Marin Independent Journal

Fears of Russian nuclear arms use diminishes

- By Julian E. Barnes and David E. Sanger

In the fall, tensions in Washington reached a crescendo as Moscow made persistent nuclear threats and U.S. intelligen­ce reported discussion­s among Russian military leaders about the use of such weapons.

Concerns remain over Russia using a nuclear weapon, but the tensions have since abated. Several factors explain why, officials said: A more stable battlefiel­d, China's warnings against the use of nuclear weapons, improved communicat­ions between Moscow and Washington, and an increased role of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency in Ukraine have contribute­d to a measure of stability.

President Vladimir Putin of Russia, a senior U.S. official said recently, may well have come to the conclusion that the threats, which he once saw as leverage, were backfiring.

The possibilit­y of nuclear escalation continues to influence U.S. decisions over what advanced weaponry to give Ukraine. But nearly a year into the war there, American policymake­rs and intelligen­ce analysts have more confidence that they understand at least some of Putin's red lines — and what kinds of support for Ukraine will prompt statements of condemnati­on versus what might risk something more dangerous.

Inside the Biden administra­tion, officials caution that Russia's threats over nuclear escalation are not over and that the next time the Kremlin wants to remind the West about the power of its arsenal, it could potentiall­y move a nuclear weapon that it knows can be observed by the United States. The U.S. officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss deliberati­ons.

The Pentagon continues to war game what might happen if Putin moves tactical weapons into position as a reminder that he can back up his convention­al forces. But overwrough­t threats, in the absence of other intelligen­ce, are causing little stir. A nuclear threat last month by Dmitry Medvedev, the former Russian president who serves as a deputy chair of Russia's security council, was met mostly with shrugs in the United States.

This week, in response to Germany's decision to supply Ukraine with tanks, Putin delivered a veiled warning. “We aren't sending our tanks to their borders,” he said. “But we have the means to respond, and it won't end with the use of armor. Everyone must understand this.”

At a speech in Washington on Thursday, William J. Burns, the CIA director, said the United States had to take seriously the nuclear “saber rattling” of Putin and his advisers. Burns added that he had to made clear to Russian officials the serious consequenc­es of any use of tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine.

“It is a risk we cannot afford to take lightly; on the other hand, the purpose of the saber rattling is to intimidate us, as well as our European allies and the Ukrainians themselves,” he said. “So I think we have to stay on an even keel in weighing those threats carefully but also not being intimidate­d by them.”

Heightened nuclear fears in October came against the backdrop of a successful counteroff­ensive by the Ukrainian military when it reclaimed a huge swath of territory east of Kharkiv, in the northeast. It then made a drive at Kherson, in the south, forcing the Russian military to eventually retreat from there. With their army in disarray, Putin and other Russian officials warned against Ukraine's use of a so-called dirty bomb: a crude device that spreads radiologic­al material but does not create a nuclear reaction. U.S. officials were unsure what Moscow might do.

As winter set in and Russia managed to pull its forces from Kherson in a relatively orderly retreat, the battlefiel­d stabilized. Intense fighting remains around Bakhmut, in the Donbas region, but there are no drastic territoria­l shifts. In the south, the Russians have dug in, intensifyi­ng their defenses; they do not appear to be on the brink of a collapse that could make their leaders think that only the use of a tactical nuclear weapon could stave off defeat.

U.S. officials also credit an improved dialogue with Moscow, at least over nuclear issues.

Amid Russia's battlefiel­d failures, U.S. intelligen­ce concluded that Russian military officials had discussed situations in which a tactical nuclear weapon could be used. Two calls between Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and the Russian defense minister, Sergei K. Shoigu, worried Washington because Shoigu had raised concerns about Ukraine's possible use of a dirty bomb.

The claims were propaganda, but some U.S. officials said Russian officials appeared to believe their own disinforma­tion. Getting Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency inspectors into Ukraine — and, in early November, when the agency found no evidence of a dirty bomb — helped ease tensions.

A call in late October between Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and his counterpar­t, Gen. Valery V. Gerasimov, Russia's chief of the general staff, also relieved tensions. In the call, according to two U.S. officials, Gerasimov outlined a use of nuclear weapons consistent with Washington's understand­ing of Russia's nuclear doctrine.

Burns also met with his counterpar­t, Sergei Naryshkin, director of Russia's foreign intelligen­ce service, in Turkey to warn Russia about its nuclear threats. The purpose of the trip, Burns said Thursday, was “to make very clear the serious consequenc­es of any use of tactical nuclear weapons.” The meeting, officials said, opened up a new line of communicat­ion with Russian leadership.

President Joe Biden has been criticized for being overly cautious in sending assistance to Ukraine, but U.S. officials insist his top priority is ensuring that the war does not escalate into a nuclear conflict between Russia and the West. And while American officials have a better sense of what actions will prompt Russian reaction, determinin­g what might provoke Putin is imperfect.

“This is a very dynamic situation,” Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., chair of the Armed Services Committee, said after a visit to Kyiv last month. “It's a day-to-day basis on what's a red line.”

Administra­tion officials say they are trying to distinguis­h between Putin's threats and his actual opportunit­ies to use nuclear weapons, in hopes of cutting those off.

So far, they have no evidence that he is moving nuclear weapons toward the battlefiel­d, though they note that with some of his tactical weapons — small battlefiel­d arms, including some that can fit into an artillery shell — they might not see such movement. But the officials expect that if Putin wants to raise the level of alarm, he will make a public show of transferri­ng weapons or make sure Western allies pick up chatter among the units that control those weapons.

“We don't have any indication that Mr. Putin has any intention to use weapons of mass destructio­n — let alone nuclear weapons, tactical or otherwise,” John Kirby, a White House spokespers­on, said at a news briefing last week. “We monitor as best we can, and we believe that — that our strategic deterrent posture is appropriat­e. But we have seen no indication that that's in the offing.”

The United States and its allies say that appealing to Russia's partners is vital to warning Moscow against a nuclear weapon. China's leader, Xi Jinping, whose support Putin needs, issued an explicit warning — pushed in part by Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany during his visit to Beijing in November. The German diplomatic push came with the support of the United States, several U.S. officials said.

Scholz said publicly that his joint statement with Xi on the use of nuclear weapons justified his visit to Beijing.

“Because the Chinese government, the president and I were able to declare that no nuclear weapons should be used in this war,” Scholz said, “that alone made the whole trip worthwhile.”

 ?? MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV, SPUTNIK, KREMLIN POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? A senior U.S. official said recently that Russian President Vladimir Putin may well have come to the conclusion that the nuclear threats, which he once saw as leverage, were backfiring.
MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV, SPUTNIK, KREMLIN POOL PHOTO VIA AP A senior U.S. official said recently that Russian President Vladimir Putin may well have come to the conclusion that the nuclear threats, which he once saw as leverage, were backfiring.

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