UKRAINE claimed today Belarus troops stormed across the border in the north to join the Russian invasion.
The country's parliament said Belarusian troops entered the Chernihiv region just hours after Belarus president Aleksandr Lukashenko claimed he had no plans to join Putin's war.
A huge 40-mile convoy of Russian tanks and armoured vehicles is already inching closer to the Ukrainian capital as fighting intensifies on the ground.
In a statement, Ukraine parliament said: "Belarusian troops have entered Chernihiv region.
"The information was confirmed to the public by Vitaliy Kyrylov, spokesman for the North Territorial Defence Forces."
According to local reports, a column of 33 tanks marked with white circles rolled through the villages of Slabyn, Pakul, and Mykhailo-Kotsyubynsky at 11.30am local time.
Officials warned earlier this week that Belarus could be preparing to send its soldiers into Ukraine.
Putin's puppet leader Lukashenko has already allowed the Russian president to use Belarus as a staging post for his forces.
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Images have emerged in recent days appearing to show trains stacked with tanks arriving in the city of Brest in the south west - and there have been reports of missile and aircraft launches from Belarus.
“It’s very clear Minsk is now an extension of the Kremlin,” a US official told The Washington Post.
It came as President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed the European Parliament after yesterday requesting to join the EU.
He accused Russia of "state terrorism" over a missile strike on Ukraine's second largest city Kharkiv.
"We are fighting also to be equal members of Europe. I believe that today we are showing everybody that is what we are," he said.
"We have proven that, as a minimum, we are the same as you."
Zelenskyy received a round of applause as the war continues for its sixth day and Ukraine remains under siege.
Belarus's troop rollout comes just hours after Lukashenko denied Russian forces were attacking Ukraine from his territory.
After reports emerged of his troops crossing into Ukraine, Lukashenko claimed he was only deploying more forces to the border to "stop any provocation".
It comes as...
- Putin is believed to have unleashed terrifying "vacuum bombs" which can blow out people's lungs
- Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of war crimes over the attacks of Kharkiv
- Zelenskyy also gave Boris Johnson a "shopping list" of arms needed to defeat Russian forces
- Brits are signing up to join up in Ukraine and fight Putin
- The Klitschko brothers are on a "kill list" of Ukrainians the Russians want dead
- Brave civilians unleashed a molotov cocktail attack on a Russian tank as they fight back
- At least 16 children have been killed - including a little girl, 6, as her docs told reporters 'show this to Putin'
- The Russian tyrant has amassed 6,000 nuclear weapons as he puts his arsenal on high alert
"Those are well trained rapid deployment groups which are ready to stop any provocation and any military action against Belarus," he said, according to state news agency Belta.
In a worrying move on Monday, Belarus ditched the country’s non-nuclear status - making way for a possible deployment of Russian nuclear weapons in the country.
Nato's chief Jens Stoltenberg today called on Russia to withdraw all its forces - and said Belarus was "enabling" the war.
He said: "The Russian assault is totally unacceptable and it is enabled by Belarus.
"Nato is a defensive alliance, we do not seek conflict with Russia.
"Russia must immediately stop the war, pull all its forces from Ukraine and engage in good faith in diplomatic efforts."
Stoltenberg said Putin had "shattered peace in Europe" by invading Ukraine.
It comes after Kyiv was rocked by loud explosions after Russian airstrikes hit the Ukrainian capital.
Dramatic video showed the night sky lit up, as a huge 40-mile column of Russian tanks was earlier seen advancing to the city.
In the early hours of Tuesday morning, air raid sirens blared out across the city as police officers hurried people to shelters.
Putin's troops are believed to be looking to surround Kyiv after earlier attacks by advanced forces were repelled in fierce battles.
Kyiv was bracing itself for a further onslaught after the Russians unleashed hell on Ukraine's second city Kharkiv using deadly cluster bombs.
Satellite pictures provider Maxar Technologies said the convoy on the eastern edge of Kyiv's Antonov airport contained hundreds of armoured vehicles, tanks, towed artillery and logistics support vehicles.
