Russian foreign minister accuses Ukraine of assassination attempt on top general in Moscow

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A police car is parked outside a residential building where the assassination attempt on Russian Lieutenant General Vladimir Alexeyev took place in Moscow on Feb. 6, 2026. (Reuters)
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A view of the Kremlin in central Moscow, Russia. (AFP)
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Updated 07 February 2026
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Russian foreign minister accuses Ukraine of assassination attempt on top general in Moscow

MOSCOW: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday accused Ukraine of being behind an assassination attempt on a top Russian general in ‌Moscow, something he ‌said ‌was ⁠designed to ‌sabotage peace talks.

A senior Russian military officer, Lt. Gen. Vladimir Alexeyev, was rushed to ⁠hospital earlier on ‌Friday after being shot ‍in ‍Moscow, investigators said, ‍in the latest of a series of attacks on top ​military officials.

There has been no ⁠comment from Ukraine on the shooting. Lavrov did not cite evidence to support his accusation that Kyiv was behind the attack.

Alexeyev ‌is deputy chief of the Main Directorate of the General Staff at the Defense Ministry. ⁠When Russian mercenary chief Yevgeny ‌Prigozhin staged ‍a ‍short-lived mutiny in ‍June 2023, Alexeyev was one of the top officials who were sent to negotiate with him.

Several senior Russian ⁠military officials have been assassinated since the start of the war in Ukraine, with Moscow blaming the attacks on Kyiv.

In some cases, ⁠Ukrainian military intelligence has claimed responsibility.

The most recent officer to be killed was the head of the General Staff’s army training directorate, Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov, who was killed by a bomb under his car on December 22.


Poland slow to counter Russia’s ‘existential threat’: general

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Poland slow to counter Russia’s ‘existential threat’: general

  • The general highlighted a low “pace of technical modernization,” compared to increases in the army’s size
  • Kukula said the Polish army should reach 500,000 soldiers by 2039

WARSAW: Russia poses an “existential threat” to Poland and its military is lagging, the country’s armed forces chief warned senior officials on Wednesday.
Poland, the largest country on NATO’s eastern flank and a neighbor of Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine, is the western alliance’s largest spender in relative terms.
This year, the country is allocating 4.8 percent of its GDP to defense, just shy of the alliance’s five percent target to be met by 2035.
However, that record defense spending was not enough to “make up for nearly three decades of chronic underfunding of the armed forces,” General Wieslaw Kukula, chief of the general staff, argued at the meeting, which included top officers, the defense minister and Poland’s president.
The general highlighted a low “pace of technical modernization,” compared to increases in the army’s size.
Kukula said the Polish army should reach 500,000 soldiers by 2039, compared with around 210,000 at present.
As a result of a lack of updates, some new Polish units “are not achieving combat readiness,” due to insufficient equipment, rather than a personnel shortage, the general argued.
Meanwhile, he added, “the Russian Federation remains an existential threat to Poland.”
Russia “is constantly reorganizing its forces, drawing on the lessons from its aggression in Ukraine, and building up the capacity for a conventional conflict with NATO countries,” he stressed.
Poland is to receive 43.7 billion euros ($51,5 billion) in loans under the European Union’s Security Action For Europe (SAFE) scheme, designed to strengthen Europe’s defensive capabilities.
Warsaw plans to use these funds to boost domestic arms production.
The Polish government claims that Poland will be able to access SAFE finance even if President Karol Nawrocki — backed by Poland’s conservative-nationalist opposition — vetos a law setting out domestic arrangements for its implementation.
Law and Justice (PiS) — the main opposition party — argues that SAFE could become a new tool for Brussels to place undue pressure on Poland, thanks to a planned mechanism for monitoring the funds, which they claim risks undermining Polish sovereignty.