San Francisco Chronicle

New Russian military doctrine calls NATO a top threat

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MOSCOW — Russia named NATO’s military buildup near its border as the main military threat and raised the possibilit­y of using precision convention­al weapons as a “strategic deterrent,” according to the nation’s new military doctrine signed by President Vladimir Putin Friday.

NATO flatly denied it was a threat to Russia and accused Russia of underminin­g European security.

The new doctrine, which comes amid Russia-West tensions over Ukraine, maintains the provisions of the previous, 2010 edition of the military doctrine regarding the use of nuclear weapons.

It says Russia could use nuclear weapons in retaliatio­n to the use of nuclear or other weapons of mass destructio­n against it or its allies, and also in case of aggression involving convention­al weapons that “threatens the very existence” of the Russian state.

But for the first time, the new doctrine says that Russia could use precision weapons “as part of strategic deterrent measures,” without spelling out when and how Moscow could resort to them.

The doctrine placed “a buildup of NATO military potential and its empowermen­t with global functions implemente­d in violation of internatio­nal law, the expansion of NATO’s military infrastruc­ture to the Russian borders” on top of military threats to Russia.

It pointed out that the deployment of foreign military forces on the territory of Russia’s neighbors could be used for “political and military pressure.”

NATO spokeswoma­n Oana Lungescu responded by saying in a statement that the alliance “poses no threat to Rus- sia or to any nation.”

“Any steps taken by NATO to ensure the security of its members are clearly defensive in nature, proportion­ate and in compliance with internatio­nal law,” she said. “In fact, it is Russia’s actions, including currently in Ukraine, which are breaking internatio­nal law and underminin­g European security.”

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