The United States is relocating its Ukraine embassy operations from the capital Kyiv to the western city of Lviv, Secretary of State Antony Blinken says, citing a "dramatic acceleration in the build-up of Russian forces".
The move comes as US officials warned Moscow was continuing to amass more than 100,000 troops near Russia's border with Ukraine and in neighbouring Belarus, and could at any time launch a devastating attack, including on Kyiv. Moscow denies Western accusations that it is planning an invasion.
"An incursion into Ukraine could entail massive violence, massive destruction, and the loss of life would not discriminate between Americans, Ukrainians" or others, State Department spokesman Ned Price told a news briefing on Monday.
Blinken said in a statement the decision to move the embassy operations to Lviv - about 80 kilometres from Ukraine's western border with Poland - was taken out of concern for the safety of the staff.
Most embassy staff have already been ordered to depart Ukraine and US citizens have been advised to leave the country by commercial means.
Blinken said relocating the embassy operations "in no way" undermined US support for Ukraine's "sovereignty and territorial integrity", and US diplomats would "remain engaged" with the Ukrainian government.
The United States was continuing to press Moscow for a diplomatic resolution, he said.
Price, however, told reporters it was "unclear to us whether Russia is interested in ... pursuing a diplomatic course".
Washington, he said, took note of comments that Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov made in a televised meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin that Moscow would press on with diplomatic efforts to extract security guarantees from the West.
"What we have not taken note of is any indication of de-escalation" by Russian forces, Price said.
Relocating the embassy operations, he said, was based on an assessment "of what we are seeing on the ground with our own eyes, which is a continued and unprovoked Russian buildup."
The top US diplomat in Ukraine, Charge d'Affaires Kristina Kvien, will work from Lviv, and the US mission in Kyiv would be protected by Ukrainian National Guard Police, he said.Â