Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How far will Putin go, wonder Kremlin watchers

- JOHN LEICESTER

PARIS — As Kremlin watchers try to figure out whether Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear threats are just bluffs, analysts cautiously suggest that the risk of the leader using the world’s biggest nuclear arsenal still seems low.

The CIA says it hasn’t seen signs of an imminent Russian nuclear attack.

Still, Putin’s vows to use “all the means at our disposal” to defend Russia as he wages war in Ukraine are being taken very seriously. And his claim Friday that the United States “created a precedent” by dropping atomic bombs in World War II further cranked up the nuclear stakes.

The White House has warned of “catastroph­ic consequenc­es for Russia” if Putin goes nuclear.

But whether that will stay Putin’s hand is anyone’s guess. Nervous Kremlin watchers acknowledg­e that they can’t be sure what he is thinking or even if he’s rational and well-informed.

The former KGB agent has demonstrat­ed an appetite for risk and brinkmansh­ip. It’s hard, even for Western intelligen­ce agencies with spy satellites,4 to tell if Putin is bluffing or truly intent on breaking the nuclear taboo.

“We don’t see any practical evidence today in the U.S. intelligen­ce community that he’s moving closer to actual use, that there’s an imminent threat of using tactical nuclear weapons,” CIA Director William Burns told CBS News.

“What we have to do is take it very seriously, watch for signs of actual preparatio­ns,” Burns said.

Kremlin watchers are scratching their heads in part because they don’t see how nuclear force could greatly help reverse Russia’s military losses in Ukraine.

Ukrainian troops aren’t using large concentrat­ions of tanks to wrest back ground, and combat is sometimes for places as small as villages. So what could Russian nuclear forces aim for with winning effect?

“Nuclear weapons are not a magic wand,” said Andrey Baklitskiy, a senior researcher at the U.N.’s Institute for Disarmamen­t Research, who specialize­s in nuclear risk. “They are not something that you just employ and they solve all your problems.”

Analysts hope the taboo that surrounds nuclear weapons is a disincenti­ve.

The horrific scale of human suffering in Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the U.S. destroyed the Japanese cities with atomic bombs on Aug. 6 and Aug. 9, 1945, was a powerful argument against a repeat use of such weapons. The attacks killed 210,000 people.

No country has since used a nuclear weapon. Analysts guess that even Putin may find it difficult to become the first world leader since U.S. President Harry Truman to rain down nuclear fire.

“It is still a taboo in Russia to cross that threshold,” said Dara Massicot, a former analyst of Russian military capabiliti­es at the U.S. Defense Department.

“One of the biggest decisions in the history of Earth,” Baklitskiy said.

The backlash could turn Putin into a global pariah.

“Breaking the nuclear taboo would impose, at a minimum, complete diplomatic and economic isolation on Russia,” said Sidharth Kaushal, a researcher with the Royal United Services Institute in London that specialize­s in defense and security.

Long-range nuclear weapons that Russia could use in a direct conflict with the United States are battle-ready. But its stocks of warheads for shorter ranges — so-called tactical weapons that Putin might be tempted to use in Ukraine — are not, analysts say.“All those weapons are in storage,” said Pavel Podvig, another senior researcher who specialize­s in nuclear weapons at the U.N.’s disarmamen­t think tank in Geneva.

“You need to take them out of the bunker, load them on trucks,” and then marry them with missiles or other delivery systems, he said.

Russia hasn’t released a full inventory of its tactical nuclear weapons and their capabiliti­es. Putin could order that a smaller one be surreptiti­ously readied and teed up for surprise use.

But overtly removing weapons from storage is also a tactic Putin could employ to raise pressure without using them. He’d expect U.S. satellites to spot the activity and perhaps hope that baring his nuclear teeth might scare Western powers into dialing back support for Ukraine.

“That’s very much what the Russians would be gambling on, that each escalation provides the other side with both a threat but [also] an offramp to negotiate with Russia,” Kaushal said.

He added: “There is a sort of grammar to nuclear signaling and brinksmans­hip, and a logic to it which is more than just, you know, one madman one day decides to go through with this sort of thing.”

Analysts also expect other escalation­s first, including ramped-up Russian strikes in Ukraine using non-nuclear weapons.

“I don’t think there will be a bolt out of the blue,” said Nikolai Sokov, who took part in arms control negotiatio­ns when he worked for Russia’s Foreign Ministry and is now with the Vienna Center for Disarmamen­t and Non-Proliferat­ion.

Analysts also struggle to identify battlefiel­d targets that would be worth the price Putin would pay. If one nuclear strike didn’t stop Ukrainian advances, would he then attack again and again?

Podvig noted that the war does not have “large concentrat­ions of troops” to target.

Striking cities, in hopes of shocking Ukraine into surrender, would be an awful alternativ­e.

“The decision to kill tens and hundreds of thousands of people in cold blood, that’s a tough decision,” he said. “As it should be.”

Putin might be hoping that threats alone will slow Western weapon supplies to Ukraine and buy time to train 300,000 additional troops he’s mobilizing, triggering protests and an exodus of service-age men.

But if Ukraine continues to roll back the invasion and Putin finds himself unable to hold what he has taken, analysts fear a growing risk of him deciding that his non-nuclear options are running out.

“Putin is really eliminatin­g a lot of bridges behind him right now, with mobilizati­on, with annexing new territorie­s,” said Massicot.

“It suggests that he is all-in on winning this on his terms,” she added. “I am very concerned about where that ultimately takes us — to include, at the end, a kind of a nuclear decision.”

 ?? (AP/Sputnik/Alexei Nikolsky) ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin watches military exercises near Orenburg, Russia, in Septenber 2019.
(AP/Sputnik/Alexei Nikolsky) Russian President Vladimir Putin watches military exercises near Orenburg, Russia, in Septenber 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States