Los Angeles Times

Nuclear warning part of Putin’s familiar playbook

- By Laura King

WASHINGTON — Once again, Russian President Vladimir Putin is seemingly rattling the nuclear saber. But why now?

The Kremlin, citing recent comments by Western leaders regarding the war in Ukraine, said Monday that it would soon carry out simulated use of battlefiel­d, or tactical, nuclear weapons — marking the first time Moscow announced such an exercise.

The announceme­nt drew a sharp response. U.S. Defense Department spokesman Maj. Gen. Patrick Ryder called it “entirely inappropri­ate.” NATO spokespers­on Farah Dakhlallah termed Moscow’s plans “dangerous and irresponsi­ble,” and the European Union called on Russia to “stop the escalation.”

Like so many pronouncem­ents from Moscow, this one’s timing might matter as much as its substance.

This week holds two redletter days for Putin: his inaugurati­on on Tuesday to yet another presidenti­al term after an unsurprisi­ng landslide election win in March, coupled with Thursday’s traditiona­lly bombastic Victory Day celebratio­ns commemorat­ing the Soviet victory over the Nazis.

It is commonplac­e for nuclear powers such as Russia — or the United States, for that matter — to conduct checks of their weapons stockpiles. But declaring an explicit connection between exercises involving practice use of nuclear weapons and comments by adversaria­l government­s about an ongoing conflict is an unusual diplomatic move.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said the planned tactical nuclear drills near Ukraine were intended to “unconditio­nally ensure the territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y of the Russian state.”

Tactical nuclear weapons, as the term implies, are far smaller and less powerful than strategic nuclear armaments such as interconti­nental ballistic missiles carrying nuclear payloads that could lay waste to large population centers. But nuclear threats, even veiled ones, have a way of grabbing everyone’s attention.

Unlike strategic nuclear weapons, battlefiel­d nuclear munitions — which are relatively compact and easily transporta­ble — are not subject to internatio­nal arms agreements, and Russia’s stockpiles are shrouded in secrecy. Such weapons can be deployed in the form of air-dropped bombs or short-range missiles.

The Pentagon closely monitors Russia’s nuclear posture, and over the course of the Ukraine war, the Biden administra­tion has reported no changes — even at times when Russian rhetoric suggests heightened tensions.

Western analysts say the latest comments typify a pattern that has taken hold since Putin’s February 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine — that is, any perceived Western escalation is met with Kremlin threats of a nuclear nature, meant to raise the specter of all-out war between Russia and the U.S.-led coalition aiding Ukraine.

Among observers of this conflict, there’s some difference of opinion as to whether these warnings are any more worrisome or significan­t than similar ones in the past — though many dismissed Monday’s announceme­nt as little more than bluster.

Alexander Clarkson, a European studies lecturer at King’s College in London, suggested that the developmen­t did not reflect some carefully calibrated policy messaging by Moscow. Russia’s threshold for use of nuclear weapons, he wrote on the social platform X, is “whatever Putin and a small inner circle of defense apparatchi­ks think it is when getting out of bed in the morning.”

However, the Kremlin announceme­nt could give fresh ammunition to opponents of further Western aid to Ukraine. During a drawnout congressio­nal blockade of military assistance — finally resolved with approval last month of $61 billion in aid for Ukraine — far-right Republican­s accused the Biden administra­tion and Ukraine’s other Western partners of playing with nuclear fire by continuing to support the government of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Ukraine was dismissive of the Russian announceme­nt, saying it is part of a familiar playbook.

“We do not see anything new here,” Andriy Yusov, a Ukrainian military intelligen­ce spokesman, said on national television. “Nuclear blackmail is a constant practice of Putin’s regime.”

The latest rhetorical flare-up over nuclear weapons comes at a time when Ukraine is undeniably struggling on the battlefiel­d.

A much-vaunted Ukrainian counteroff­ensive foundered in the summer. Now, as the weather improves, some of the country’s allies — and even some Ukrainian defense officials — have voiced concerns about whether Russian forces might exploit weakness in Ukrainian fortificat­ions and break through somewhere along the front lines.

The eastern Ukrainian town of Chasiv Yar is considered vulnerable to a Russian onslaught, although it sits on high ground, a position that is usually favorable to the defenders.

For the last several months, Russia has been rattled by a campaign of strikes within its border by Ukrainian forces. The United States has largely enjoined Ukraine to not use American-provided weaponry for such attacks, mainly aimed at Russian energy infrastruc­ture. But close allies such as Britain are not placing similar constraint­s on Ukrainian forces.

On Monday, Britain’s ambassador to Moscow, Nigel Casey, was summoned to the Russian Foreign Ministry for a formal protest after David Cameron, the former British prime minister who is now the foreign secretary, declared last week that Ukraine had the right to use British armaments to launch strikes inside Russia.

Cameron, who visited the Ukrainian capital last week, said then that Ukraine could decide how to use Britishpro­vided long-range weapons, not ruling out strikes on Russian territory. Moscow calls that an abrogation of previous British assurances to the contrary.

Even more irksome to Russia than the Cameron comments were recent remarks by French President Emmanuel Macron, who publicly mused about the idea of sending European troops to Ukraine.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the British and French statements about such potential deployment­s “unpreceden­ted” and a “completely new round of escalation of tension.”

Asked Monday about reasons behind the tacticalnu­clear-weapons exercise, he pointed in particular to Macron’s remarks.

At the same time, Russia is characteri­zing its own sharply stepped-up production of convention­al weapons such as artillery as necessary in light of actions by Ukraine’s allies.

“We are now at the stage of open confrontat­ion, which I hope will not result in a direct armed conf lict,” a senior Russian envoy, Ambassador-at-Large Grigory Mashkov, told the state news agency RIA.

He said Moscow would take steps to strengthen its defense capabiliti­es, including bolstering missile stockpiles, “in order to discourage any potential enemy from testing Russia’s strength.”

In recent days, Russia has also railed against North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on military exercises near its frontiers.

Over the weekend, Foreign Ministry spokesman Maria Zakharova described the months-long maneuvers, set to run through this month, as a clear signal that the alliance is setting the stage for conflict with Russia. The drills, involving about 90,000 troops, represent NATO’s biggest such exercise since the Cold War.

 ?? Getty Images ?? THE KREMLIN on Monday announced plans for tactical nuclear exercises near Ukraine. Above, national guards patrol near a Yars missile system during rehearsals for Thursday’s Victory Day parade in Moscow.
Getty Images THE KREMLIN on Monday announced plans for tactical nuclear exercises near Ukraine. Above, national guards patrol near a Yars missile system during rehearsals for Thursday’s Victory Day parade in Moscow.

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