Chinese President Xi Jinping told Donald Trump that Russia might come to ‘regret’ invading Ukraine during talks in Beijing.
The revelation comes as Vladimir Putin, a close ally of China, flew to Beijing for talks with Xi.
The Russian President has doubled down on his onslaught on Ukraine despite claiming he wants ‘peace’ and his ‘regret’ at starting the war.
Putin, in a message to the Chinese people, said: ‘We do not ally ourselves against anyone, but rather work for peace and universal prosperity.’
This peace message landed on deaf ears, however, as he again savagely attacked Ukraine, forcing the scrambling of NATO warplanes in neighbouring Romania.
A statement from Romania’s military command said: ‘Russian forces carried out a new series of drone attacks on civilian and infrastructure targets in Ukraine, in the vicinity of the river border with Romania, in Tulcea county.’
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At the same time, there were new warnings that Russia is planning an attack on the NATO states in the Baltic region, stoking WW3 fears.
War games involving tactical nuclear weapons are now underway in Belarus, which borders alliance states Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.
Belarusian people have been banned from entering forests near the borders with Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine during these drills.
These are part of wider three-day Russian nuclear drills starting today involving more than 64,000 military personnel and 7,800-plus units of equipment in exercises ‘on the use of nuclear forces in the event of a threat of aggression’.
There have also been reports that Putin is planning a summer offenseve in Ukraine’s Donbas region – but some believe this is a front for a limited invasion in the Baltic States, to test NATO.
The aim ‘is not to start a war with NATO, but to trigger a major crisis within the alliance by invading Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania and, ideally, bring about its effective fragmentation.’
Last week, it was reported that Russia is stockpiling hundreds of thousands of fibre-optic drones for a future assault on NATO and the Baltic States.
Reports from Ukrainian and Russian intelligence have shown that Putin diverted huge numbers of next-generation FPV drones away from the Ukrainian front and into rear depots since late 2025.
The Kremlin may already have amassed up to 130,000 fibre-optic drones, a stockpile that could rise to 200,000 by the end of summer.
FPV drones are especially dangerous because they use hair-thin fibre-optic cables rather than radio signals, making them far harder to jam electronically by NATO defences.
Russian military insiders believe the weapons could overwhelm Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in the opening stages of an assault designed to shock Europe into submission before NATO can fully react.
The Kremlin sees the Baltic states as uniquely vulnerable because, although they possess advanced electronic warfare capabilities, they lack Ukraine’s combat experience with mass drone warfare.
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