The Mercury News

Can U.S. deter Putin from acting on nuclear threat in Ukraine war?

- By Doyle McManus Doyle McManus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Russian President Vladimir Putin reminded the world last week that he controls the world's largest arsenal of nuclear weapons.

“If anyone decides to meddle (in Ukraine) and create unacceptab­le strategic threats for Russia, they must know our response will be lightning-quick,” Putin said Wednesday. “We have all the tools for this … and we will use them if we have to.”

Two days earlier, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov delivered the same message.

“The risk is serious, real. It should not be underestim­ated,” Lavrov said. “Under no circumstan­ces should a third World War be allowed to happen.”

Nuclear saber-rattling is an unattracti­ve habit, and Putin and his aides resort to it often. In 2008, they warned Poland that it would risk annihilati­on if it joined a U.S.-sponsored missile-defense program. In 2014, they warned that an attempt to push Russia out of Crimea could trigger a nuclear response.

And in February, Putin ordered his defense minister to raise Russia's nuclear forces to “strategic combat readiness.”

The elaborate threat appeared intended to frighten the United States and its European allies away from the war. Once again, the threat didn't work.

CIA Director William Burns dismissed it as “rhetorical posturing,” noting that Russia hadn't visibly readied its nuclear forces.

There is one form of nuclear warfare, however, that Burns and others consider a more imminent threat: tactical nuclear weapons.

“Given the potential desperatio­n of President Putin and the Russian leadership, given the setbacks that they've faced so far militarily, none of us can take lightly the threat posed by a potential resort to tactical nuclear weapons or low-yield nuclear weapons,” Burns said last month.

Russia has more than 2,000 battlefiel­d nuclear weapons, and their use is a routine part of Moscow's war planning and military training.

Many “low-yield” nukes are almost as powerful as the bomb the United States dropped in 1945 on Hiroshima.

The scenario U.S. officials and outside experts worry most about is this: If Putin faces a humiliatin­g defeat in Ukraine, he might order the use of tactical nuclear weapons against military units or cities.

Even if a “low-yield” detonation did not compel Ukraine to surrender, it would break a globally observed taboo on nuclear warfightin­g that has held, almost miraculous­ly, since 1945.

So President Joe Biden has issued a warning to Putin in return — but it has been quieter than the Russian threats.

“With respect to any use of weapons of mass destructio­n — nuclear, chemical, biological — Russia would pay a severe price,” national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in March.

One diplomat told me he believes Biden has asked Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Putin's most important global ally, to send the same message.

Stanford nuclear scholar Scott Sagan has suggested another step — private warnings to Russian military leaders that they would be held responsibl­e for war crimes if they used tactical nuclear weapons against civilian targets.

“The United States has a long history of hunting down war criminals,” he told me. “Russian generals may be reluctant to cross the nuclear threshold … and the United States should reinforce that reluctance by adding very personal reasons for restraint.”

Just as in the bad old days of the Cold War, we are being forced to think the unthinkabl­e.

Part of the answer may be counterint­uitive: If Russia uses nuclear weapons, the United States need not — and should not — respond in kind.

U.S. nuclear retaliatio­n could launch a tit-for-tat cycle of escalation and lead to a global holocaust.

And it wouldn't be necessary. The United States and its allies have convention­al weapons that could destroy Russia's ability to continue the war in Ukraine.

“The response to a tactical nuclear weapon does not have to be nuclear,” Sagan said. “There are lots of convention­al responses that would be very harmful to the Russian military. … The Russian base where their nuclear attack originated could be suddenly destroyed, or many Russian warships could be suddenly sunk.”

With luck, those hard questions won't need to be confronted.

But if Putin is backed into a corner — even though it will be a product of his own brutal mistakes — he'll be even more dangerous than he is today.

That's the warning he's been sending all along.

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