Other images showed also Russian ground forces close in Zdvyzhivka, northeast of Kyiv.
On Monday night, it also was that more than 70 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed after Russian artillery hit a military base in Okhtyrka, according to Dmytro Zhyvytskyy, the head of the region.
He shared photos of the charred shell of a four-story building and later noted in a Facebook post that Russian soldiers and some local residents also were killed during the fighting on Sunday, AP reported.
Meanwhile, in Kyiv, many were preparing for a fresh assault with makeshift barricades dotting the streets on Monday night.
Residents in the city remained defiant in the face of the onslaught.
"We will greet them with Molotov cocktails and bullets to the head," said bank employee Viktor Rudnichenko.
"The only flowers they might get from us will be for their grave."
The Russian army urged Ukrainians to leave Kyiv "freely" on one highway out ahead of what is an expected Russian offensive to capture the capital.
Ukraine's army says it fought off several attempts by Russian forces to storm the outskirts of Kyiv overnight with the capital also hit by three missile strikes.
Despite the Ukrainian's success in repelling all the attacks on Kyiv so far, US officials fear Putin's forces could still prevail, after re-thinking their tactics.
"They have been slowed and they have been frustrated by their lack of progress on Kyiv," said one unnamed official, CNN reports.
"And one of the things that could result is a re-evaluation of their tactics and the potential for them to be more aggressive and more overt in both the size and the scale of their targeting of Kyiv."
An International Criminal Court prosecutor is to open a probe into possible war crimes or crimes against humanity in Ukraine in the wake of the civilian slaughter.
The Russians unleashed a devastating missile and rocket bombardment – as two-faced Kremlin officials met with a Ukrainian delegation to talk about peace.
At least nine people are believed to have been killed and 37 injured including three children as a barrage of rockets and missiles smashed into Kharkiv, the second city of Ukraine.
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The horrific midday massacre came as thousands of desperate residents queued outside supermarkets for food.
And it happened just as Ukrainian and Russian officials are meeting for peace talks on the border with Belarus amid Vladimir Putin's stalled invasion.
Putin's troops have been given a bloody nose as their tanks and trucks are left burnt out by the roadside by brave Ukrainian defenders.
But the campaign took an even more horrific turn amid the new bloodshed in Kharkiv.
Oleg Sinegubov, the region's governor, said: "The Russian enemy is bombing residential areas.
"As a result of the bombardments that are ongoing, we cannot call on the emergency services."
Footage showed multiple blasts raining down on Kharkiv in quick succession - thought to be unguided Grad rockets or banned cluster bombs.
Both are considered “area weapons” because they are not accurate enough for precision strikes.
Russian fighter bombers were also seen roaring over the city - which has seen some the bloodiest fighting since the start of the war.
Harrowing footage showed crumpled bodies and streets smeared with blood.
It is understood one group of people were queuing to fill up water bottles as they were caught up in the attack.
At least one woman appeared to have lost a foot - with blood smears covering the streets.
The remains of rocket casings could be seen littering the streets amid the horrific scenes.
It came amid chilling warnings that Russian generals have been ordered to take the city at all costs.
The devastating attack hit the north east of the town where a Russian attempt to take the city was forced to retreat on Sunday.
Russia is understood to have used BM-21 Grad rocket launchers - which have been pictured being moved into Ukraine.
The weapons - first developed in the 1960s - are known as "hail" launchers as they fire a bombardment of unguided projectiles.
With such an indiscriminate assault, it raises new fears amid the escalating violence in Ukraine - which has killed scores of civilians and a number of children.
"The Russian occupiers fired en masse on residential areas of Kharkiv. Dozens of dead and hundreds of wounded Ukrainian citizens," said the general staff of Ukraine.
Hours before the latest bombardment The Sun had watched the city’s defenders fight street battles with Russian infantry.
A convoy of Russian Tiger trucks, used by Spetznaz special forces, had sneaked into the city before dawn.
They appeared to be part of a lightly armed pincer movement, backed by soft-akin army lorries.
Residents were ordered to stay indoors and take shelter as soldiers, special forces, police and civil defence volunteers launched a counter-attack.
