French military instructors in Ukraine legitimate target for Russia: Lavrov

Ukrainian army chief said last week French military instructors would soon arrive in the country a claim that was quickly walked back by Ukraine's defence ministry.

Posters appeared on a bus stop outside the French embassy in Moscow that read: "French, do not repeat the mistakes of your ancestors." / Photo : @clashreport
Others

Posters appeared on a bus stop outside the French embassy in Moscow that read: "French, do not repeat the mistakes of your ancestors." / Photo : @clashreport

French military instructors training soldiers in Ukraine would be a "legitimate target" for Russian strikes, Moscow's top diplomat said, amid reports France could send trainers to the country.

France does not officially have military personnel assisting or training Ukrainian forces in Ukraine at the moment, but Kiev said last week it was "in talks" with Paris on the issue.

"Whoever they are labelled as, whether they are members of the French armed forces or are just mercenaries, they represent a legitimate target for our armed forces," Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told a news conference on Tuesday.

The Kremlin similarly did not rule out strikes on foreign instructors in Ukraine when asked about the issue earlier on Tuesday.

Read More
Read More

France and Germany's Ukraine rift runs deeper than Macron and Scholz

'Do not repeat the mistakes of your ancestors'

"Any instructors who are engaged in training the Ukrainian regime do not have any immunity. It does not matter whether they are French or not," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters in a briefing.

Ukrainian army chief Oleksandr Syrsky said last week French military instructors would soon arrive in the country a claim that was quickly walked back by Ukraine's defence ministry.

Posters appeared on a bus stop outside the French embassy in Moscow on Tuesday that read: "French, do not repeat the mistakes of your ancestors."

They featured a black-and-white photo of a soldier in a beret with a French tricolour on his arm, and claimed it represented a Frenchman who had fought "against Russia on the side of the Nazis".

Moscow has repeatedly advanced baseless claims that the regime in Kiev is "neo-Nazi" and says it is fighting to liberate Ukraine from fascism narratives rejected by Kiev and in the West.

French President Emmanuel Macron has refused to rule out deploying troops to Ukraine, despite reluctance from other NATO members and furious condemnation from Moscow.

Russia has warned against such a move, arguing it would dramatically escalate the conflict.

It has repeatedly vowed to destroy Western military hardware sent to the country.

Read More
Read More

France’s EU army ambitions may not be good for the rest of Europe

Route 6