Nato to deploy extra troops to alliance nations in eastern Europe

Forces not being sent to Ukraine to avoid ‘existential’ war with Russia, say UK ministers

Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg  chaired a  summit of 30 leaders  where  agreement was made to amass forces in eastern Europe. Photograph: EPA/Stephanie Lecocq
Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg chaired a summit of 30 leaders where agreement was made to amass forces in eastern Europe. Photograph: EPA/Stephanie Lecocq

Nato will deploy significant extra troops to countries in eastern Europe which are part of the alliance, but British ministers warned there would be no forces going to Ukraine itself, to avoid an "existential" war between Russia and the West.

Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg chaired a virtual summit of 30 leaders on Friday, where the agreement was made to amass forces in eastern Europe.

“No one should be fooled by the Russian government’s barrage of lies,” the leaders said in a joint statement. “We are now making significant additional defensive deployments of forces to the eastern part of the alliance.”

Mr Stoltenberg said Russia’s invasion was “the gravest threat to Euro-Atlantic security in decades”.

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“Russia has shattered peace in Europe. The people of Ukraine are fighting for their freedom in the face of Russia’s unprovoked invasion. We deplore the tragic loss of life, enormous human suffering and destruction.”

James Heappey, a British defence minister, earlier said the UK would send further armed forces to Estonia "earlier than planned" to reinforce the Nato ally. The Royal Welsh battlegroup will be arriving in the country to double force levels.

Mr Heappey also revealed that a total of 1,000 British troops were on standby to support Ukraine's neighbours with refugee responses. "The 1,000 troops that are on standby are there to support Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Poland with the expected humanitarian challenges that they will face as people make their way out of Ukraine," he said.

However, Mr Heappey also warned against any potential meeting between Russian and Nato troops, saying it could become “existential”. He told the House of Commons: “We must all in this house be clear that British and Nato troops should not, must not, play an active role in Ukraine. We must all be clear what the risk of miscalculation could be and how existential that could very quickly become if people miscalculate and things escalate unnecessarily.”

During the debate, Mr Heappey was pressed by MPs to support a no-fly zone across Ukraine, which he rejected because of the risk of Nato forces encountering Russian ones.

In an earlier exchange on BBC's Radio 4 Today programme, the Ukrainian MP Lesia Vasylenko pleaded with British defence secretary Ben Wallace for the UK and the US to close airspace above Ukraine "in order for these casualties not to escalate". However, Mr Wallace said this would constitute a direct act of aggression towards Russia, which would prompt a response and result in "war across Europe", as any attack on the UK would implicate all other Nato members.

Mr Wallace said: “To do a no-fly zone I would have to put British fighter jets against Russian; Nato would have to declare war on Russia.” He added: “I cannot and won’t trigger a European war but I will help Ukraine fight every street with every piece of equipment we can support them.”

Mr Wallace said the UK had supported accelerating Ukraine’s Nato membership, which would have triggered military intervention from fellow members, but that other countries had been concerned by the pace.

He added that other democratic countries had a "moral duty" to continue to arm the Ukrainian forces since it was widely acknowledged that Russian president Vladimir Putin "won't stop at Ukraine" and would proceed to train his sights on Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, as he "doesn't believe the Baltic states are countries".

Labour leader Keir Starmer, has said he believes "further financial restrictions" against Russia are needed. He said if British prime minister Boris Johnson brought forward tougher sanctions on Russia, they would be voted through parliament "very, very quickly" with Labour's support. – Guardian