The sequence of threats reveals a calculated escalation in Moscow's public messaging.
The evolution from a conditional threat to a declared, open-ended campaign represents a significant rhetorical escalation, aiming to normalize the danger to central Kyiv.
Despite the increasingly dire language from Moscow, Western governments have responded with a clear and coordinated message: they are not leaving.
The most definitive response came from the European Union immediately after the May 6-7 warning. An EU spokesperson dismissed the threat, stating, "Russia's public threats to attack Kyiv are part of its reckless escalatory tactics… As to us, the EU, we will not change our posture or presence in Kyiv" . This position was echoed by individual member states. Poland's embassy in Kyiv stated plainly that it would "ignore Russian threats and does not plan to evacuate diplomats"
. Multiple reports confirmed that, despite the formal notes and public warnings, foreign embassies showed no indication of leaving
.
This unified rejection treats Russia's warnings not as a credible, immediate military ultimatum to which the West must respond, but as an operation in information warfare designed to project an image of danger and destabilize the political environment in the capital.
The pattern of these evacuation demands is a direct lens into Moscow's current strategy of pressure.
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