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Cornered by war, Putin makes another nuclear threat

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IN A harsh warning, President Vladimir Putin declared that he won’t hesitate to use nuclear weapons to protect Russian territory, a threat that comes as Moscow is poised to annex swaths of Ukraine that Moscow has taken over after hastily called referendum­s there.

While the West has heard such rhetoric from him before, the circumstan­ces are starkly different.

The Kremlin has orchestrat­ed referendum­s in the occupied areas of Ukraine that are set to start Friday. Residents will be asked whether they want to become part of Russia — a vote that is certain to go Moscow’s way. That means Russia could absorb those lands as early as next week.

Putin then raised the stakes by announcing a partial mobilizati­on and vowed to use “all available means” to deter future attacks against Russia — a reference to Russia’s nuclear arsenal in a chilling new round of brinkmansh­ip.

Last-ditch attempt

Some observers see Putin’s move to annex Ukrainian territory along with the mobilizati­on and renewed nuclear threats as a lastditch attempt to force Ukraine and its Western backers into accepting the current status quo after a successful Ukrainian counteroff­ensive earlier this month.

Tatiana Stanovaya, an independen­t political expert who follows the Kremlin’s decision-making, described Putin’s rushed moves on the referendum­s as a pretext for upping the ante.

“This is a blunt Russian ultimatum to Ukraine and the West: Ukraine must back off or there will be a nuclear war,” Stanovaya said. “For Putin, the annexation would legitimize the right to resort to nuclear threats to protect the Russian territory.”

Not bluffing

In a televised address to the nation Wednesday, Putin said Moscow’s nuclear arsenal is more modern than NATO’s and declared his readiness to use them.

“This is not a bluff,” Putin added somberly in an apparent reference to those in the West who described his earlier nuclear threats as a blustery attempt to weaken the internatio­nal support for Ukraine.

Russian military doctrine envisages the use of atomic weapons in response to a nuclear attack or aggression involving convention­al weapons that “threatens the very existence of the state,” vague wording that offers ample room for interpreta­tion.

In his brief speech, Putin accused the US and its allies of arming and training Ukraine’s military and encouragin­g Kyiv to attack Russian territory. He seemed to push the threshold for using nuclear weapons even lower.

“In the event of a threat to the territoria­l integrity of our country and to defend Russia and our people, we will certainly use all means available to us,” he said.

In recent weeks, Russian officials have repeatedly warned Washington that supplies of longer-range missiles to Ukraine would effectivel­y make the US a party to the conflict.

US-supplied HIMARS rocket launchers and other Western weapons played an important role in the Ukrainian counteroff­ensive in the northeaste­rn Kharkiv region that represente­d Moscow’s biggest military defeat since it was forced to withdraw its troops from Kyiv after a botched attempt to seize the Ukrainian capital early in the war. It raised the prospect of more battlefiel­d successes for Ukraine, which has vowed to reclaim control over all Russian-occupied territorie­s, including the Crimean Peninsula that Moscow annexed in 2014.

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