The Boston Globe

Putin offers both reassuranc­e and threat on a wider war

Warns that bases for F-16s could become targets

- By Ivan Nechepuren­ko

President vladimir putin of Russia has warned that if F-16 fighter jets supplied to Ukraine by its western allies operated from airfields in other countries, the bases would be legitimate targets for attack.

In a speech to Russian air force pilots late wednesday, however, putin rejected suggestion­s from some western leaders that Russia is planning to invade NATO countries as complete nonsense.

The threat that Russia might move against other countries has become one of the main arguments used by the Ukrainian government and its supporters to try to persuade the United States to dispatch more military aid to the country.

Ukrainian president volodymyr Zelensky said again in an interview with CBS News published Thursday that war “can come to Europe, and to the United States of america.”

“It can come very quickly to Europe,” Zelensky said.

At the United Nations on Thursday, Russia vetoed a resolution that would have extended UN oversight of sanctions tied to North korea’s nuclear program, prompting accusation­s from western nations that it was acting to keep the pipeline of weaponry open from the North koreans for use in Ukraine.

The Russian vote — a reversal from its past support for the monitoring program — drew condemnati­on from world leaders. In the United States, white House national security spokespers­on John kirby called it a “reckless action” that made clear the growing ties between North korea and Russia.

The vote came a day after putin visited the provincial town of Torzhok in the Tver region north of moscow, where he inspected a training center for Russian military pilots.

Speaking with the pilots, putin said that Russia spent only a fraction on its military of what the United States does.

“Considerin­g this difference,” he said, concerns that moscow would fight NATO are nonsense.

Putin also reiterated his argument that NATO’S enlargemen­t in the wake of the Soviet collapse was the primary reason for his decision to attack Ukraine in 2022. “Did we cross the ocean and approach US borders?” he asked. “No, they are the ones who are closing in on us, and they have reached our borders.”

But putin did leave open the door to an expanded battlefiel­d when it came to the decision by Ukraine’s allies to equip it with american-made F-16 fighter jets. “F-16 aircraft can also carry nuclear weapons, and we will have to heed this while organizing our combat operations,” putin said.

Ukraine has also figured large in the kremlin’s response to the terrorist attack that killed at least 143 people last week at a concert hall outside moscow.

Since shortly after the attack, putin and other Russian officials, without evidence, have depicted Ukraine as the likely mastermind behind it. putin eventually acknowledg­ed that the assault had been “perpetrate­d by radical Islamists,” but stuck with the contention that Ukraine could have ordered it.

On Thursday, continuing in that vein, Russia’s investigat­ive committee, the country’s equivalent to the FBI, said in a statement that it had “obtained evidence” that the attackers were “connected with Ukrainian nationalis­ts,” without specifying what that proof was.

Investigat­ors said that they had “confirmed data that the perpetrato­rs of the terrorist attack received significan­t amounts of money and cryptocurr­ency from Ukraine, which were used in preparing the crime.” They also said that another person had been arrested in connection with the attack and would soon appear in court.

The Ukrainian government has denied any involvemen­t in the assault. The United States and other western government­s have said repeatedly that the Islamic State group — which has issued two claims of responsibi­lity — was behind the assault and that Ukraine was not involved.

With 74 victims of the concert hall attack still hospitaliz­ed, putin has yet to visit them or to go to the site of the attack. Dmitry peskov, the kremlin spokespers­on, said Thursday that putin had been heavily involved in the rescue effort on the night of the attack, and that a visit to the site would hinder their work.

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman stood outside her house in Uglegorsk in Ukraine’s Donetsk region Thursday following recent shelling.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A woman stood outside her house in Uglegorsk in Ukraine’s Donetsk region Thursday following recent shelling.

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