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A Ukrainian soldier in a trench on in Pisky, Ukraine on January 22. Photo: Getty Images / TNS

Spain and the Netherlands begin air surveillance in Bulgaria as Ukraine tensions soar

  • The Spanish and Dutch will send up to nine fighter jets as part of an air policing mission in Bulgaria, a Nato member
  • Britain alleged it had information that Moscow was ‘looking to install a pro-Russian leader in Kyiv’
Ukraine

Spain and the Netherlands have taken up air surveillance in Bulgaria amid soaring regional tensions, as Nato and Western allies fear Russia may be preparing to invade Ukraine.

The Spanish and Dutch will send up to nine fighter jets as part of an air policing mission in Bulgaria, a member of Nato. Bulgaria borders the Black Sea, as does Ukraine.

Bulgaria does not have any of its own fighter jets, Defence Minister Stefan Yanev said on Saturday. The Bulgarian government is set to decide on the deployment of Spain’s Eurofighter jets on Monday.

A poster of Russian President Vladimir Putin is used as target practice near the village of Zolote in the Lugansk region of Ukraine on January 21. Photo: AFP

Meanwhile, Britain on Saturday alleged that it had information that Moscow was “looking to install a pro-Russian leader in Kyiv”.

“We have information that indicates the Russian Government is looking to install a pro-Russian leader in Kyiv as it considers whether to invade and occupy Ukraine.

The former Ukrainian MP Yevgen Murayev is being considered as a potential candidate,” the UK Foreign Office said in a press release.

US National Security Council spokeswoman Emily Horne said on Saturday: “This kind of plotting is deeply concerning. The Ukrainian people have the sovereign right to determine their own future, and we stand with our democratically elected partners in Ukraine.”

German navy chief ‘resigns over Ukraine crisis remarks’

There have been repeated Russian provocations on the Black Sea in recent years and tensions are high across the region.

The build-up of Russian troops along Ukraine’s borders has triggered fears of an invasion. Extensive diplomatic efforts in recent weeks have failed to lead to a breakthrough.

Moscow has also demanded that Nato provide “security guarantees” that the defence alliance will not admit Ukraine or expand further east.

Rumen Radev is sworn in for a second term as Bulgaria’s President at the Bulgarian Parliament in Sofia on January 19. Photo: AFP

On Friday, Bulgarian President Rumen Radev rejected Russian demands that Nato withdraw its troops from eastern member states such as Bulgaria, calling them “unacceptable and groundless.”

Radev, who was re-elected in November, began his second five-year term on Saturday with a ceremonial military parade in central Sofia.

He was formerly an air force chief and fighter jet pilot.

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