Confident Putin warns Europe is ādefencelessā
Ever since Russiaās full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has been engaged in nuclear sabre-rattling, dropping a series of not-so-subtle hints that trying to defeat a nuclear power like Russia could have disastrous consequences for those who try.
Today President Putin claimed that Russia wouldnāt need to use a nuclear weapon to achieve victory in Ukraine.
He was being interviewed at a panel discussion at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum: the annual event often described as āRussiaās Davosā.
There are few occasions when Mr Putin looks dovish compared to the person asking him the questions.
But when the person asking the questions is Sergei Karaganov it would be hard not to. Mr Karaganov is a hawkish Russian foreign policy expert. Last year he called for a pre-emptive nuclear strike. Today he suggested holding a ānuclear pistolā to the temple of the West over Ukraine.
President Putin wasnāt so extreme in his language.
But he is no dove.
The Kremlin leader said he did not rule out changes to Russiaās nuclear doctrine: the document which sets out the conditions under which Russia would use nuclear weapons.
āThis doctrine is a living tool and we are carefully watching what is happening in the world around us and do not exclude making changes to this doctrine. This is also related to the testing of nuclear weapons.ā
And he delivered a warning to those European countries whoāve been supporting Ukraine: Russiaās has āmany more [tactical nuclear weapons] than there are on the European continent, even if the United States brings theirs over.ā
āEurope does not have a developed [early warning system],ā he added. āIn this sense they are more or less defenceless.ā
Tactical nuclear weapons are smaller warheads designed to destroy targets without widespread radioactive fallout.
This has been a surreal week in St Petersburg. On the one hand, a huge international economic forum has been taking place , sending the message that Russia is ready for cooperation and that, despite everything, itās business as usual.
Clearly, though, it is not business as usual. Russia is waging war in Ukraine, a war which is now in its third year; as a result, Russia is the most heavily sanctioned country in the world.
And, right now, tensions are soaring between Russia and the West.
Earlier this week, at a meeting with international news agency chiefs in St Petersburg, President Putin suggested that Russia might supply advanced conventional long-range weapons to others to strike Western targets.
This was his response to Nato allies allowing Ukraine to strike Russian territory with Western-supplied weapons.
He repeated the idea again today.
āWe are not supplying those weapons yet, but we reserve the right to do so to those states or legal entities which are under certain pressure, including military pressure, from the countries that supply weapons to Ukraine and encourage their use on Russian territory.ā
There were no details. No names.
So, to which parts of the world might Russia deploy its missiles?
āWherever we think it is necessary, weāre definitely going to put them. As President Putin made clear, weāll investigate this question,ā Vladimir Solovyov, one of Russian state TVās most prominent hosts, tells me.
āIf you are trying to harm us you have to be pretty sure we have enough opportunities and chances to harm you.ā
āIn the West some will say weāve heard this sabre-rattling before,ā I respond, āand that itās a bluff.ā
āItās always a bluff. Until the time when it is not,ā Mr Solovyov replies. āYou can keep thinking that Russia is bluffing and then, one day, there is no more Great Britain to laugh at. Donāt you ever try to push the Russian bear thinking that āOh, itās a kitten, we can play with it.ā
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