Lithuania has intelligence that Russia is planning attacks on infrastructure, and security around energy and ​transport sites will be tightened as a precaution, President Gitanas Nauseda said in an interview published on Wednesday.

Nauseda said he had no information on when or where ​the attacks were planned, and did not ​say that his country was the target, in ⁠his interview with BNS news agency.

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“We have such ​signals, which we receive from our (intelligence) services. They do ​not clearly identify place or time … because the opponent is not at the end of its planning, and we only know ​about the planning or the goal,” he said.

“It ​could be various means aimed at physically damaging critical infrastructure. … ‌Anything ⁠that halts the functioning of these sites,” he added.

Lithuania — a NATO member which shares land borders with the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad and with Moscow’s ally ​Belarus — has tripled ​its defence ⁠spending since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Neighbouring Poland said earlier this month that Western ​intelligence agencies were concerned about the risk ​of ⁠Russian attacks against its territory and the Baltic states.

Moscow has regularly denied accusations of planning or carrying out ⁠sabotage ​and other attacks on countries ​outside Ukraine, saying such reports are part of an anti-Russian propaganda campaign.