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Ukraine defense minister resigns over Crimean withdrawal
Last Updated: 2014-03-26 13:13 | CE.cn/Agencies
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Ukraine's besieged defense minister resigned on Tuesday after his forces began a humiliating withdrawal from Crimea without firing a shot against Russian forces who claimed the Black Sea peninsula.

Crimea's effective loss - though recognized by no Western power - has dealt a heavy psychological blow to many Ukrainians who have already spent the past years mired in corruption and economic malaise.

Ukraine's ground commanders in Crimea had complained bitterly of indecision and confusion among the top brass in Kiev since Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision on March 1 to seek the right to use force against his neighbor in response to last month's fall in Kiev of a pro-Kremlin regime.

Some 228 deputies in the 450-seat Verkhovna Rada parliament supported Igor Tenyukh's dismissal after the acting defense minister tendered his resignation in an emotional address broadcast live across the nation of 46 million people.

"It seems that the actions of the interim defense minister in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea ... has displeased some," said Tenyukh.

"I have never clung on to my job, and I don't intend to do so now," he said. "I have honor."

Deputies then quickly voted to appoint Lieutenant General Mykhailo Koval as the new acting defense minister after his name was submitted for approval by interim President Oleksandr Turchynov.

Tuesday's session gave lawmakers a chance to voice growing frustrations with how the interim leaders have handled their jobs since being swept to power on the back of three months of deadly protests whose ultimate aim was to eliminate the corruption and Kremlin dependence that have weighed over Ukraine throughout its post-Soviet history.

"We gave up Crimea to the Russians thanks to our unprofessionalism," independent lawmaker Igor Palytsya fumed.

"We gave up Crimea thanks to our indecision."

Russia Shrugs Off G-8 Snub

The Crimean crisis has sparked the most explosive East-West confrontation since the Cold War era and fanned fears in Kiev that Putin now intends to push his troops into the heavily Russified regions of southeast Ukraine.

Western leaders sought to ward off any such threat by forging a more forceful response in The Hague after two rounds of only targeted sanctions that hit only specific officials but left Russia's broader economy untouched.

A summit of the Group of Seven most industrialized countries agreed on Monday to deepen Moscow's isolation over the crisis and meet on their own - without Russia - in Brussels instead of gathering in Sochi in June.

They also threatened tougher sanctions over Moscow's formal annexation of Crimea last week.

"We're united in imposing a cost on Russia for its actions so far," U.S. President Barack Obama said in reference to the travel bans and asset freezes that Washington imposed on key members of Putin's inner circle last week.

Russia's loss of the right to host the G-8 summit is a moral blow to Putin - a leader whose 14 years in power have focused on resurrecting the Kremlin's post-Soviet pride.

But the Kremlin on Tuesday shrugged off the seven world leaders' decision as "counterproductive" but otherwise harmless.

"When it comes to contacts with the G-8 countries, we are ready for them, we have an interest in them," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the ITAR-TASS news agency.

"But the unwillingness of other countries to continue dialogue - we consider it counterproductive, both for us and for our partners themselves," Putin's spokesman said.

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