Belarus Says Russian Troops To Remain As Us Fears Ukraine Invasion Approved
The Guardian|February 21, 2022
Russian troops sent to Belarus for military exercises will remain in the country indefinitely, Belarus’s defence ministry has said , in a decision that will further fuel concerns that Moscow is planning an imminent Ukraine invasion.
Luke Harding Pjotr Sauer Shaun Walker
Belarus Says Russian Troops To Remain As Us Fears Ukraine Invasion Approved

The US television networks CBS and NBC reported yesterday that US intelligence sources now believe Russian army generals have been given the go-ahead to invade Ukraine.

The news came as the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, held a 105-minute phone call with France’s Emmanuel Macron and agreed to continue diplomacy.

In Belarus the defence minister, Gen Viktor Khrenin, said Russian soldiers would stay after joint drills were completed yesterday. He said the move was necessary because of the “escalation of the situation” in Donbas, in eastern Ukraine.

The Kremlin had promised to remove its forces from Belarus once the 10-day exercise, which began on 10 February, ended. It has deployed what the Nato secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, said was the largest concentration of soldiers and weapons in Belarus since the cold war.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 21, 2022-Ausgabe von The Guardian.

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