Britain-Ukraine: 1,000 soldiers put on alert to deal with possible humanitarian crisis

Britain has ordered 1,000 troops to be put on alert to provide support in the event of a humanitarian crisis over Russian aggression.

The troops went on alert ahead of today’s meeting between Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the NATO chief and the Polish prime minister.

Johnson will visit Brussels and Warsaw to highlight the need for commitment to NATO principles and to discuss ways in which Britain can provide military support while Russia concentrates its forces near its borders. Of Ukraine.

Johnson’s visit is part of the mobilization of international diplomacy. French President Emmanuel Macron met with Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier in the week, and US Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to meet with US allies and allies at the Munich Security Conference next week.

Britain’s foreign and defense ministers are also expected in Moscow this week for talks with their counterparts.

“The United Kingdom remains firm in its commitment to European security,” Johnson said in a statement. “As an alliance we must draw lines in the snow and be clear that there are principles on which we will not compromise.”

Britain announced yesterday that it would send 350 troops to Poland, following the deployment of 100 troops last year to help deal with the immigration crisis on its border with Belarus.

Johnson’s office reiterated yesterday that any military invasion of Ukraine by Russia is likely to cause the forced and mass evacuation of people from their homes to European borders, affecting countries such as Poland and Lithuania.

In 2014, Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine.

Johnson’s office announced that the British Prime Minister would also discuss with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg the British proposal to strengthen the alliance’s defenses, including doubling the number of troops in Estonia, the development of more Europe, but also the mission of a Trent naval patrol ship and a Type 45 destroyer in the Eastern Mediterranean.

SOURCE: AMPE

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Source: Capital

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