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Russia Calls U.S. Sanctions Over Ukraine 'Primitive' Revenge

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, accompanied by U.S. former Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul, meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow, Russia.

Russia condemned new U.S. sanctions on Thursday as a primitive attempt to take revenge on Moscow over the Ukraine crisis and accused Washington of blackmailing the EU into agreeing more sanctions.

Washington and Brussels say Moscow has been fanning separatist violence in eastern Ukraine and broadened their sanctions on Wednesday, sending Russian shares and the ruble currency down.

"We consider the new set of U.S. sanctions on Russia as a primitive attempt to avenge the fact that developments in Ukraine are not following Washington's scenario," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

It said Washington was trying to put the blame on Moscow for the conflict in Ukraine and was encouraging bloodshed by not putting enough pressure on Kiev to stop a military operation intended to end the uprising in the east.

"It is widely known that sanctions are a double-edged sword," the ministry said, adding that it reserved the right to introduce retaliatory measures of its own which could mean the U.S. business community also lost out.

A separate ministry statement on the new EU sanctions — not as far-reaching as the U.S. measures — criticized the 28-nation bloc but used less tough language.

"We are disappointed that the EU, contradicting its own interests, succumbed to the blackmail of the U.S. administration and followed the path of sanctions," it said.

See also:

Putin Says Russia-U.S. Relations Heading to a 'Dead End' Over Sanctions

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