Sharjah 24 – AFP: Top US diplomat Antony Blinken and European ministers were preparing Monday what they vowed would be a tough response to any Russian incursion into Ukraine, as Kyiv complained that Washington's decision to withdraw diplomatic families was "premature".
Tensions are soaring over Russia's deployment of some 100,000 troops at its neighbour's borders, and Britain followed the US and sent home some staff and their relatives from its embassy in Kyiv. Moscow insists it has no intention of invading.
The US is trying to marshal its allies to prepare an unprecedented package of sanctions for Moscow if its sends in its forces -- and European Union members insist they could hit the Kremlin with "massive consequences" in days if needed.
But there remain divisions over the extent of any punishment for Moscow and how imminent the threat of military action could be.
Blinken will dial in to a meeting of EU counterparts in Brussels to brief them on his talks Friday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, where the two sides failed to make a major breakthrough but agreed to keep working to ease tensions.
EU foreign ministers will sound out Blinken over a written response Washington has committed to provide to Moscow this week after the Kremlin laid down a series of security demands that would stop Ukraine joining NATO and roll back Washington's influence in eastern Europe.
Ahead of the latest week of talks, Washington on Sunday ordered the families of its diplomats to leave Ukraine and authorised the "voluntary" departure of non-essential embassy staff.
Ukraine's foreign ministry decried the move as "premature" and insisted there had been no "no radical changes" recently in security conditions.
The EU's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the bloc had no plans to pull people out yet, adding there was no need to "dramatise" the situation while talks with Russia continued.