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LTMedicine9 days ago

Russia is building military infrastructure along its borders with Northern Europe, Baltics

A joint investigation by Swedish broadcaster SVT and Norwegian broadcaster NRK reports that Russia is constructing new military infrastructure along its borders with the Nordic and Baltic countries and intends to deploy up to 115,000 troops in the region.

Russia is actively building new military infrastructure along its borders with the Nordic and Baltic countries and plans to station up to 115,000 troops there, according to a joint investigation by the Swedish and Norwegian broadcasters SVT and NRK.

Satellite imagery has revealed new barracks, ammunition depots and a concentration of military equipment in several locations – in the Pechenga district, ten kilometres from the Norwegian border, in Petrozavodsk and Sapjorn on the border with Finland, in Luga near Pskov, and in the Königsberg area.

According to estimates, the number of Russian troops on the Finnish border could rise from the current 20,000 to 80,000, whilst on the Norwegian border it could rise from 7,000 to 17,000.

Analysts believe that Moscow plans to staff these facilities once the intense phase of the war Russia has launched against Ukraine has subsided.

“While Russia is preoccupied with Ukraine, the immediate military threat is minimal,” said Major General Brian Nissen, NATO’s commander of forces in the Baltic states and Poland.

Article initially published on 11 June 2026 at 07:19 (CEST).

Translated with the use of AI, full text checked by a human.

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Source document: SVT and NRK Joint Investigation

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LRT (English)State / PublicCenter9 days ago
Russia is building military infrastructure along its borders with Northern Europe, Baltics

A joint investigation by Swedish broadcaster SVT and Norwegian broadcaster NRK reports that Russia is constructing new military infrastructure along its borders with the Nordic and Baltic countries and intends to deploy up to 115,000 troops in the region.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual report based on a joint investigation by two reputable European broadcasters. It does not include overtly biased language, one-sided sourcing, or editorializing. The information is reported neutrally without apparent ideological framing.

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  • organisationSVT and NRK Joint Investigation