<p>Machine gun fire echoed through the abandoned buildings of Pripyat in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, as Ukrainian National Guard troops on Friday staged urban combat exercises.</p>.<p>The live-fire training -- carried out in one of the most radioactive places on earth -- came as warnings swirl over a potential Russian invasion.</p>.<p>Moscow has massed over 100,000 troops along Ukraine's border -- including deploying personnel to Belarus, which lies just 10 kilometres (six miles) to the north for joint drills.</p>.<p>For Ukraine's forces, the deserted streets and apartment blocks of Pripyat -- empty since residents were evacuated following the nuclear reactor disaster in 1986 -- made an ideal training ground.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/nato-considers-bolstering-allies-if-russian-troops-stay-in-belarus-1078981.html" target="_blank">NATO considers bolstering allies if Russian troops stay in Belarus</a></strong></p>.<p>Troops in winter camouflage practised clearing armed attackers from buildings, targeted mortar fire and took on snipers in urban conditions.</p>.<p>Emergency service workers staged evacuations -- a speaker on a drone telling residents to clear out -- and fought fires caused by fighting.</p>.<p>"As there are no civilians around here we can conduct exercises with real ammunition in a situation as close to actual urban warfare as possible," said one National Guard serviceman, giving only his call sign Litva.</p>.<p>But conducting exercises inside the exclusion zone has its own risks.</p>.<p>Ahead of the training -- the first of its kind staged in Pripyat -- workers with Geiger counters had to scan the route to check there were no radioactive hotspots.</p>.<p>"It has all been checked and it doesn't present a danger," Litva said confidently, as he clutched his automatic rifle to his chest.</p>.<p>Some Western leaders insist the threat from Russia's massed forces is real and urgent -- but authorities in Kyiv have cautioned against stirring "panic".</p>.<p>Ukraine's defence minister Oleksiy Reznikov played down the likelihood of an incursion by Russian forces sent to Belarus for joint drills.</p>.<p>While the US has said that their number could reach 30,000 -- Reznikov insisted that the "several thousand" Russians currently across the Belarusian frontier were not enough to attack.</p>.<p>He also pointed to difficult terrain as a major obstacle -- and the threat from radiation if they tried to push through the exclusion zone towards the capital Kyiv.</p>.<p>"This area is very hard to get through -- forests, swamp, rivers -- it's complicated enough to move by foot let alone with a tank," Reznikov told journalists, who had been ferried into the exclusion zone on a press tour to see the exercises.</p>.<p>"And don't forget that still since the disaster there remain some highly radioactive areas on the route from Belarus."</p>.<p>Ukraine's interior minister Denys Monastyrskiy said that due to the spike in tensions security had been stepped up around all nuclear reactors -- including the Chernobyl site, now covered by a mammoth protective sarcophagus.</p>.<p>"We're absolutely sure that the nuclear plant in Chernobyl is not under threat," Monastyrskiy said.</p>.<p>But the National Guard troops in Pripyat were not training to counter a full-scale Russian invasion.</p>.<p>They were instead preparing for the threat from ununiformed infiltrators who might seize buildings and stir unrest across the country.</p>.<p>That was what happened when Russia seized the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and began fuelling a separatist conflict in the east of Ukraine.</p>.<p>Ukraine's authorities insist that type of internal destabilisation remains their biggest worry.</p>.<p>"We have to show our readiness to react to all events," said Monastyrskiy</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>
<p>Machine gun fire echoed through the abandoned buildings of Pripyat in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, as Ukrainian National Guard troops on Friday staged urban combat exercises.</p>.<p>The live-fire training -- carried out in one of the most radioactive places on earth -- came as warnings swirl over a potential Russian invasion.</p>.<p>Moscow has massed over 100,000 troops along Ukraine's border -- including deploying personnel to Belarus, which lies just 10 kilometres (six miles) to the north for joint drills.</p>.<p>For Ukraine's forces, the deserted streets and apartment blocks of Pripyat -- empty since residents were evacuated following the nuclear reactor disaster in 1986 -- made an ideal training ground.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/nato-considers-bolstering-allies-if-russian-troops-stay-in-belarus-1078981.html" target="_blank">NATO considers bolstering allies if Russian troops stay in Belarus</a></strong></p>.<p>Troops in winter camouflage practised clearing armed attackers from buildings, targeted mortar fire and took on snipers in urban conditions.</p>.<p>Emergency service workers staged evacuations -- a speaker on a drone telling residents to clear out -- and fought fires caused by fighting.</p>.<p>"As there are no civilians around here we can conduct exercises with real ammunition in a situation as close to actual urban warfare as possible," said one National Guard serviceman, giving only his call sign Litva.</p>.<p>But conducting exercises inside the exclusion zone has its own risks.</p>.<p>Ahead of the training -- the first of its kind staged in Pripyat -- workers with Geiger counters had to scan the route to check there were no radioactive hotspots.</p>.<p>"It has all been checked and it doesn't present a danger," Litva said confidently, as he clutched his automatic rifle to his chest.</p>.<p>Some Western leaders insist the threat from Russia's massed forces is real and urgent -- but authorities in Kyiv have cautioned against stirring "panic".</p>.<p>Ukraine's defence minister Oleksiy Reznikov played down the likelihood of an incursion by Russian forces sent to Belarus for joint drills.</p>.<p>While the US has said that their number could reach 30,000 -- Reznikov insisted that the "several thousand" Russians currently across the Belarusian frontier were not enough to attack.</p>.<p>He also pointed to difficult terrain as a major obstacle -- and the threat from radiation if they tried to push through the exclusion zone towards the capital Kyiv.</p>.<p>"This area is very hard to get through -- forests, swamp, rivers -- it's complicated enough to move by foot let alone with a tank," Reznikov told journalists, who had been ferried into the exclusion zone on a press tour to see the exercises.</p>.<p>"And don't forget that still since the disaster there remain some highly radioactive areas on the route from Belarus."</p>.<p>Ukraine's interior minister Denys Monastyrskiy said that due to the spike in tensions security had been stepped up around all nuclear reactors -- including the Chernobyl site, now covered by a mammoth protective sarcophagus.</p>.<p>"We're absolutely sure that the nuclear plant in Chernobyl is not under threat," Monastyrskiy said.</p>.<p>But the National Guard troops in Pripyat were not training to counter a full-scale Russian invasion.</p>.<p>They were instead preparing for the threat from ununiformed infiltrators who might seize buildings and stir unrest across the country.</p>.<p>That was what happened when Russia seized the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and began fuelling a separatist conflict in the east of Ukraine.</p>.<p>Ukraine's authorities insist that type of internal destabilisation remains their biggest worry.</p>.<p>"We have to show our readiness to react to all events," said Monastyrskiy</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>