New Straits Times

Putin: Russia is ready for nuclear war

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MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin yesterday warned the West that Russia was technicall­y ready for nuclear war and that if the United States sent troops to Ukraine, it would be considered a significan­t escalation of the war.

Putin, speaking just days before a March 15-17 election which is certain to give him another six years in power, said the nuclear war scenario was not “rushing” up and he saw no need for the use of nuclear weapons in Ukraine.

“From a military-technical point of view, we are, of course, ready,” Putin, 71, told Rossiya-1 television and news agency RIA in response to a question on whether Russia was really ready for a nuclear war.

Putin said the US understood that if it deployed troops on Russian territory — or to Ukraine — Russia would treat the move as an interventi­on.

“(In the United States) there are enough specialist­s in the field of Russian-American relations and in the field of strategic restraint.

“Therefore, I don’t think that here everything is rushing to it (nuclear confrontat­ion), but we are ready for this.”

The war in Ukraine has triggered the deepest crisis in Russia’s relations with the West since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis and Putin has warned several times that the West risks provoking a nuclear war if it sends troops to fight in Ukraine.

Putin sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine in February 2022, triggering full-scale war after eight years of conflict in eastern Ukraine between Ukrainian forces on one side and pro-Russian Ukrainians and Russian proxies on the other.

Western leaders have promised to defeat Russia in Ukraine, but after two years of war, Russian forces control a little under one fifth of Ukrainian territory.

In a US election year, the West is grappling with how to support Kyiv against Russia which has bolstered its army with hundreds of thousands of men and is rearming much faster than the West.

Kyiv says it is defending itself against an imperial-style war of conquest designed to erase its national identity. Russia says the areas it controls in Ukraine are now Russia.

Putin, Russia’s ultimate decision maker on nuclear weapons, reiterated that the use of nuclear weapons was spelled out in the Kremlin’s nuclear doctrine, its policy setting out the circumstan­ces in which Russia might use its weapons.

“Weapons exist in order to use them,” Putin said. “We have our own principles.”

Russia and the United States are by far the largest nuclear powers, controllin­g over 90 per cent of the world’s nuclear weapons.

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