The Daily Telegraph

Russians ‘hoard Ukrainian corpses’ to stage fake nuclear attack at Chernobyl

Both sides accuse the other of plotting atrocities as tensions rise following Kremlin’s capture of the former power plant

- By Nick Gutteridge

‘Putin is ready to commit nuclear blackmail of the world community … with catastroph­ic consequenc­es’

RUSSIA is stockpilin­g corpses of dead Ukrainian soldiers to plant as evidence in a false flag operation at Chernobyl, Ukrainian officials have warned.

Kyiv’s Military Intelligen­ce Directorat­e said Vladimir Putin plans to release radioactiv­e waste in what would amount to a “terrorist attack”. In a statement it said Kremlin forces have been seen laying the groundwork by collecting “fake evidence” to blame Ukraine for a nuclear leak.

“Russian car refrigerat­ors collecting the bodies of dead Ukrainian defenders were spotted near the Antonov airport in Hostomel,” it said.

“There is a possibilit­y that they will be presented as killed saboteurs in the Chernobyl zone.” Russian forces have been in charge of the disused power plant since capturing it in the first few days of the war.

Ukrainian officials say the occupiers have refused to let the facility’s repairmen and engineers back onto the site.

They have warned that there is now just 48 hours’ worth of diesel left with which to power its emergency generators. Kyiv says saboteurs posing as Belarusian nuclear experts have been brought in to prepare a “man-made catastroph­e for which the occupiers will try to shift responsibi­lity to Ukraine”.

But the Kremlin claims they are technician­s who were sent in to restore power to the derelict plant.

Russia argues it is Ukraine and the US which are preparing to trigger biological warfare through the use of chemical weapons.

Moscow’s foreign ministry said “radical Ukrainian groups under the control of the representa­tives of American special services” are plotting atrocities. It said they were planning multiple attacks including “the destructio­n of containers with toxic chemicals in highly populated areas”.

“The objective of such actions is to accuse Russia of the use of chemical weapons against the civil population and violating its obligation­s”, it added. There is no evidence the claims are anything other than fabricatio­n.

Boris Johnson has raised concerns that disinforma­tion is being sown by the Kremlin so it can deflect blame for its own atrocities.

“They start saying that there are chemical weapons that have been stored by their opponents or by the Americans,” the Prime Minister told Sky News.

“And so when they themselves deploy chemical weapons, as I fear they may, they have as a sort of a maskirovka,

a fake story ready to go.” Joe Biden, the US president, vowed that Russia “would pay a severe price if it used chemical weapons” in Ukraine.

But speaking at the White House, he ruled out any direct military interventi­on as it would spark “World War Three”. “We will not fight a war against Russia in Ukraine,”, he told reporters.

Chris Philp, the UK technology minister, said the use of chemical weapons would “trigger a dramatic, increased response” from the West.

Kyiv says that the aim of any false flag operation at Chernobyl would be to undermine Western support for its defensive efforts.

In an intelligen­ce update posted to social media, Kyiv’s Military Intelligen­ce Directorat­e said the Kremlin faces having to resort to such tactics because the invasion has stalled.

It wrote: “According to available informatio­n Vladimir Putin has ordered the preparatio­n of a terrorist attack at the Chernobyl nuclear station.”

Last night, Mr Putin agreed to provide Belarus with up-to-date military equipment in a meeting with its leader Alexander Lukashenko at the Kremlin.

It comes as Kyiv warned that Belarus could join the invasion imminently after Russian fighter jets fired into the country from Ukrainian air space in an apparent “false flag” attack.

The Pentagon said the US had not yet seen evidence that troops from Belarus were in Ukraine. “That’s not to say that it couldn’t happen or that it wouldn’t happen,” a Pentagon spokesman said.

Chernobyl has been designated as an exclusion zone since a meltdown at the Soviet-built plant in 1986. Reactor 4 was covered with a giant steel and concrete tomb in 2016 to prevent future leaks.

Last week, Kremlin forces shelled the Zaporizhzh­ya nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine, causing a fire.

Yesterday, they carried out an air strike on the Kharkiv Physical and Technical Institute, which contains a nuclear reactor for experiment­s.

Western leaders have branded such actions war crimes and raised fears Russia will try to exploit the threat of radioactiv­e fallout spreading across Europe.

The Kremlin has denied indiscrimi­nate shelling of Ukrainian cities and has even claimed Kyiv is carrying out the attacks itself to gain sympathy.

 ?? ?? This week’s satellite image from Maxar Technologi­es of Chernobyl nuclear power station
This week’s satellite image from Maxar Technologi­es of Chernobyl nuclear power station

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