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Tens of thousands could die if Russia invades Ukraine, minister warns

James Heappey said it would be ‘extraordinarily stupid’ for Vladimir Putin to launch an offensive.

Geraldine Scott
Wednesday 19 January 2022 09:31 GMT
Armed Forces minister James Heappey warned tens of thousands could die if Russia launches military action against Ukraine (David Mirzoeff/PA)
Armed Forces minister James Heappey warned tens of thousands could die if Russia launches military action against Ukraine (David Mirzoeff/PA) (PA Archive)

Tens of thousands of people could die if Russia launches into an “extraordinarily stupid” conflict with Ukraine a minister has warned.

Armed Forces minister James Heappey said there is a “grave possibility” that Russia may launch military action, as a hastily-arranged meeting between the US and Moscow is due this week in a bid to defuse tensions.

Mr Heappey said it is not “remotely realistic” that British troops would engage in combat with the Russian military, but he added the Ukrainians are “ready to fight for every inch of their country”.

Mr Heappey told Times Radio that the UK had sent light anti-tank missiles to the country in a show of support, and photographs and video shared online by the Ministry of Defence of Ukraine on Tuesday suggested these have been received.

But Mr Heappey warned: “What stands in front of us, what could be weeks away, is the first peer-on-peer, industrialised, digitised, top-tier army against top-tier army war that’s been on this continent for generations.

“Tens of thousands of people could die.

“This is not something that people in Moscow should believe to be bloodless. This is not something that the rest of the world should stand by and ignore.

“It’s right that all diplomatic avenues are being exhausted, I just hope that as we’re on the brink, people in Moscow start to reflect that thousands of people are going to die and that is not something that anybody should be remotely relaxed about.”

It comes after Boris Johnson said the UK is doing “everything possible” to support the people of Ukraine in the face of a Russian “disinformation campaign”.

Russian President Vladimir Putin (Nick Potts/PA) (PA Archive)

The Prime Minister told the Cabinet that Russian President Vladimir Putin “must not be allowed to rewrite the rules” of international relations as tensions continue to mount.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to meet his Russian counterpart in Switzerland on Friday in a bid to quell the hostilities.

A senior State Department official told reporters: “We are now at a point where Russia could launch an attack on Ukraine at any time.”

Reports have suggested Russia has massed 100,000 troops with tanks and other heavy weapons near the Ukrainian border in what many observers believe may be preparation for an invasion.

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