 NATO has turned Vilnius into a fortress defended by advanced weaponry to protect US President Joe Biden and other alliance leaders meeting next week only 32 km from Lithuania's razor wire-topped border fence with Russian ally Belarus. Lithuania has tripled the deployment of border guards at the Belarus and Russian borders for the summer, augmented by officers from Latvia and Poland. The two countries have also sent police to help patrol Vilnius. With villages next to the Belarus border, locals told Reuters they feel totally safe, despite the Russian allies offered to accommodate Russia's private Wagner militia and its hosting of Russian nuclear weapons. At Vilnius Airport, eight German-operated Patriot missile launchers were seen standing with their nozzles pointed in the direction of Russia's Kaliningrad. Two more pointed towards Belarus. All of the launchers were operational since Friday morning. The situation is really very tense because of aggression of Russian Federation against Ukraine. So it's already on a very, very high level. And definitely these threats of Lukashenko's regime to use the nuclear weapons against the whole world really creates a lot of, I would say, concerns. And this is why we're talking about very strong additional security measures and what you mentioned and asked about the presence of our allies is one of those very important things. We still can expect a certain provocation in terms of regular migration. Bigger groups can be formed and then pushed to our territory. As well, there might be intentional border violations by persons or by military staff in order to check the capability to react of Lithuanian border guards as well as you sometimes may see certain military equipment at the border. So far we don't see this kind of activity. Again, I will repeat myself. We do not observe any unusual activities at the border with Belarus as well as Russian Federation.