Ukraine invasion: Moscow claims Israeli 'mercenaries' fighting alongside Ukrainians

Tensions between Israel and Russia have escalated further following comments from Moscow that Israeli mercenaries were fighting alongside the far-right Azov Regiment in Ukraine.
2 min read
Azov is a far-right militia, founded in 2014, that has fought alongside the Ukrainian army [source: Getty]

A spokeswoman for Russia's foreign ministry on Wednesday claimed Israeli mercenaries were fighting alongside the far-right Azov Regiment in Ukraine, further fuelling tensions with Israel after Russia suggested Adolf Hitler had "Jewish blood".

"Israeli mercenaries are practically shoulder to shoulder with Azov militants in Ukraine," Maria Zakharova told pro-Kremlin Sputnik radio in an interview.

Azov rose to prominence in 2014, when its far-right activists took up arms to fight pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine's eastern Donbas region but have since fallen under the command of Ukraine's military.

They have been fighting alongside the Ukrainian army against Russian troops, which on February 24 launched a military campaign in the pro-Western country.

Its members are part of the Ukrainian resistance in the port city of Mariupol, holed up inside the Azovstal steel plant against which Russian forces launched a major assault on Tuesday.

By suggesting that Israelis are fighting alongside Azov - viewed by Russia as "fascists" and "Nazis" - Moscow is compounding tensions that started after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Sunday that Hitler had "Jewish blood".

World
Live Story

His remarks sparked outrage in Israel, which called the statement "unforgivable and outrageous" and a "terrible historical error".

Russia's foreign ministry on Tuesday accused Israel of backing "the neo-Nazi regime in Kyiv". Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky is of Jewish descent.