Migration crisis: Belarus armed forces are ready to respond harshly to any attacks
Russia sent paratroopers to Belarus on Friday, in a show of support for its ally amid tensions over migrants and refugees amassing on the Belarus-Poland border, but two of the Russian soldiers were killed in a parachute accident.
The ministry said in a statement later the two paratroopers’ parachutes collided in a gust of wind and deflated. It noted one of the soldiers tried to use a reserve chute but the altitude was too low for it to deploy. Both died of their injuries in a hospital.
The Russian Defense Ministry said as part of joint war games, about 250 Russian paratroopers jumped from heavy lift Il-76 transport planes into the Grodno region of Belarus, which borders Poland.
The Belarusian military said the exercise involving a battalion of Russian paratroopers was intended to test the readiness of the allies’ rapid response forces due to an “increase of military activities near the Belarusian border.”
The ministry said the paratroopers who took part in the drills re-boarded the transport planes and flew back to Russia after the exercise.
It said the drills that involved Belarusian air defense assets, helicopter gunships and other forces envisaged targeting enemy scouts and illegal armed formations, along with other tasks.
Earlier this week, Russia sent nuclear-capable strategic bombers on patrol missions over Belarus for two straight days. Russia’s deputy U.N. ambassador, Dmitry Polyansky, told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York the flights came in response to a massive buildup on the Polish-Belarusian border.
Russia has strongly supported Belarus amid a tense standoff this week as thousands of migrants and refugees, most of them from the Middle East, gathered on the Belarusian side of the border with Poland in hopes of crossing into the European Union.
The EU has accused Belarus’s authoritarian president, Alexander Lukashenko, of encouraging illegal border crossings as a “hybrid attack” to retaliate against EU sanctions on his government for its crackdown on domestic protests after Lukashenko’s disputed 2020 reelection.
The Belarusian Defence Ministry has accused Poland of an “unprecedented” military buildup on the border, saying migration control did not warrant the concentration of 15,000 troops backed by tanks, air defence assets and other weapons.
Belarus denies the allegations but has said it will no longer stop refugees and migrants from trying to enter the EU.
“I’d like to warn hotheads not to overestimate their capabilities,” Defense Minister Viktor Khrenin said Friday.
“Language of ultimatums, threats and blackmail is not acceptable. Belarus armed forces are ready to respond harshly to any attacks.”
Russia and Belarus have a union agreement envisaging close political and military ties. Lukashenko has stressed the need to boost military cooperation in the face of what he has described as aggressive actions by NATO allies.