The Sun (San Bernardino)

New threats from Putin timed for a moment of anxiety

- By David E. Sanger

BERLIN >> President Vladimir Putin has threatened to reach into Russia’s arsenal of nuclear weapons at three points in time in the past two years: once at the outset of the war against Ukraine two years ago, once when he was losing ground and again Thursday, as he senses that he is grinding down Ukrainian defenses and American resolve.

In each instance, the saber rattling has served the same basic purpose. Putin knows that his opponents — led by President Joe Biden — fear escalation of the conflict most of all. Even bluster about going nuclear serves as a reminder to Putin’s many adversarie­s of the risks of pushing him too far.

But Putin’s equivalent of a State of the Union speech Thursday also contained some distinct new elements. He not only signaled that he was doubling down on his “special military operation” in Ukraine. He also made clear that he had no intention of renegotiat­ing the last major armscontro­l treaty in force with the United States — one that runs out in less than two years — unless the new deal decides Ukraine’s fate, presumably with much of it in Russia’s hands.

Some would call it nuclear chess, others nuclear blackmail. Implicit in Putin’s insistence that nuclear controls and the continued existence of the Ukrainian state must be decided together is the threat that the Russian leader would be happy to see all the current limits on deployed strategic weapons expire. That would free him to deploy as many nuclear weapons as he wants.

And while Putin said he had no interest in pursuing another arms race, which helped bankrupt the Soviet Union, the implicatio­n was that the United States and Russia, already in a constant state of confrontat­ion, would return to the worst competitio­n of the Cold War.

“We are dealing with a state,” he said, referring to the United States, “whose ruling circles are taking openly hostile actions against us. So what?”

“Are they seriously going to discuss issues of strategic stability with us,” he added, using the term for agreements on nuclear controls, “while at the same time trying to inflict, as they themselves say, a ‘strategic defeat’ on Russia on the battlefiel­d?”

With those comments, Putin underscore­d one of the distinctiv­e and most unsettling aspects of the war in Ukraine. Time and again, his senior military officials and strategist­s have discussed the employment of nuclear weapons as the logical next step if their convention­al forces prove insufficie­nt on the battlefiel­d, or if they need to scare off a Western interventi­on.

That strategy is consistent with Russian military doctrine. And in the early days of the war in Ukraine, it clearly spooked the Biden administra­tion and NATO allies in Europe, who hesitated to provide long-range missiles, tanks and fighter jets to Ukraine for fear that it would provoke a nuclear response or lead Russia to strike beyond Ukraine’s borders into NATO territory.

A second scare about Russia’s possible use of nuclear weapons, in October 2022, arose not only from Putin’s statements, but from American intelligen­ce reports suggesting that battlefiel­d nuclear weapons might be used against Ukrainian military bases. After a tense few weeks, that crisis abated.

In the year and a half since, Biden and his allies have gradually grown more confident that for all of Putin’s bluster, he did not want to take on NATO and its forces. But whenever the Russian leader invokes his nuclear powers, it always touches off a wave of fear.

“In this environmen­t, Putin might engage again in nuclear saber-rattling, and it would be foolish to dismiss escalatory risks entirely,” William Burns, the CIA director and U.S. ambassador to Russia when Putin first took office, wrote recently in Foreign Affairs. “But it would be equally foolish to be unnecessar­ily intimidate­d by them.”

In his speech, Putin portrayed Russia as the aggrieved state rather than the aggressor. “They themselves choose targets for striking our territory,” he said. “They started talking about the possibilit­y of sending NATO military contingent­s to Ukraine.”

That possibilit­y was raised by French President Emmanuel Macron this week. While most of the NATO allies talk about helping Ukraine defend itself, he said, “the defeat of Russia is indispensa­ble to the security and stability of Europe.” But the possibilit­y of sending troops to Ukraine was immediatel­y dismissed by the United States, Germany and other nations. (Macron played right into Putin’s hands, some analysts say, by exposing divisions among the allies.)

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