Russia Deploys 10,200 Soldiers In Belarus, Not Enough For Attack On Ukraine: Border Guard
KEY POINTS
- 10,200 servicemen of Russia's Armed Forces have been deployed in Belarus
- The amassed force is not enough to attack Ukraine, Ukrainian officials say
- Belarus has not declared war on Ukraine, but it lets Russian forces pass into its territory
Russia has stationed more than 10,000 soldiers in Belarus, Serhiy Deyneko, the head of the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine, revealed Wednesday during a national newscast.
Around 10,200 servicemen from the Russian Armed Forces have been deployed in Russia's western neighbor, Deyneko said, as per the Ukrainian outlet Pravda.
The amassed troops are not enough to attack Ukraine, he claimed.
Deyneko's remarks came as Russian and Belarusian forces conducted joint military drills at an undisclosed location in Belarus.
The troops, part of a regional group of forces, conducted the exercises "to practice tactical elements, use of weapons, medical and engineering skills, as well as driving combat vehicles across rough terrain," Russia's Defense Ministry said Wednesday, according to Russian state-owned news agency TASS.
Belarus, a close ally of Russia, announced in October that around 9,000 Russian troops would be stationed in the country as part of a "regional regrouping" of forces to protect the Belarusian border.
A week before the announcement, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said that Belarus' troops would be deployed with Russian forces near the Ukrainian border in response to what he said were threats from Ukraine and the West.
Belarus has not declared war on Ukraine, but it did allow the Russian forces' passage into Ukrainian territory at the start of the conflict in late February.
Russian troops have since been able to enter, leave and return to Belarusian territory whenever they want without the permission of local authorities, according to the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank based in Germany.
Russian President Vladimir Putin may now be pressuring Lukashenko to join the war on his side.
The two leaders met Tuesday in St. Petersburg's Russian Museum on the sidelines of a summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States, an alliance of several countries in Asia and Europe that includes Russia and Belarus.
The informal bilateral meeting was "a very good environment to talk, including to discuss serious discussions," Putin claimed.
"We already have things to discuss, that is why I am glad that we have this opportunity to meet on the sidelines of our informal summit and once again discuss issues of mutual interest," the Russian head of state added.
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