Albany Times Union

Russia’s security chief floats nuclear threat, blasts West

- By Vladimir Isachenkov

MOSCOW — A top Russian security official warned Thursday about the rising threat of a nuclear war and blasted a German minister for threatenin­g Russian President Vladimir Putin with arrest, saying that such action would amount to a declaratio­n of war and trigger a Russian strike on Germany.

Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy secretary of Russia’s Security Council chaired by Putin, said in video remarks to reporters that Russia’s relations with the West have hit an alltime bottom.

Asked whether the threat of a nuclear conflict has eased, Medvedev responded: “No, it hasn’t decreased, it has grown. Every day when they provide Ukraine with foreign weapons brings the nuclear apocalypse closer.”

He has issued a barrage of such strongly-worded statements in the past, blasting the U.S. and its NATO allies for what he described as their efforts to break up and destroy Russia. It’s been a drastic metamorpho­sis for the gentle-looking politician, who once was hailed by the West as a liberal hope.

In Thursday’s comments, the 57-year-old Medvedev denounced the Internatio­nal Criminal Court’s decision to issue an arrest warrant for Putin on charges of alleged involvemen­t in abductions of thousands of children from Ukraine as legally null and void. He noted that the move added to a “colossal negative potential” in the already bitterly strained ties between Russia and the West.

“Our relations with the

West are already worse than they have ever been in history,” he said.

Medvedev specifical­ly blasted German Justice Minister Marco Buschmann, who said last week that Putin would be arrested on the ICC’S warrant if he visits Germany. “Let’s imagine ... the leader of a nuclear power visits the territory of Germany and is arrested,” Medvedev said, adding that it would amount to a declaratio­n of war against Russia. “In this case, our assets will fly to hit the Bundestag, the chancellor’s office and so on.”

Medvedev also challenged Ukraine’s sovereignt­y in comments that could reflect Moscow’s plans to extend its gains.

“Honestly speaking, Ukraine is part of Russia,” he said. “But due to geopolitic­al reasons and the course of history we had tolerated that we were living in separate quarters and had been forced to acknowledg­e those invented borders for a long time.”

The soft-spoken and mild-mannered Medvedev, who served as Russia’s president from 2008 to 2012 when term limits forced Putin to shift into the prime minister’s post, was widely seen by Western officials as more liberal than his mentor. Many in the West expected Medvedev to win a second term and further soften the Kremlin’s policies, but he stepped down to allow Putin to reclaim the presidency in what Kremlin critics denounced as a cynical manipulati­on.

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