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UK troops will be sent to protect eastern Europe if Russia invades Ukraine, Boris Johnson says

Prime minister hints at deployment to Hungary, telling MPs: ‘Everyone can see the need to fortify Nato’s eastern flank’

Rob Merrick
Deputy Political Editor
Tuesday 25 January 2022 12:14 EST
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Boris Johnson says UK troops will be deployed to eastern Europe if Russia invades Ukraine

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British troops will be sent to help protect countries in eastern Europe if Russia invades Ukraine, Boris Johnson has told MPs.

As the crisis mounts, the prime minister attacked the Kremlin for threatening the use of “brute force to terrify reasonable people into giving way to completely unacceptable demands”.

Overnight, Joe Biden announced that 8,500 US troops are being put on high alert to deploy to Europe as Nato responds to the rising tensions by reinforcing its eastern borders.

In his statement, Mr Johnson said: “If Russia invades Ukraine, we would look to contribute to any new Nato deployments to protect our allies in Europe.”

He added: “There is nothing new about large and powerful nations using the threat of brute force to terrify reasonable people into giving way to completely unacceptable demands.”

Calling an invasion “tragic and futile,” the prime minister said of Vladimir Putin: “Nor can we allow him to believe that he would be able to take some smaller slice of Ukraine.”

However, Mr Johnson said UK soldiers in Ukraine itself is not “a likely prospect” – because it is not a Nato member – arguing help with training and “defensive weaponry” were better options.

He also warned of “Russian gas blackmail” of dependent countries, telling MPs: “In this era of high gas prices, we are bumping up against that reality.”

The UK and other Nato nations have said that diplomatic discussions with Russia remain the priority, to persuade Moscow to “avoid the trap of starting a terrible war”, as Mr Johnson put it.

The group has vowed that Moscow will be hit with “swift retributive responses” if a “further Russian incursion into Ukraine” takes place – meaning tougher sanctions.

But Tobias Ellwood, the Conservative chair of the Commons defence committee, warned: “The threat of sanctions will not deter this Russian aggression.”

Under questioning, Mr Johnson pointed to the existing 850 British troops in Estonia – calling the argument that the number should be increased now “a very good point’.

The government is now considering helping to strengthen “the Nato south-eastern flank as well”, MPs were told.

He pointed to Hungary – saying there are “questions about what we might do there” – and added: “Everyone can see the need to fortify Nato’s eastern flank.”

Keir Starmer offered his party’s full backing, saying: “The Labour party supports the steps that the government has taken to bolster Ukraine’s to properly defend itself.”

The prime minister again raised the spectre of “bloodshed comparable to the first war in Chechnya or Bosnia”.

“If Russia pursues this path, many Russian mothers’ sons will not be coming home,” he told the House of Commons.

“The response in the international community would be the same and the pain that would be inflicted on the Russian economy will be the same.”

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