
Lukashenko Reveals Direct Talks with Kyiv, Warns Against Drawing Belarus into War
The Belarusian leader disclosed a meeting with Ukrainian envoys and cautioned that any attempt to involve Minsk would “instantly change the quality of the war,” as a standoff over border relay stations de-escalated.
President Alexander Lukashenko confirmed that he recently received representatives of President Volodymyr Zelensky in Minsk, delivering a blunt warning that any effort to pull Belarus into the conflict would “instantly change the quality of the war” and turn it into “a completely different war.” The meeting, which had not been publicly announced by either side, came days after Kyiv issued an ultimatum demanding the removal of Russian ground-based relay stations along the Belarusian-Ukrainian border. On 24 June, Zelensky stated that those stations had ceased operating, a development that officials in Minsk and Kyiv have not formally linked to the talks but which marks a tangible de‑escalatory step.
Viewed from Minsk, the encounter served to restate a dual position: Belarus describes its stance as “peace‑loving” and insists it has no intention of entering the war, yet Lukashenko simultaneously declared that “in any situation we will be with Russia.” He told the Ukrainian envoys that negotiations should proceed “substantively” and “without shouting,” and later asserted that Kyiv’s leadership “understands” Minsk’s red lines. Ukrainian officials, for their part, have accused Belarus of developing what they call “border infrastructure of aggression” — roads, ammunition depots and fuel storage sites along five axes — and have demanded that such activity stop. Zelensky’s administration maintains that it has sent “necessary signals” to Minsk about the unacceptability of hosting Russian military assets.
In Moscow, the reaction has been calibrated. A senior State Duma deputy described Russia’s attitude toward the meeting as “condescending,” arguing that Zelensky is deliberately escalating in the hope of being shielded by Western backers, while acknowledging that Belarus’s leadership genuinely wishes to avoid damage to its own territory. The Kremlin’s spokesman said President Putin and Lukashenko would discuss threats from Kyiv, and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stressed that Moscow is prepared to take the full range of measures under the Union State treaty to defend Belarus. Separately, Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova pointed to European military aid packages as the main obstacle to a settlement, a line that frames the standoff as part of a wider confrontation with the West.
Western capitals are watching the Belarusian frontier with concern. Poland’s Deputy Prime Minister Radek Sikorski told CBS News he would not rule out a Russian “false flag operation” designed to justify an attack on a NATO member, while noting that Ukraine’s battlefield successes have so far deprived Moscow of the resources for a large‑scale thrust on NATO’s eastern flank. The Wall Street Journal reported that Russia has been pressing Belarus to open a new front and to host additional drone stations, but that Lukashenko has resisted full involvement, describing his country as “very militarily vulnerable.” French President Emmanuel Macron, according to the same report, personally warned Lukashenko against allowing Belarus to be drawn deeper into Russia’s war.
The immediate crisis over the relay stations has subsided, yet the underlying dynamics remain unresolved. Lukashenko’s prediction that the peoples of Russia, Belarus and Ukraine “will be together sooner or later” echoes his long‑standing rhetoric, but no formal negotiation track has emerged from the Minsk meeting. The border infrastructure that Kyiv has flagged continues to be built, according to Ukrainian intelligence, and the risk of miscalculation persists. For now, the dossier rests on an informal back‑channel whose next steps have not been announced, while NATO and Russian forces maintain their vigilance along a frontier that has repeatedly threatened to become an active front.
| Iranian & allied press | 0.00 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Russian & CIS press | +0.30 | aligned |
Lukashenko warns Kyiv: do not drag us into the war, or everything will change.
The report focuses on Lukashenko's words without adding commentary, creating an impression of objective reporting, but in fact legitimizes the Belarusian position as reasonable.
It does not mention that Lukashenko is a close ally of Moscow and that Belarus has already allowed Russian troops on its territory, which would undermine the portrayal of Minsk as a neutral mediator.
Belarus will not stand idly by: those who threaten its borders will face a devastating response.
The use of threatening language and the repetition of the concept of 'quality of war' create a sense of inevitability and justify a disproportionate reaction.
It omits that Lukashenko also called for regular negotiations and expressed a desire to avoid conflict, which would soften the aggressive stance attributed to Minsk.
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