President Zelenskyy demands his Belarusian counterpart, Lukashenko, shut down stations installed by
Russia, warning ‘or we will’.Analysts say Belarusian President
Alexander Lukashenko, right, privately conceded to Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy's ultimatum [Reuters]Published On 29 Jun 2026Kyiv,
Ukraine – It was, perhaps,
Ukraine’s quietest victory over
Russia’s oldest and closest ally.Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged neighbouring
Belarus to shut down four Moscow-installed relay stations that help guide
Russian drone attacks on
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Russia–
Ukraine war?list 4 of 4Ukraine says it attacked two Russian oil refineriesend of listThe border between
Ukraine and
Belarus stretches for 1,084km (674 miles), mostly across swamps and Europe’s largest and densest forests.The stations – originally cellular communication towers – relay signals for Russian drone operators and allow their unmanned aircraft to exchange information with each other and fly deep into western
Ukraine, which has few drone interceptors and
NATO-supplied air defence systems.The relayers did “make the signal stronger” and the Russian attacks “more precise”, Andriy Pronin, one of the pioneers of drone warfare in
Ukraine, told
Al Jazeera.Zelenskyy said on June 19 that Belarusian President Aleksander Lukashenko allowed
Russia to run “equipment that corrects fire on Ukrainian civilians, specifically civilians”.And then he issued an ultimatum that reflects Kyiv’s newfound assertiveness.“I think one week will be enough” for Lukashenko to remove the relayers, Zelenskyy said. “If he doesn’t do that, we will.”‘A barking dog doesn’t bite’With its heavy bomber drones and missiles, Kyiv is capable of striking
Belarus, a country about a third of the size of
Ukraine whose air defence systems are too obsolete to effectively repel drone attacks.The commander of
Ukraine’s drone forces was far less diplomatic than Zelenskyy.“A barking dog doesn’t bite,”
Robert Browdy wrote on Facebook, referring to Lukashenko. “The first 500 targets [in
Belarus] have been marked. A free and very practical advice – get out of
Ukraine’s sight.”Lukashenko, an ex-collective farm manager who became one of the world’s longest-ruling leaders and has helmed his nation of 10 million people since 1994, hinted that he may retaliate by targeting the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant.The site of the world’s largest nuclear disaster sits in a forested, cordoned-off exclusion zone next to the Belarusian border – and less than 100km (62 miles) north of Kyiv.“We have one goal, a serious one, with exact coordinates and not far from
Belarus at all,” Lukashenko said in televised remarks.But by Thursday, he quietly had shut down the relayers, Zelenskyy said.“Whether they were dismantled or not, I honestly don’t know,” the Ukrainian president said during a news conference. “But we’re working on it. The fact is that the relayers don’t work for now.”The last Russian drone crossed the Belarusian-Ukrainian border on Sunday, Flagstock, an independent Belarusian publication, reported, quoting residents of border regions.Lukashenko explained the shutdown as a peacemaking step – and tried to assure the Kremlin that he is always on its side.“I told [Ukrainian negotiators] directly, ‘Boys, you go tell your president that if he thinks he can talk to us this way and force us into the war, then he has to understand that the quality of the war will change momentarily. It will be an absolutely different war,” Lukashenko was quoted by his country’s state-run news agency, Belta, as saying.“Our position is about peace. But in any situation, we will be next to
Russia,” he said.According to a
Belarus-born, Kyiv-based analyst, Zelenskyy’s ultimatum worked.“
Ukraine deliberately ups its ante in its dialogue with
Belarus,” Ihar Tyshkevich told
Al Jazeera.Apart from removing the immediate threat from drone attacks, it may herald a separate track in
Ukraine’s negotiations with
Belarus.The talks may help Lukashenko “exit”
Belarus’s diplomatic and economic isolation by the West and “balance
Russia’s influence”, Tyshkevich said.Lukashenko is one of the members of United States President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, which may play a role in rebuilding post-war
Ukraine.But Kyiv would have its own list of demands before allowing Belarusian companies to take part in the restoration and letting Belarusian goods such as petrol, foodstuffs and construction materials back in.“For
Ukraine, it’s a matter of Lukashenko’s responsibility for the war and the defence of
Ukraine’s interests,” Tyshkevich said.The shutdown is Lukashenko’s “attempt to find an indirect compromise” with Kyiv, according to Volodymyr Fesenko, head of the Kyiv-based Penta think tank.“This is a concession to Zelenskyy’s ultimatum but not a public one, not an official one,” he told
Al Jazeera.(
Al Jazeera)Moscow could be disappointed by Lukashenko caving in, but it has so far not commented on it.
Russia “undoubtedly saw it as a manifestation of Lukashenko’s weakness”, Fesenko said.However,
Russia “is not ready to help him, including because it lacks military resources”, he said.On Tuesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called Zelenskyy’s ultimatum “absolutely aggressive” and added that Russian President Vladimir Putin would “soon” discuss it with Lukashenko.A day later, Lukashenko travelled to Moscow to meet with Putin. The Kremlin did not hold a news conference and did not release any information about their meeting.Moscow has been urging
Belarus to take part in the war since its beginning, but Lukashenko repeatedly refused while managing to demand more political and economic concessions from
Russia.In late May, he and Putin presided over joint military drills that “rehearsed” the use of
Russia’s nuclear weapons.As part of the drills, Moscow supplied Minsk with modified Su-25 fighter jets, Iskander-M ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons that are reportedly stored less than 200km (124 miles) north of the Ukrainian border.A Belarusian shift as
Russia’s front-line woes growLukashenko’s change of tone heralds Kyiv’s success in slowing down Moscow’s offensive and destroying oil terminals, refineries, fuel depots and supply routes in
Russia and
Russia-occupied Ukrainian regions.“What’s significant is that now
Ukraine acts from the position of power and Lukashenko has to reckon with it,” Fesenko said.Ukrainian drones, for instance, could within hours kill his golden goose – the Mozyr and Novopolotsk oil refineries.Built in the Soviet Union’s waning days, they process discounted Russian crude – and Lukashenko sells the production in Eastern Europe and
Russia.The fuel supplies have become vital for Moscow in recent weeks as every Russian region experiences petrol shortages after Ukrainian drone attacks.Eastern European nations have long been tired of Lukashenko’s political escapades.In 2021, he allowed thousands of refugees and migrants, mostly from the Middle East and North Africa, to arrive in
Belarus and cross into Poland and Lithuania in a move that was widely seen as a response to Western sanctions.The European Union’s executive arm, the European Commission, said on June 22 that Zelenskyy’s ultimatum affirms “
Ukraine’s right to self-defence.”