Biden says Putin's nuclear threat brings risk of 'Armageddon'
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[October 07, 2022]
By Nandita Bose and Pavel Polityuk
NEW YORK/KYIV (Reuters) - Russian President
Vladimir Putin's threat to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine has brought
the world closer to "Armageddon" than at any time since the Cold-War
Cuban Missile Crisis, U.S. President Joe Biden said.
Putin celebrated his 70th birthday to fawning praise from some
officials. But with his seven-month invasion unravelling, public events
appeared sparse, a contrast to just a week ago, when he staged a huge
concert on Red Square to proclaim the annexation of nearly a fifth of
Ukrainian land.
In a clear repudiation of Putin's record, the Nobel Peace Prize was
awarded to Russia's most prominent human rights group, Memorial, which
Moscow shut down over the past year. A Ukrainian human rights group and
a jailed campaigner against abuses by the pro-Russian government in
Belarus were also awarded.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Kyiv's forces were swiftly
recapturing more territory, including more than 500 sq km in the south
where they burst through a second major front this week.
Russia's failings on the battlefield have brought unusual public
recrimination from Kremlin allies, with one Russian-installed leader in
occupied Ukrainian territory going so far as to suggest Putin's defence
minister should have shot himself.
Biden said the prospect of defeat could make Putin desperate enough to
use nuclear weapons, the biggest risk since U.S. President John Kennedy
and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev faced off over missiles in Cuba in
1962.
"We have not faced the prospect of Armageddon since Kennedy and the
Cuban missile crisis," Biden said in New York. "For the first time since
the Cuban Missile Crisis, we have a direct threat to the use of nuclear
weapons, if in fact things continue down the path they'd been going."
Putin was "not joking when he talks about potential use of tactical
nuclear weapons or biological or chemical weapons, because his military
is, you might say, is significantly underperforming," Biden said.
Concern so far has been over the prospect of Russia deploying a
so-called "tactical" nuclear weapon - a short-range device for use on
the battlefield - rather than the "strategic" weapons on long-range
missiles that Washington and Moscow have stockpiled since the Cold War.
But Biden suggested it made little difference: "I don't think there's
any such thing as the ability to easily (use) a tactical nuclear weapon
and not end up with Armageddon."
The Nobel Peace Prize for Memorial, the rights group shut down in Russia
as illegal "foreign agents" last December, was the most open rebuke of
Moscow's record by the prize committee since it bestowed the award on
Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov in 1975. Sakharov had been named
Memorial's first chairman shortly before his death in 1989.
Memorial was honoured along with jailed Belarusian activist Ales
Byalyatski and Ukraine's Center for Civil Liberties. Committee Chair
Berit Reiss-Andersen denied that the awards were a statement against
Putin.
"We always give the prize for something and to something, and not
against someone," she told reporters.
The Russian group, now operating in exile, said the award was
recognition of its human rights work and of colleagues who continue to
suffer "unspeakable attacks and reprisals" in Russia.
"It encourages us in our resolve to support our Russian colleagues to
continue their work at a new location, despite the forced dissolution of
MEMORIAL International in Moscow," said a statement by Memorial board
member Anke Giesen to Reuters.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks following a tour of IBM in Poughkeepsie, New York, U.S.,
October 6, 2022. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
PATRIARCH'S PRAYER
Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill, a vocal supporter of the war, led
birthday tributes for Putin with a prayer for God to "grant him
health and longevity, and deliver him from all the resistances of
visible and invisible enemies".
Ramzan Kadyrov, the leader of Chechnya, a once-breakaway region
Putin reconquered two decades ago, congratulated "one of the most
influential and outstanding personalities of our time, the number
one patriot in the world".
But public celebratory events appeared tame. A video circulated on
pro-Russian social media channels showed a crowd of a few hundred
youths in central St Petersburg waving Russian flags. They were
filmed from the sky holding up red umbrellas to spell out "Putin -
My President".
Putin has warned he would use all means necessary, including
Russia's nuclear arsenal, to protect Russian soil, which he now says
includes four Ukrainian regions.
In remarks to Australia's Lowy Institute, Zelenskiy said NATO should
use preventive strikes on Russia to preclude its use of nuclear
weapons.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denounced those comments as "an
appeal to start yet another world war". Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov said Zelenskiy's remarks demonstrated why Russia was
right to launch its operation. Kyiv later said Zelenskiy had been
referring to sanctions, not military strikes.
PUBLIC CRITICISM
Ukrainian forces have advanced swiftly since bursting through the
Russian front in the northeast at the start of September, and in the
south this week.
Since Putin proclaimed the annexation a week ago, Ukraine has
recaptured the main Russian bastion in northern Donetsk, and a swath
of territory on the west bank of the Dnipro River in Kherson.
Zelenskiy said in a video address on Thursday that Kyiv's forces had
recaptured more than 500 square kilometres (195 square miles) and
dozens of settlements in Kherson in October.
Putin has responded to the losses by ordering the call-up of
hundreds of thousands of reservists, a move that sent thousands of
men fleeing the country to escape the draft.
Public criticism of the authorities - once all but unheard of - has
become common, with Kremlin supporters openly seeking scapegoats and
demanding punishment. Anger has been aimed at Defence Minister
Sergei Shoigu, a Putin loyalist for decades.
"Many say, if they were a defence minister who had allowed such a
state of affairs, they could, as officers, have shot themselves,"
Kirill Stremousov, deputy head of the Russian-installed
administration in Kherson, said on Thursday.
Vladimir Solovyov, one of the most prominent Russian talk show
hosts, demanded: "Please explain to me what the general staff's
genius idea is now?"
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing Cynthia Osterman, Michael
Perry, Peter Graff; Editing by Robert Birsel and Timothy Heritage)
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