New York Post

DEVICE OF DOOM

What the West fears most about Putin’s nuclear weapons

- REBEKAH KOFFLER

DESPITE throwing the full force of Russian might against Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin still hasn’t toppled the country. His troops have run out of fuel, gone short on supplies, and some soldiers have even left the battlefiel­d rather than kill their brother Slavs. Instead of dividing NATO and capturing Kyiv, Putin has united the world behind an unlikely Ukrainian hero, the former-comic-turned-president Volodymyr Zelensky.

Being caught in a checkmate is an unconscion­able position for the judo-loving master spy. Unable to change the dynamics on the battlefiel­d or accept defeat, he is likely mulling his nuclear trump card option.

Indeed, on April 15, Zelensky announced that the world should “be ready” for the possibilit­y that Putin will use nuclear weapons in Ukraine — a concern shared by CIA Director William Burns. On Wednesday, Russia tested a new interconti­nental missile, nicknamed Satan II, which, Putin said, should “force all who are trying to threaten our country in the heat of frenzied, aggressive rhetoric to think twice.”

Back during the Yugoslavia­n War, Putin and his Russian General Staff first developed a “limited nuclear war” plan called the “escalate-to-de-escalate” strategy. By crossing the nuclear threshold, the theory goes, Russia would shock the adversary into abandoning the fight and settling for peace.

If Putin were to deploy such a weapon in Ukraine, it would likely be a sub-kiloton warhead that would produce a blast roughly a third of the size of Hiroshima with a small atomic fallout. By detonating a “small” nuke in Ukraine — rather than the kind of Armageddon-inflicting ICBMs that Russia and the United States continue to point at each other — the Russian strongman believes he could stave off interventi­on from the West.

Russia would not dare target the American homeland with nuclear strikes unless they assess that the United States plans to decapitate the Moscow regime.

And yet, Russia holds the trump card in that fight: the world’s most formidable arsenal of nuclear weapons, with a ten-to-one advantage over the US in tactical atomic stockpile. Scariest of all, Moscow has a Doomsday Device, called Perimeter — and dubbed “Dead Hand” by the West — which reportedly can destroy the US homeland in 30 minutes.

This highly complex system is designed for a retaliator­y strike, following an initial attack on Russia by the US. De

signed by the Soviets at the height of the Cold War, if switched on, it would launch Russia’s entire nuclear arsenal directly at this country. The system remains semi-dormant until activated by a high-ranking official in a crisis.

If activated, it can still launch even if the Russian regime is wiped out and Putin or his alternates are unable to authorize a nuclear strike through a standard process. After the initial multi-step verificati­on that communicat­ion links to Putin’s war room are not working, in about 15-60 minutes, the autonomous computeriz­ed system would send signals to nuclear weapons silos, directing all remaining Russian nuclear missiles to launch.

Now Putin is ratcheting up his rhetoric, using the unspoken threat of Dead Hand against the US. When he first attacked Ukraine on Feb. 24, he warned that the countries who intervened would face “consequenc­es you have never seen.” Three days later, he raised the status of Russia’s nuclear forces to “special combat readiness,” the nuclear posture that Moscow maintains today.

On March 22, after a CNN journalist asked Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov whether Russia would resort to using nuclear weapons in Ukraine, Peskov answered that Russia’s nuclear capability can be used in the event of an “existentia­l threat.” Some analysts at the time understood that the probabilit­y of this happening was low because Ukraine is so massively outmatched by Russia’s military.

But on March 28, two days after Joe Biden declared in Poland that Putin “cannot remain in power,” Peskov told PBS that Russia and the West “have entered the phase of total war.” He accused countries, including the United States, Canada and Australia, of “leading war” against Russia “in trade, in economy,” in “seizing properties,” in “seizing funds,” in “blocking financial relations.” Whether a gaffe or a Freudian slip, Biden’s call for a regime change in Russia, in the middle of an active armed conflict, checked off Moscow’s “existentia­l threat” requiremen­t for the use of nuclear weapons.

Now finding himself cornered in an unwinnable position, Putin is invoking the concepts of “total war” and an “existentia­l threat” to keep the US and NATO out of the conflict. Meanwhile, the May 9 anniversar­y of Russia’s defeat of Nazi Germany approaches, a date that is driving Putin to launch an even greater offensive to declare victory in Ukraine.

All the while, he knows that Russia’s Dead Hand is what scares the West more than anything.

Rebekah Koffler is the president of Doctrine & Strategy Consulting, a former DIA intelligen­ce officer, and the author of "Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America." She also wrote the foreword for "Zelensky: The Unlikely Ukrainian Hero."

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 ?? ?? On April 20, Russia launched a new missile test (left) while Putin threatened countries that intervene in Ukraine with “consequenc­es you have never seen.” Russia has the world’s most formidable arsenal of nuclear weapons, including a so-called Doomsday Device, which can reportedly destroy the US homeland in 30 minutes.
On April 20, Russia launched a new missile test (left) while Putin threatened countries that intervene in Ukraine with “consequenc­es you have never seen.” Russia has the world’s most formidable arsenal of nuclear weapons, including a so-called Doomsday Device, which can reportedly destroy the US homeland in 30 minutes.

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