WE WON’T BE COWED BY PUTIN’S NUCLEAR THREATS
After desperate Kremlin leader warns West of Armageddon if he’s thwarted on Ukraine, Liz Truss issues defiant riposte...
LIZ Truss last night warned Vladimir Putin he will never win in Ukraine despite his ‘desperate’ threat to use nuclear weapons.
She and Joe Biden both denounced the Russian despot in New York after he delivered a chilling speech in Moscow.
Putin said he had ordered the mobilisation of reserves to fight in Ukraine and claimed he was ‘not bluffing’ over the use of his nuclear arsenal. The crisis dominated talks between the Prime Minister and President Biden last night during which they insisted the West would not yield to aggression.
Addressing the UN general assembly in the early hours, Miss Truss said Putin was ‘desperately trying to justify his catastrophic failures’.
She added: ‘He is doubling down
by sending even more reservists to a terrible fate. He is desperately trying to claim the mantle of democracy for a regime without human rights or freedoms.
‘And he is making yet more bogus claims and sabre-rattling threats.
‘This will not work. The international alliance is strong – Ukraine is strong.’
Miss Truss, who has held talks in New York with Volodymyr Zelensky’s wife Olena, said Ukrainians were ‘ not just defending their own country – they are defending our values and the security of the whole world. That’s why we must act’.
President Biden condemned Putin’s threat to deploy his nuclear arsenal following a series of military setbacks.
‘A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought,’ he told the UN general assembly. ‘ We will stand in solidarity against Russia’s aggression, period.’
He said Russia had ‘shamelessly violated the core tenets’ of the UN with a ‘brutal, needless war’ and its alleged war crimes ‘should make your blood run cold’. The unprecedented warnings came as:
▪ Russia released five captured Britons in a deal brokered by Saudi Arabia, including two former soldiers sentenced to death;
▪ Protests sprang up in Russian cities at the decision to mobilise 300,000 reservists;
▪ Queues formed at the border with Finland and air tickets sold out as potential conscripts tried to flee;
▪ Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg warned that any use of nuclear weapons would have ‘unprecedented consequences for Russia’;
▪ Foreign Secretary James Cleverly prepared to confront his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov with evidence that Moscow plans sham referendums in Ukraine’s breakaway republics;
▪ Miss Truss pledged to give Ukraine at least £2.3billion in military aid next year – the same as promised this year.
Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, which was supposed to be over in three days, has been hit with a string of disasters.
These culminated with Ukrainian forces recapturing more than 1,000 square miles of territory this month.
In his rambling speech yesterday, Putin accused Western powers of ‘trying to tear
apart and destroy Russia’ and claimed they were ‘using the Ukrainian people as cannon fodder’. ‘If the territorial integrity of our country is threatened, we will absolutely use all available means to protect Russia and our people. We are not bluffing,’ he said during a 20-minute tirade.
‘Those who try to blackmail us with nuclear weapons should know that the prevailing winds can turn in their direction.’
The 69- year- old leader did not say whether Moscow would use shorter-range, tactical nuclear weapons on the battlefield, or the long- distance strategic warheads that can destroy entire cities.
His pre-recorded comments are his most overt threat since the illegal invasion of Ukraine began nearly seven months ago.
A diplomatic source said there were growing fears that Putin could follow through on his threat to use nuclear weapons. ‘We take this threat very seriously in terms of pure defence, but also as another example of Putin flouting international agreements,’ the source said. ‘The threat either of using tactical nuclear weapons, which would be tragic, or using bigger nuclear weapons is very real.’
The source said the bellicose language from the Kremlin suggested Putin was becoming increasingly desperate, adding: ‘We are not going to engage in a battle of words about a nuclear threat from a man who postponed his speech last night, was shaking when he delivered it, and is now attempting to mobilise reservists who are attempting to get to airports across Russia. His lies are catching up with him.’
Vladislav Davidzon, a Russia expert at the Atlantic Council think-tank, described Putin’s speech as an ‘act of rage’.
‘Threatening to use atomic weapons looks like an extremely reckless gamble,
but it is far from certain whether Putin would go ahead with it,’ he added. ‘If you have to tell your enemies you are not bluffing, it probably means that you are.’
Putin yesterday signed a decree for an immediate ‘partial mobilisation’, giving his defence minister Sergei Shoigu the power to draft in 300,000 conscripts.
It is the first mobilisation in Russia since the Second World War and draws from the country’s vast military reserves of around 25million people.
The move follows a draft bill approved by Russian MPs to increase punishments for wartime offences such as desertion.
The presidential order also forces army contracts to be extended automatically until the end of the mobilisation period, effectively indefinitely.
Putin’s speech signalled that he plans to immediately recognise the results of sham votes set to take place in the occupied Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia regions of Ukraine from Friday.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky told Germany’s Bild tabloid yesterday that Putin wanted ‘to drown Ukraine in blood, but also in the blood of his own soldiers’.
‘I don’t believe that he will use these weapons, I don’t believe that the world will allow him to use these weapons,’ he said, warning the West against giving in to those threats.
‘Tomorrow, Putin can say as well as Ukraine, we want part of Poland, otherwise we will use atomic weapons. We cannot make these compromises.’
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace branded the Kremlin’s move as an admission that Putin’s invasion was failing.
He added: ‘He and his defence minister have sent tens of thousands of their own citizens to their deaths, ill equipped and badly led. No amount of threats and propaganda can hide the fact that Ukraine is winning this war.’
The Prime Minister reminded her fellow leaders that the Queen had used her own address to the UN in 1956 to warn the world that it was ‘vital not only to have strong ideals but also to have the political will to deliver on them’.
She added: ‘Now we must show that will. We must fight to defend those ideals.’
‘We must now fight to defend our ideals’
WHEN in trouble, tyrants cannot admit any weakness for fear it would undermine their authority and trigger the rapid downfall of their regime.
By planning to throw 300,000 Russian reservists into battle as cannon fodder, however, Vladimir Putin has given away the fact that he knows he is losing the war he hubristically started in Ukraine.
The despot’s unhinged threat to launch nuclear weapons against the West for arming Ukraine’s heroic resistance also reveals his humiliation at the failed invasion. ‘I’m not bluffing,’ he snarled in a rambling speech.
This military debacle has killed Putin’s credibility, along with his reputation as a master strategist – not to mention the countless young men sent to wage what was supposed to be a swift war.
True, the reservists will bolster Russia’s depleted and demoralised forces. But they’ll need extra training and weapons, and won’t relish the prospect of spending a cold winter facing slaughter. And for what? To satisfy Putin’s pride.
The Ukrainians, on the other hand, are well armed and confident after inflicting a series of crushing defeats. And they have powerful motivations to fight to the death: Their country, families and friends.
The more Russian soldiers return home in coffins, the more obvious Putin’s folly will become to his people. Perhaps then they will rise against the Kremlin.
Of course, the West must take seriously his threat of a nuclear strike. While highly unlikely he would press the button, it’s not impossible. Who knows what the deranged dictator might do in desperation?
There is, however, no alternative for the democratic world but to stand firm in the face of his sabre-rattling.
Liz Truss is right to promise that Britain will next year at least match the £2.3billion it has already committed to Ukraine’s war effort. All our Nato allies must show similar resolve to the Prime Minister. After Ukraine’s recent stunning battlefield successes, it is vital they help this courageous nation by sending more and better weapons.
That is the best way to hasten the end of the bloody conflict – and bring about Putin’s much-deserved demise.