The head of the Russian intelligence is threatened by: Streetters like Poland will be the first goals

The head of the Foreign Intelligence Service of Russia Sergei Naryszkin is currently in Belarus, where he made an official visit to President Aleksander Łukashence. During his visit to Minsk, Naryszkin stated that Poland and the Baltic States “are characterized by a high level of aggressiveness”.
He also added that “the security services of Russia and Belarus are ready for proactive action, taking into account, Increased escalation from Europe in connection with Ukraine. “
He also added that if NATO attacks Russia or Belarus, Moscow will retaliate the North Atlantic Alliance, and Poland and the Baltic States will suffer first.
“Tutors such as Poland and the Baltic States should realize that they will be the first goals of retaliation in the case of NATO aggression on the state of Russia and Belarus,” said Sergei Naryszkin in Minsk, quoted by the Russian press agency TASS.
Putin's man about Poland: they are constantly shaking weapons
Sergei Naryszkin also said that our country “at least in rhetoric is constantly shaking weapons.”
“Poland even went to announce plans for deploying about 2 million anti -tank mines along the borders with Belarus and the Kaliningrad District of Russia, while expressing the desire to have American nuclear weapons” – thundered the director of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service.
Sergei Naryszkin established in his speech to leave Poland from the Convention on the ban on the use of anti -personnel mines. Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia also said the Ottawa convention.
In March, President Andrzej Duda called for placing American nuclear weapons in Poland. In an interview with the Financial Times, he argued that “NATO borders moved east in 1999, so 26 years later the NATO infrastructure should also be shifted to the east.”
In the opinion of the Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service of Russia, the Baltic States are becoming more and more military activity near the borders of Russia and Belarus contribute to “the current large, sharp and very dangerous crisis on the European continent.”