The Daily Telegraph

We are ready to attack Poland next, warns Chechen leader

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva RUSSIA CORRESPOND­ENT

RAMZAN KADYROV, the leader of Russia’s Chechen Republic, has threatened to attack Poland unless it agrees to withdraw its support for Ukraine.

“Ukraine is a done deal. What I’m interested in is Poland,” said Mr Kadyrov in a video message on social media on Wednesday night.

“What is Poland trying to achieve? Once Ukraine is done, we can show you what we’re capable of in six seconds if there is an order.”

Poland has been in the crosshairs of Russian propaganda for its support of Ukraine. Warsaw has emerged as one of Kyiv’s staunchest allies in the war with Russia, and has pushed for an EU ban on Russian oil and gas imports.

Oleg Morozov, a pro-kremlin lawmaker, said earlier this month that Poland’s support for Ukraine “is pushing Russia to put it first in line for denazifica­tion”, a term the Kremlin used to describe one of its goals in Ukraine.

Now, the country appears to have caught the attention of Mr Kadyrov, who calls himself a “foot soldier” of Vladimir Putin, the Russian president.

He has often channelled the Kremlin’s deep frustratio­n with the West on an array of issues but in a manner that would be too radical for anyone in the Russian government to voice.

Mr Kadyrov has been accused of extrajudic­ial killings – something he denies – and has publicly threatened to kill his opponents.

His forces have also been accused of war crimes in Ukraine.

They took part in the battle for Mariupol and were allegedly among the occupying forces who killed civilians in Kyiv suburbs.

Mr Kadyrov himself purportedl­y made several trips to the front line in Mariupol, but the footage suggest that it was actually filmed in Russia.

He also referenced an attack on Russia’s ambassador to Poland earlier this month on Victory Day. “You better take away your weapons and your mercenarie­s and officially apologise to our ambassador,” he warned.

A Ukrainian activist threw red paint at Sergey Andreev as he laid flowers at the Soviet military cemetery in Warsaw on the anniversar­y of the allied victory over Nazi Germany in 1945.

‘Once Ukraine is done, we can show you what we’re capable of in six seconds if there is an order’

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