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Russia says foreign forces in Ukraine would be ‘legitimate targets’

By Thomson Reuters Feb 2, 2026 | 1:03 PM

MOSCOW, Feb 2 (Reuters) – Russia would regard the deployment of any foreign military forces or infrastructure in Ukraine as foreign intervention and treat those forces as legitimate targets, the Foreign ‍Ministry said on Monday, citing Minister Sergei Lavrov.

The ministry’s comment, one of many it said were in response to questions put to Lavrov, also praised U.S. President Donald Trump’s efforts at working for a resolution of the war and said he understood the fundamental reasons behind the conflict.

“The deployment ‌of military units, facilities, warehouses, and other infrastructure ‌of Western countries in Ukraine is unacceptable to us and will be regarded as foreign intervention posing a direct threat to Russia’s security,” the ministry said on its website.

It said Western countries – which have discussed a possible ​deployment to Ukraine to help secure any peace deal – had to understand “that all foreign military contingents, including German ones, if deployed ‍in Ukraine, will become legitimate targets for ​the Russian Armed Forces”.

The United States has spearheaded efforts ​to hold talks aimed at ending the conflict in Ukraine and a ‍second three-sided meeting with Russian and Ukrainian representatives is to take place this week in the United Arab Emirates.

The issue of ceding internationally recognised Ukrainian territory to Russia remains a major stumbling block. Kyiv rejects Russian calls for it to give up all of ‍its Donbas region, including territory Moscow’s forces have not captured.

Moscow has repeatedly said it will not tolerate the presence in Ukraine of troops from ‍Western countries.

The ministry said ‍Moscow valued the “purposeful efforts” of the Trump administration ​in working towards a resolution and understanding Russia’s ​long-running ⁠concerns about NATO’s eastward expansion and its overtures to ‌Ukraine.

It described Trump as “one of the few Western politicians who not only immediately refused to advance meaningless and destructive preconditions for starting a substantive dialogue with Moscow on the Ukrainian crisis, but also publicly spoke about its root causes”.

(Reporting by Reuters; writing by Maxim Rodionov and Ron Popeski; editing ⁠by Mark Heinrich)