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- Putin Updates Russia's Nuclear Deterrence Doctrine in Response to US Arms Decision for Ukraine
Putin Updates Russia's Nuclear Deterrence Doctrine in Response to US Arms Decision for Ukraine
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Vladimir Putin has signed a revised nuclear doctrine, which considers a conventional attack on Russia as a joint attack, effectively lowering the threshold for Moscow's use of nuclear weapons. This decision was made in response to the US decision to allow Ukraine to strike targets inside Russia, using US-made weapons. Kremlin officials argue that this doctrine is a necessary response to recent US military support for Ukraine, citing concerns over Western involvement in the conflict. The revised doctrine also takes into account the involvement of nuclear-armed nations, which could potentially lead to a nuclear response by Moscow in the event of a conventional attack on Russia.
We are ready to normalise ties with Washington.
But we cannot tango alone, and we are not going to do it.
They [the changes] have already been practically formulated. They will be formalised as necessary.
The big picture is that Russia is lowering the threshold for a nuclear strike in response to a possible conventional attack.
Russian Nuclear Capabilities
- Vladimir Putin expresses hope of no need to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine
- Russian nuclear threat and AI emergence push Doomsday Clock closer to midnight
- Russia holds nuclear forces exercise simulating retaliatory strikes
sources
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Russian Foreign Policy
- 3.Russia-Ukraine War
- 4.US-Russia Relations
- 5.Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
- 6.Nuclear Weapons
- 7.Russian Politics
- 8.Ukrainian Politics
countries
- 1.Belarus
- 2.Germany
- 3.France
- 4.United Kingdom
- 5.Korea, Democratic People's Republic of
- 6.Russian Federation
- 7.Ukraine
- 8.United States
organizations
- 1.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 2.Kremlin
- 3.US National Security Council
- 4.White House
- 5.Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy
- 6.University of Hamburg
persons
- 1.Vladimir Putin
- 2.Dmitry Peskov
- 3.Joe Biden
- 4.Alexander Graef
- 5.Alexander Lukashenko
- 6.Annalena Baerbock
- 7.Camilla Marshall
- 8.Keir Starmer
- 9.Volodymyr Zelenskiy