U.S. intel suggests Russia is planning a false-flag operation

The Biden administration has information indicating Russia might soon launch a false-flag operation to provide a pretext for an invasion of Ukraine, a U.S. official told POLITICO.

Per the official, Russia has already placed a group of operatives “trained in urban warfare and in using explosives” in eastern Ukraine. The intel suggests that this group might “carry out acts of sabotage against Russia’s own proxy-forces,” thereby providing the Kremlin a convenient excuse to send some or all of its 100,000 troops stationed outside of Ukraine over the border.

The Russian military plans to start these activities “several weeks” before a potential invasion, which is estimated to begin sometime between mid-January and mid-February, the official continued. “We saw this playbook in 2014 with Crimea.”

CNN first reported on the obtained intelligence.

Top U.S. officials, including national security adviser Jake Sullivan and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in recent days previewed that the U.S. had information suggesting that Moscow was setting the groundwork for another incursion.

“Russia is laying the groundwork to have the option of fabricating a pretext for an invasion, including through sabotage activities and information operations, by accusing Ukraine of preparing an imminent attack against Russian forces in Eastern Ukraine,” Sullivan told reporters at the White House Thursday, promising the administration would share more details within the following 24 hours.

The revelation comes after a week of talks in Europe between the United States, its allies and Russia. Little progress was made, leading officials to express their pessimism out in the open. “At the present time, we’re facing a crisis in European security," Michael Carpenter, America’s ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, told reporters Thursday. "The drumbeat of war is sounding loud, and the rhetoric has gotten rather shrill."

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov added more fuel to the fire Friday, saying the Kremlin wants the U.S. and NATO to accept its demands, namely that Ukraine and Georgia will never join the alliance. “If our proposals are rejected … we will make a decision on how to ensure our security in a reliable way,” adding that Russian officials “have run out of patience.”

The Ukrainian government also released a statement Friday indicating it has intelligence that Russian troops are preparing "provocations" against other Russian armed forces to inculpate Ukraine.

Andriy Yermak, head of the office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, said during a Friday Atlantic Council event that a new Russian invasion “will be [a] big tragedy, and it will be [a] big war,” because most Ukrainians “will fight against aggressors.”

Oriana Pawlyk contributed to this report.