Responsible Statecraft: Zelensky threatens Belarus as NATO hovers at edges of war

10:56 28.06.2026 •

Zelensky VS Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko

From the first days of Russia’s invasion, Ukraine and its Western partners including the U.S. and NATO, have warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ambitions would not be contained to the borders of Ukraine. They claimed that if not dealt with, Russia would attack other European and NATO countries. The UK, relying on its own intelligence and echoing other European leaders, said Russia would be prepared to strike by 2030, Responsible Statecraft notes.

But the real risk of a widening war at the moment comes from Ukraine, and on two fronts — the Baltic states and Belarus. On May 19, a Romanian F-16 fighter jet based in Lithuania shot down a Ukrainian drone in Estonian airspace after it had flown through Latvian airspace. It was not the first Ukrainian drone flying through the airspace of a Baltic country. Russia has accused the Baltic countries of permitting the Ukrainian armed forces to use “air corridors” that reduce flight times to targets deep inside Russia and increase their effectiveness.

In response, the Baltic countries say Russia is “lying,” and Kyiv insists that “Ukraine has never requested such a use.”

Even more serious is Russia’s accusation that Ukraine is coordinating with Latvia to allow Kyiv to launch drones from its territory.

This war of words, including Zelensky’s most recent threats, is getting dangerous.

In his charges last week, Zelensky accused Belarus of installing four signal relay stations on communications towers on its territory to assist Russia in directing drones targeting Ukraine. He said Minsk has been warned through intelligence and military channels to “stop helping the Russians.”

Ukraine has other issues. Despite an increasing series of spectacular drone strikes deep inside Russia, the war on the battlefield isn’t going as well as the mainstream would like us to believe. Russian advances have increased again recently, and the key strategic city of Kostyantynivka is now in real danger of falling to Russian forces.

If it falls, Russia’s goal of taking all of Donbas will be within reach. Zelensky wants the “hot phase” of the war to end by winter, and has suggested certain parts of contested Ukraine could come under the NATO security umbrella to achieve that.

Nicolai Petro, Professor of Political Science at the University of Rhode Island, suggested to RS that Zelensky’s threat against Belarus “may make sense in the context of his overall strategy of trying to provoke an escalation from Russia or Belarus that would necessitate NATO's direct military intervention.”

Petro, however, questions whether European leaders would intervene under such circumstances. Alexander Hill, Professor in Military History at the University of Calgary, agrees, telling RS that he suspects Zelensky’s threat is another part of his “attempts to widen the war and ultimately drag NATO into a more active role.”

The tensions over how and whether Baltic airspace is being used and the threat delivered to Belarus show how dangerous the risk of escalation beyond Russia and Ukraine is becoming. Zelensky may not be posturing or issuing idle threats. Experts believe Zelensky could be seeing how far he can go and that, if there are no existential objections from key European players, there is a good chance he'll keep pushing.

 

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