https://twitter.com/i/status/1498673348183744518 Putin's strongman ally may have accidentally shared a map of Russia's Ukrainian invasion plans
Katie Balevic and John Haltiwanger 12 hours ago
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with his Belarus counterpart Alexander Lukashenko (L) following their talks at in Moscow on February 18, 2022.
Russian President Vladimir Putin with his Belarusian counterpart, Alexander Lukashenko, on February
The Belarusian president may have shared on live TV Russia's plan of attack for Ukraine.
Alexander Lukashenko showed "what looks like an actual invasion map," a reporter tweeted.
The map also showed Ukraine divided into four sections.
Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko may have accidentally shared Russia's invasion plans for Ukraine on live television.
A short video shared by the Belarusian journalist Tadeusz Giczan on Twitter showed Lukashenko pointing to a map of Ukraine that shows it segmented into four parts. Giczan called it "what looks like an actual invasion map." Lukashenko is an authoritarian and longtime ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"I thank these guys," Lukashenko said, though it was unclear who he was referring to. "They warned us, and literally, six hours before the launch of the missiles, we discovered this."
Russia's Iskander tactical missile system was "located here, right?" he added.
At that point, someone off-screen says, "In the Mazyr area," referring to a Belarusian city.
"In the Mazyr area," Lukashenko said. "We hit these rockets, these positions. And we haven't seen them afterward. During the offensive of the Russians in Ukraine, we already did not see them from the position. That's why I'm saying, yes, we have made launches from the territory of Belarus, and I told, frankly, which positions we targeted. Sit down."
Lukashenko's map shows red arrows from Belarus and Russian that point deep into Ukraine, with a pincer over Kyiv (the country's beseiged capital) and others that reach from the east all the way to the Dnieper river in the country's heart.
The video appeared to be published by a Belarusian pro-state Telegram channel.
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