As thousands of Russian troops enter the war in eastern Ukraine, a coalition of pro-Russian separatists, Kremlin officials and far right politicos from across Europe are meeting in the Crimean city of Yalta.

The meeting in Yalta this weekend—called “Russia, Ukraine, New Russia: Global Problems and Challenges” is something of an inversion of the 1945 Yalta Conference, which brought together the Allied powers to reorganize Europe after the defeat of Nazi Germany.

Today, the Russian-led version is discussing how to carve up Ukraine.

This version also includes a slew of European far right and neo-fascist political parties, according to a guest list which was posted—and then removed—from a Facebook page for press announcements in the Russian-occupied Autonomous Republic of Crimea.

While many of the individuals present are to the political right of Pres. Vladimir Putin, there is at least one close Putin adviser present. It’s another example of budding ties between the Kremlin and European populist and far right parties, united out of a shared opposition to the European Union.

First of all, there’s the separatists. Part-time war reenactor and former Donetsk People’s Republic defense minister Igor Strelkov is on the list. He’s joined by Alexander Borodai, the self-proclaimed prime minister of the DPR.

Alexey Anpilogov, the head of the Novorossiya central committee, joins Strelkov and Borodai. Novorossiya, or New Russia, a Russian name for the war-torn eastern region of Ukraine. Anpilogov’s organization represents a political union of the separatist DPR and the Luhansk People’s Republic.

Then there’s the European far right parties. Ten parties have invited representatives at the conference. Some of the most extreme include Nick Griffin—the president of the neo-Nazi British National Party—and Pavel Chernev of the Nationalist Party of Bulgaria, which aims to wipe out all “foreign and alien immigrant scum” in Bulgaria.