Fiji Sun

Putin’s Chilling Warning on N-Threat

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has issued a chilling warning about the rising threat of nuclear war, saying it could lead to “the destructio­n of civilisati­on as a whole and maybe even our planet”. Speaking at his annual news conference, Mr Putin also scoffed at Western claims he wants to dominate the world, and says Western countries are antagonisi­ng Russia for their own domestic reasons, and at their own peril. He dismissed claims of Russian interferen­ce abroad, from a nerve agent poisoning in Britain to an alleged effort to infiltrate the US National Rifle Associatio­n.

Pointing at the US intention to withdraw from the 1987 Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, Putin warned that if the US puts intermedia­te-range missiles in Europe, Russia will be forced to take countermea­sures. “We are witnessing the breakup of the arms control system,” Mr Putin said on Thursday.

US officials say the withdrawal from the INF was prompted by Russian violations of the treaty. Mr Putin noted that Western analysts are talking about the possibilit­y of using low-yield nuclear weapons and said lowering the threshold could lead to “a global nuclear catastroph­e”.

He said Russia will have to ensure its security, and headed off arguments it was trying to gain unilateral advantages, saying the country was “trying to preserve the balance”.

Mr Putin also emphasised that the US is pondering the use of ballistic missiles with convention­al warheads, saying that the launch of such a missile could be mistaken for the launch of a nucleartip­ped one.

“If that happens, it could lead to the destructio­n of civilisati­on as a whole and maybe even our planet,” he said.

Mr Putin said it’s the US, not Russia, that’s aspiring to dominate the world. He pointed at US annual defence spending exceeding $US700 billion ($FJ$1.49bn), comparing it with Russia’s military budget of $46b ($FJ97.95bn).

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