Latest developments: Biden and Zelenskyy have agreed to attempt diplomacy.

Ukraine news for the 13th of February: According to the White House, the leaders of the United States and Ukraine reached an agreement over the phone on both the carrot and the stick in response to Russian military buildup.

Russia might invade Ukraine at any moment and could use a surprise pretext to launch an assault, the US national security advisor said on Sunday, underlining the commitment of the United States to protect "every inch" of the alliance's territory.


Russia has more than 100,000 troops stationed near Ukraine, which is not a member of the Atlantic military alliance, and the United States has repeatedly warned that an invasion is imminent, while maintaining the openness of diplomatic channels that have so far failed to alleviate the tensions in the region.



The president of Ukraine has invited Biden to visit Kyiv in the 'coming days.'

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine has requested US Vice President Joe Biden to visit Kyiv in order to demonstrate Washington's support for the Ukrainian people in the face of a looming Russian invasion.


"I am certain that your travel to Kyiv in the coming days... would be a tremendous signal and help stabilize the situation," Zelenskyy told Biden in a phone chat earlier on Sunday, according to the White House.

As a result of the possibility of conflict, airlines are reviewing their services to Ukraine.

Some airlines have canceled or diverted flights to Ukraine in response to warnings from the West that a Russian invasion is coming, despite the fact that Kyiv has said that it would maintain its airspace open.


In spite of the fact that Russia has amassed tens of thousands of soldiers along Ukraine's border and has accused the West of "peak hysteria," the country maintains that it does not aim to invade the country.


On Saturday, a phone conference between US President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin failed to produce a breakthrough, with the United States threatening Russia with crushing consequences if it engages in military action.

President Joe Biden and his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, had a lengthy conversation regarding Russia's military buildup around Ukraine's borders, with the two leaders agreeing on the need of pursuing "diplomacy and deterrence," according to the White House.


An official transcript of the almost 50-minute phone talk said that the two leaders "agreed on the significance of continuing to pursue diplomacy and deterrence in response to Russia's military buildup on Ukraine's borders."


The White House stated that Biden "made clear that the United States will react promptly and firmly, along with its friends and partners, to any additional Russian action against Ukraine," as Western worries of a Russian invasion of the former Soviet republic have grown.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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