The Sunday Telegraph

Putin to station nuclear arsenal in Belarus

Russia is moving weapons closer to Europe amid tensions with the UK over depleted uranium shells

- By James Kilner

VLADIMIR PUTIN has announced plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus for the first time, shifting his most destructiv­e weapons closer to Europe and Kyiv.

The shift will see Russia store part of its nuclear arsenal in another country for the first time since the breakup of the Soviet Union.

Putin told Russian TV broadcast yesterday: “We agreed with Lukashenko that we would place tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus without violating the nonprolife­ration regime.”

Putin went on to suggest that his announceme­nt was in response to news that Britain was sending depleted uranium shells to Ukraine with its Challenger 2 tanks.

He added: “Russia has its own answer to ammunition with depleted uranium.

We have similar weapons, but the Russian Federation has not yet used them.”

Experts insist, however, that depleted uranium is standard use in British armour-piercing shells and holds no nuclear value.

Responding to Russia’s concerns around depleted uranium earlier in the week, the British Ministry of Defence said: “The British Army has used depleted uranium in its armourpier­cing shells for decades. It is a standard component and has nothing to do with nuclear weapons or capabiliti­es. Russia knows this, but is deliberate­ly trying to disinform.” Alexander Lukashenko, the Belarusian president, is a staunch supporter of Putin and allowed Russia to use Belarus as a launchpad for its invasion of Ukraine.

He has resisted Putin’s pressure to directly enter the war but has allowed Russian warplanes to use Belarusian airspace to fire missiles at Ukrainian targets.

Last year, the Russian military upgraded Belarus’s air force so that it was capable of firing missiles with nuclear warheads and last month Belarus’s military said it had taken delivery of Iskander missile launchers from Russia which are capable of firing nuclear-tipped missiles.

Putin said he wasn’t breaking any internatio­nal treaties because we are “doing what the US has been doing for decades”.

“We agreed that we will do the same, without violating our obligation­s,” he said.

The US stations nuclear missiles in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s and Turkey.

Earlier this year, Russia pulled out of the Start Nuclear Treaty, the last remaining treaty with the US aimed at stopping a nuclear arms proliferat­ion.

Putin said the storage facility to house tactical nuclear weapons would be completed by July and that Russia would remain in control of the weapons.

Russia is already suspected of stationing nuclear weapons in its European enclave of Kaliningra­d, wedged between Poland, Lithuania and the Baltic Sea. It has also developed a missile called Satan-2 that can fire a nuclear warhead at any city in the world within minutes.

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