Airspace closure On 14 February, a day after the coup plot allegations were made public, Moldova briefly closed its airspace after a small object resembling a
weather balloon was detected in its airspace over the north of the country, near the Moldovan-Ukrainian border. Its airspace was re-opened after authorities ascertained the object posed no safety risk to civilians. The incident transpired against the backdrop of the
2023 Chinese balloon incidents.
Foreign citizen entry bans Fearing infiltration of foreign saboteurs and Russian agents, Moldovan authorities limited entry of Serbian, Belarusian, and Montenegrin citizens into Moldova, preventing the entry of some 1,000 Serbian soccer fans, and a Montenegrin boxing team. In February 2023, two individuals were expelled from Moldova as spies. On 12 March, Moldovan police stated that 182 foreign nationals, including a possible representative of the Russian
Wagner Group, had been denied entry into the country.
Arrest of alleged diversionists On 12 March, Moldovan police disclosed that they had foiled an alleged plot by a series of Russian-backed actors trained to foment mass unrest within a protest against Moldova's new pro-western government. Seven people were detained. The diversionists (whom included Russian citizens) were promised up to $10,000 in compensation for sparking unrest during anti-government protests. The diversionists were to act in groups, breaking police cordons and inciting violence. The plot was uncovered after the group was infiltrated by an undercover agent, Moldovan authorities said. ==Responses==