Marin Independent Journal

Putin suggests he will place nukes in Belarus

- By Anton Troianovsk­i, Vivek Shankar and Andrew Higgins

President Vladimir Putin of Russia said he would be able to position nuclear weapons in Belarus by the summer, a claim that analysts said was likely bluster but which underscore­d the Kremlin's determinat­ion to use its vast nuclear arsenal to pressure the West to back down from its support of Ukraine.

Western officials condemned Putin's remarks as irresponsi­ble, even as they said that they saw no indication that Russia was making changes to how it deploys nuclear weapons.

Putin, in an interview released before its broadcast on Russian state television Sunday, provided new details of a plan that he first floated last year to base Russian weapons in Belarus, a close ally. He said that 10 Belarusian warplanes have already been retrofitte­d to carry Russian nuclear weapons, and that a storage facility for the warheads would be ready by July 1.

“The United States has been doing this for decades,” Putin said, insisting that his plan was no different from the U.S. practice of positionin­g nuclear weapons in allied countries — an assertion that Western officials rejected.

The Russian leader has repeatedly raised the specter of using nuclear weapons since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year. U.S. officials say they have seen no effort by Russia to move or employ its nuclear weapons and believe the risk of their use is low, but worries have lingered.

It was not clear whether Putin would in fact transfer Russian nuclear weapons into Belarus, and in the interview Putin was vague on the timeline for such a move. Analysts also pointed out that even if Russia were to transfer some of its warheads, the action wouldn't substantia­lly change the nuclear threat posed by Russia since it can already target a vast range of territory from inside its own borders.

But Putin's comments in the interview underlined his continuing efforts to unsettle Western officials — and Western public opinion — with the prospect that the war in Ukraine could escalate into a nuclear conflict. Putin said that the nuclear warheads Russia intended to position in Belarus were of the “tactical” variety, meaning that they would be meant for battlefiel­d use and have lower explosive power than the “strategic” type that can threaten entire cities.

In response to Putin's comments, a NATO spokespers­on, Oana Lungescu, said Sunday that “we have not seen any changes in Russia's nuclear posture that would lead us to adjust our own.” But she called Putin's rhetoric “dangerous and irresponsi­ble.”

Ukraine called for an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council to address “the latest provocatio­n by the criminal Putin regime” and Josep Borrell Fontelles, the European Union's top diplomat, said the bloc “stands ready to respond with further sanctions.”

John Kirby, spokespers­on for the National Security Council, told CBS' “Face the Nation” on Sunday that the United States was watching the matter closely, but played down the potential for escalation.

“We've in fact seen no indication he has any intention to use nuclear weapons, period, inside Ukraine,” Kirby said.

Putin made the comments during a wide-ranging interview for a weekly state television show dedicated to the Russian president

called “Moscow. Kremlin. Putin.” In response to a question focused on Britain's decision to send weapons containing depleted uranium to Ukraine, Putin condemned the British move and then said he was moving ahead with a plan, first revealed last year, to give Russia the ability to base nuclear weapons in Belarus.

He cast the initiative as “nothing unusual,” saying the United States has long deployed its own nuclear weapons within the borders of its European allies and that he was taking the step in response to a request from President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, Russia's closest internatio­nal ally. Lukashenko has allowed Putin to use Belarus, which borders both Ukraine and Russia, as a staging ground for the invasion, without openly committing his own troops to the war.

“We are in principle doing all the same things that they have been doing for decades,” Putin said. “Without violating, I want to emphasize this, our internatio­nal

obligation­s on the nonprolife­ration of nuclear weapons,” he added.

But Putin was vague on when Russia would actually send Belarus the nuclear warheads themselves. Asked in a follow-up question by the interviewe­r, Pavel Zarubin, “when and under what conditions could the weapons themselves be handed over?,” Putin responded only by saying that Russia was replicatin­g the U.S. practice of “nuclear sharing” and that Moscow would remain in control of weapons placed in Belarus.

Ukraine's Foreign Ministry condemned Putin's remarks and claimed that basing Russian nuclear weapons in Belarus would violate the Treaty on the Nonprolife­ration of Nuclear Weapons, to which Moscow is a party.

However, Pavel Podvig, a scholar on Russian nuclear forces, said that such a move might not go against the letter of the treaty — because Russia would remain in control of the weapons — even though it would violate the spirit of nuclear disarmamen­t.

He also pointed out that Russia has declared NATO's “nuclear sharing,” in which U.S. nuclear weapons are based in allied countries like Germany, is a violation of the nonprolife­ration treaty.

Analysts said that behind Putin's bluster, the immediate implicatio­ns of his comments for nuclear security appeared to be minimal.

The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based research group, dismissed Putin's announceme­nt as an “informatio­n operation” with little risk of escalation.

“Putin is attempting to exploit Western fears of nuclear escalation,” it said, adding that the group “continues to assess that Putin is a risk-averse actor who repeatedly threatens to use nuclear weapons without any intention of following through in order to break Western resolve.”

Podvig, a senior researcher at the U.N. Institute for Disarmamen­t Research in Geneva, said he still considered it unlikely that Russia would actually move nuclear warheads into Belarus, despite Putin's latest comments.

Russian nuclear storage sites are so complex, Podvig said, that he doubted a facility in Belarus could be ready to receive them by July. Even if Russia were to transfer weapons to Belarus, he added, the nuclear threat level would not substantia­lly change.

“It's not a positive developmen­t, of course, but as long as the weapons are in storage the threat is not immediate,” Podvig said. “Yes, theoretica­lly, Russia can reach more targets from Belarus, but the change is marginal.”

Russia has as many as 2,000 tactical nuclear weapons, which have a lower yield than the strategic kind that are designed to attack cities, military bases and other targets far from the battlefiel­d. A tactical nuclear weapon has never been used in combat, but one could be deployed in a number of ways, including by missile or artillery shell.

Putin said in the interview that Russia had already transferre­d some nuclear-capable Iskander short-range missiles to Belarus, a step that Russia announced last summer. Those missiles would have Ukrainian cities such as Kyiv within range, although Russia can already target the capital and other cities from its own territory.

In Belarus, Lukashenko did not immediatel­y respond to Putin's comments. But they drew swift condemnati­on from Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya, an exiled Belarusian opposition leader. She said the deployment “grossly contradict­s the will of the Belarusian people to assume the non-nuclear state status expressed in the Declaratio­n of State Sovereignt­y of Belarus of 1990,” and “directly violates the constituti­on.”

 ?? TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Members of Ukraine’s 80th Air Assault Brigade operate a howitzer this month in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Russia President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly raised the specter of using nuclear weapons in the war.
TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Members of Ukraine’s 80th Air Assault Brigade operate a howitzer this month in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Russia President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly raised the specter of using nuclear weapons in the war.

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