- Reports indicate Belarus has begun rapid reserve call-ups in western regions near NATO borders under the framework of a sudden readiness inspection.
- Opposition officials and local accounts describe the process as a mass mobilization conducted with short notice and immediate deployment orders.
Residents in western Belarus have reported sudden reserve call-ups and rapid deployment orders near the country’s border with NATO member states, according to statements from opposition officials and local accounts published Feb. 2026, raising attention over what critics describe as an undeclared mobilization effort.
Reports from the regions of Grodno, Slonim, and the village of Baranki indicate that men have been issued military summonses without advance notice and ordered to report for duty within hours. Local residents cited on social media said reserve groups were being formed quickly and transported to training grounds the same day notifications were delivered.
Pavel Latushko, deputy head of the United Transitional Cabinet of Belarus, told Ukrainian broadcaster Kyiv24 that the pace and manner of the call-ups differ from previous reserve training campaigns.
“Summonses, for example, arrive at 8:00 in the morning — they bring the summons and say to arrive at the place of service by 9:00. Or a summons arrives at 22:00 in the evening, and by 8:00 in the morning you must arrive in a completely different city of Belarus. That is, there is indeed a mass call-up taking place now. No refusals are accepted, everyone is taken under arms, for one month, for two. They also take mobile phones, meaning there is no contact with relatives,” Latushko said.
According to Latushko, the measures are being conducted under the guise of a sudden readiness inspection but amount in practice to a hidden mobilization. He said social and medical deferments are reportedly being ignored during the process, and individuals called up are immediately transferred to military units.
Independent Belarusian outlet Zerkalo reported that its journalists contacted local military enlistment offices while posing as relatives and received confirmation that summonses were being issued and executed on the same day. Officials contacted by the publication suggested the activity could be tied to a mobilization readiness check rather than a routine training campaign.
The Belarusian Ministry of Defense has not publicly announced a nationwide mobilization. However, Latushko claimed there is a gap between official statements and conditions reported by citizens, noting that Defense Minister Viktor Khrenin has publicly described reserve activities as routine and voluntary.
The reported call-ups come amid heightened security attention along Belarus’ western frontier bordering Poland and Lithuania, both NATO members. Belarus has previously conducted snap military inspections, but observers note that the speed and scale described in current reports have generated stronger public reaction inside the country.
Belarus remains closely aligned with Russia militarily, and analysts have assessed that Moscow continues to deepen operational influence over Belarusian territory. Western officials have previously expressed concern about military activity in the region, particularly following incidents involving alleged airspace violations near NATO borders.
Separately, Russian domestic discussions have referenced potential future mobilization measures tied to manpower shortages, while authorities have increased restrictions on access to certain social media platforms and messaging services in recent weeks, reportedly to limit the spread of protest coordination similar to demonstrations seen in 2022.
The current developments in Belarus have not been officially framed as preparation for combat operations, and available reporting points primarily to readiness testing or reserve force verification activities. Nevertheless, the sudden nature of the call-ups and their proximity to NATO borders have drawn attention from regional observers monitoring military activity in Eastern Europe.

