Rusland gør 80.000 soldater klar nær NATO-grænsen

En ny undersøgelse viser, at Rusland øger sit militære nærvær nær Finland. SVT og partnermedier har gennemgået satellitbilleder og interviews, der peger på en hurtigere oprustning.

SVT har sammen med DR, NRK og Delfi undersøgt nye satellitbilleder, der viser russisk oprustning på flere steder på den anden side af den finske grænse. Rusland gør plads til i alt 80.000 soldater mod tidligere 20.000, ifølge den finske hærchef Pasi Välimäki. Efterretningstjenesten MUST's chef, Thomas Nilsson, beskriver det som en trussel, der bør tages alvorligt. Ifølge MUST opbygger Rusland en struktur, der kan fyldes, når krigen i Ukraine slutter, med i alt otte divisioner i området. NATO svarer igen med øget tilstedeværelse, herunder den svenskledede base FLF Finland. Generalmajor Brian Nissen advarer om, at truslen kan stige hurtigt, hvis der indgås en våbenhvile i Ukraine. Russiske ambassader oplyser, at oprustningen er defensiv, mens Putins rådgiver Sergej Karaganov beskriver NATO som en kræftsvulst, som Rusland kan blive nødt til at eskalere imod.

Relaterede artikler

Swedish and Russian fighter jets over the Baltic Sea during an interception mission.
Billede genereret af AI

Swedish jets intercept Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Swedish Defense Forces launched two missions with JAS 39 Gripen jets on Friday to intercept two Russian fighter planes near Swedish airspace over the Baltic Sea. Danish aircraft also participated in one of the operations.

The Swedish Armed Forces are turning parts of the training area in Enköping into protected zones. This means barriers and access bans for the public on 275 hectares of forest.

Rapporteret af AI

Swedish combat vehicles and Dutch Apache helicopters simulate an attack at Revingehed in Skåne as part of the major Aurora 26 exercise. The drill involves 18,000 participants from Sweden and allies, running until May 13. Russia's war in Ukraine drives the heightened Nato focus.

Police in southern Sweden are reinforced with officers from across the country and Denmark ahead of the NATO foreign ministers meeting on May 21 and 22.

Rapporteret af AI

Thomas Nilsson, head of Sweden's Must intelligence service, tells Financial Times that Russia's economy is worse than the Kremlin reports. The Kremlin manipulates statistics and may even deceive President Vladimir Putin himself about the crisis's scale. Despite the issues, Putin is expected to continue the war in Ukraine.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis