Russia starts major military drills in Belarus as Nato watches

10 February 2022 - 10:00 By Aliaksandr Kudrytski and Ilya Arkhipov
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now
Ukrainian Serviceman, war name Bonehead, 21 years-old, joined the army one and a half years ago. "For generations my family has been fighting for the independence of Ukraine, I had to continue" he said, quietly positionned at a frontline position held by Ukraine's 503rd Detached Marine Battalion on February 7, 2022 near Verkhnotoretske, Ukraine.
Ukrainian Serviceman, war name Bonehead, 21 years-old, joined the army one and a half years ago. "For generations my family has been fighting for the independence of Ukraine, I had to continue" he said, quietly positionned at a frontline position held by Ukraine's 503rd Detached Marine Battalion on February 7, 2022 near Verkhnotoretske, Ukraine.
Image: Gaelle Girbes/Getty Images

Russia and Belarus begin their largest joint military drills in years Thursday, watched closely by the US and Europe amid tensions over neighbouring Ukraine.

Thousands of troops backed by tanks, fighter aircraft and advanced S-400 missile-defense systems are involved in the “Allied Resolve 2022” exercises in Belarus that run to February 20. They include drills near the border with Ukraine as well as close to Poland and Lithuania, both Nato members.

“Russia and Belarus are facing unprecedented threats, the nature and concentration of which is now, unfortunately, much greater and far more dangerous than it was before,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on a conference call Wednesday. While Russia conducts regular drills with Belarus, these exercises “may be on a larger scale than before” in response to pressure from Nato, he said. 

Around 30,000 Russian troops may be in Belarus, making it “the largest military build-up there since the Cold War,” Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters Monday. The alliance has moved to reinforce its eastern flank and remains vigilant because “we have seen Russia use military exercises before as a cover for aggressive actions,” he said.

Russia has repeatedly denied it plans an attack on Ukraine after the US and its Nato allies warned a build-up of close to 130,000 Russian troops near the Ukrainian border may be preparation for an invasion as soon as this month, including via Belarus from the north. The Kremlin accuses the West of trying to undermine Russia’s security by drawing Ukraine closer to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. 

Chief of the Russian General Staff Valery Gerasimov arrived in Belarus to check preparations for the exercises, the Belta news service reported Wednesday. The Defense Ministry in Moscow hasn’t said how many Russian troops are taking part, though it has said the drills don’t exceed limits under a 2011 agreement on confidence-building measures in Europe. Those specify that exercises involving at least 9,000 troops require notification and that foreign observers must be invited if it's more than 13,000.

Russia is also sending six large landing ships into the Black Sea from the Mediterranean to take part in naval exercises, the Defense Ministry said in a statement Tuesday.

Ukraine’s military will hold its own drills beginning Thursday until Feb. 20 including with Turkish-made Bayraktar drones  and anti-tank weapons provided by the UK, Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said Tuesday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin wants the US and Europe to exclude Ukraine from future membership of Nato as part of new security guarantees sought by Moscow, a demand they have rejected. French President Emmanuel Macron said during visits to Moscow and Kyiv this week that Putin had agreed not to escalate the standoff over Ukraine, though the Kremlin declined to endorse this claim.

How a Country Joins Nato (and Why Putin Cares): QuickTake

“There are no signs of de-escalation” from Russia, Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas told reporters Wednesday at an airbase outside the capital, Tallinn, alongside her Belgian counterpart Alexander De Croo. Belgian fighter jets are on rotation in Estonia under Nato’s Baltic air policing mission.

Russia hasn’t massed enough forces near Ukraine for a large-scale operation, though the drills may allow Moscow to establish a permanent military presence in Belarus, said Mikhail Barabanov, a defense expert at the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies, a Moscow-based think-tank. That would be “a response from the Russian side to the build-up of Nato forces in Poland and Lithuania,” he said.

Russia and Belarus say their drills are defensive and aimed at protecting the borders of their Union State from external aggression. Russian forces will return to their bases once the exercises have finished, Peskov said Tuesday. 

Still, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko told Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu in Minsk last week that his country wants to create new joint training centres including for advanced air-defense systems as part of strengthening security along its border with Ukraine.

Why Russia-Ukraine Tensions Are So Hard to Defuse: QuickTake

Russia may leave military equipment in Belarus near Ukraine’s border though the drills are likely intended to raise pressure on the West to make concessions rather than a prelude to an invasion, said Yahor Lebiadok, a Minsk-based independent military analyst. “Why attack when everyone’s ready?” he said. “One should attack when nobody’s prepared.”

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Exercises take place amid tensions with the West over Russian military buildup near Ukraine
Exercises take place amid tensions with the West over Russian military buildup near Ukraine
Image: Bloomberg
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.