Lavrov that he would welcome further discussions
focused on how to de-escalate the crisis in Ukraine if and when we see concrete evidence
that Russia is prepared to engage on these proposals," Ms Psaki said.
She said "it was conceivable" that Mr Kerry might meet Mr Lavrov prior to the planned
Crimean referendum but the secretary of state first wanted to ensure that Moscow would engage
seriously on US diplomatic proposals.