The Russians were ambushed by Ukrainian forces and soldiers fled into a nearby homes as they tried to retreat on foot.Ukrainian troops fired volleys of rocket propelled grenades at suspected Russian hideouts.
It is thought the Russians made a last stand in a nearby school which was burned to the ground overnight.
The Sun saw a tank called up to the fight to flush them out of their hideout.
Ukraine's former president Petro Poroshenko said: "We will never forget and forgive this crime against humanity - the showy executions of our Kharkiv by the Russians.
"With special cynicism and cruelty, the Hail destroyed civilian neighborhoods and houses."
Speaking earlier on Monday before the attack, UK defence secretary Ben Wallace warned that Putin could launch "ruthless" and "indiscriminate" bombing amid the slow progress of his invasion.
Mr Wallace said that Russia's forces are "strung out" and "behind schedule" as they face a tough Ukrainian resistance.
The much larger and supposedly better armed Russian army has found itself grinding to a halt and having little success.
Ukraine claims it has killed, captured or incapacitated 5,300 soldiers, destroyed 151 tanks, blown up 816 armoured vehicles, and shot down 58 warplanes and helicopters.
It is believed the invasion is costing Russia at least £15billion a day - and it could totally fail unless Putin make significant progress within the next ten days.
And this money burning exercise could see Moscow left without enough cash to prop up the invasion.
But this embarassing state of play of the Russians - who expected they could roll in and take the capital in days - could force Vlad's hand to try and stamp out the defenders.
Mr Wallace said although the Ukrainians were putting up "a very strong fight" the reality was they were going up against "the overwhelming scale of the Russian Federation Army".
Putin "convinced himself that all these people would somehow welcome them with Russian flags and thank them for being great liberators", he said.
But instead the Ukrainian resistance had made these plans "go awry" - but he warned the offensive is likely to become "more violent".
Mr Wallace said: "So we have to brace ourselves for what may come next, which could be ruthless, indiscriminate bombing of cities and propelling forward of soldiers and high casualty levels, and that's going to be horrific."
Pictures show the utterly devastating impacts of what had long been warned to potentially become Putin's very own Vietnam War - a slow, costly, grinding defeat.
Burned out Russian vehicles and dead soldiers have been seen scattered across Ukraine.
And there have also been reports of Putin's tanks running out fuel and other supplies as Moscow was stunned by the level of fightback by Kyiv.
All you need to know about Russia's invasion of Ukraine
Everything you need to know about Russia's invasion of Ukraine...
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One video shows a Russian tank crew standing by their broken down vehicle as they are taunted by a Ukrainian driver on the roadside.
Another clip shows one of Putin's 'Z' tanks being towed away by a tractor, and other footage shows a pair of tanks stuck in the mud.
Mr Wallace also downplayed the nuclear threat from Russia after Putin announced his forces were now on "high alert".
"We've looked at their posture. There isn't a significant change," he said on LBC radio, accusing Putin of trying to "flex muscles" with his invasion bogged down.
Wallace said he had assured his 12-year-old son: "No, we're not going to have a nuclear war.
"What I've said to him is, look, President Putin is dealing at the moment in a rhetoric, he wants to distract from what's gone wrong in Ukraine, and he wants us all to be reminded that he has a nuclear deterrent."
But Britain, France and the United States had their own nuclear deterrence available, Wallace stressed: "It's kept us safe for decades. It is a deterrent by definition and design."
The minister said the progress of Russia's advance into Ukraine was deteriorating, telling BBC radio in a separate interview: "There are many reports of Russians either sort of deserting or surrendering.
"Because they are confused as much as anyone why they are engaged in a war with people they're probably related to."
Boris Johnson described Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as “a disastrous, misbegotten venture by President Putin” which “can lead to no good” for Russia.
And he had a phone call this afternoon Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
In a statement, Downing Street said: "The leaders categorically condemned the barbaric airstrikes being carried out by Russia against innocent civilians, including children.
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“The Prime Minister updated President Zelenskyy on UK military support being sent to Ukraine, and committed to sending more in the coming hours and days.”