The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) Thursday denied plotting to assassinate the president of the Russian-backed breakaway state Transnistria. The denial comes after the Transnistrian Ministry of State Security (MGB) said it thwarted an SBU-orchestrated terrorist attack targeting multiple Transnistrian government officials.
The MGB claimed in its statement that a number of suspects in the planned attack have been detained and given confessions. In an address, Transnistrian President Vadim Krasnoselsky alleged that SBU operatives entered Transnistria under the pretense of being refugees and subsequently worked to detonate a car bomb in the capital city of Tiraspol. Krasnoselsky’s address followed the release of a professionally-produced “video investigation” by the Investigative Committee of Transnistria detailing the alleged plot.
The SBU characterized the accusation as an instrument of Russian provocation amid the country’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. The security service wrote on the social media platform Telegram:
Any statements by representatives of the so-called “Ministry of State Security” of the fake “Transnistrian People’s Republic” regarding the participation of the SBU in the preparation of a terrorist attack should be considered exclusively as a provocation orchestrated by the Kremlin. Therefore, the Security Service of Ukraine urges you not to take nonsense seriously, the spread of which shows a clear goal of Russia to destabilize the situation in the territory that is actually occupied and under its control, accusing our state of this.
Transnistria controls around 4,000 square kilometers of internationally-recognized Moldovan territory but is not recognized by any UN member state. However, Russia has maintained a longstanding military presence in the breakaway state, which borders Ukraine, since the Transnistria War of the early 1990s.
The accusations against Ukraine come amid rising tensions in the region as Moldova accused Russia of trying to undermine its sovereignty in February following a tip from the SBU. In the same month, Russia claimed that Ukraine was going to invade Transnistria. Nevertheless, observers are concerned that Russia may invade Ukraine from Transnistria or continue to target Moldova.