Ukraine war drives shift in Russian nuclear thinking -study
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[January 22, 2024]
By Mark Trevelyan
LONDON (Reuters) - The war in Ukraine has dented Russia's confidence in
its conventional forces and increased the importance to Moscow of
non-strategic nuclear weapons (NSNWs) as a means of deterring and
defeating NATO in a potential future conflict, a leading Western
think-tank said on Monday.
NSNWs include all nuclear weapons with a range of up to 5,500 km (3,400
miles), starting with tactical arms designed for use on the battlefield
- as opposed to longer-range strategic nuclear weapons that Russia or
the U.S. could use to strike each other's homeland.
Monday's report by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS)
raised the question of whether Russia might be emboldened to fire a NSNW
in the belief that the West lacks the resolve to deliver a nuclear
response.
"The Russian perception of the lack of credible Western will to use
nuclear weapons or to accept casualties in conflict further reinforces
Russia's aggressive NSNW thought and doctrine," it said.
It said the logic of using a NSNW would be to escalate a conflict in a
controlled fashion, "either to prevent the US and NATO from engaging, or
to coerce them into war termination on Russian terms".
Moscow denies wielding nuclear threats but several of President Vladimir
Putin's statements since the onset of the war in Ukraine have been
interpreted as such in the West - starting on day one of the Russian
invasion when he warned of "consequences that you have never faced in
your history" for anyone who tried to hinder or threaten Russia.
His warnings, however, have not prevented the U.S. and its NATO allies
from providing massive military aid to Ukraine including advanced
weapons systems that were unthinkable at the start of the war.
Putin has resisted hawkish calls to alter Russia's stated doctrine,
which allows for nuclear use in the event of "aggression against the
Russian Federation with conventional weapons when the very existence of
the state is threatened". But he has shifted Russia's stance on key
nuclear treaties and said he is deploying tactical nuclear weapons in
Belarus.
NUCLEAR DEBATE
Western analysts and policymakers have been closely tracking a debate
among Russian military experts about whether Moscow should lower its
threshold for nuclear use.
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Kyiv Mayor Vitalii Klitschko shows the warhead of a Kh-47 Kinzhal
Russian hypersonic missile - a dual-capable missile that can carry a
conventional or nuclear warhead - shot down by a Ukrainian Air
Defence unit, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 12, 2023. REUTERS/Valentyn
Ogirenko/File Photo
Last year, for example, Russian analyst Sergei Karaganov spoke of
the need to threaten nuclear strikes in Europe in order to
intimidate and "sober up" Moscow's enemies.
William Alberque, author of the IISS report, said Karaganov was part
of a wider discussion in Russia on the failure of its military to
win the Ukraine war decisively and quickly.
"They're afraid, according to their own debates, that that has
further emboldened us, so that's why this nuclear debate is
happening now, where they think 'we need to do something else to
super-scare the United States'."
He told reporters that Western intelligence would be able to pick up
a number of signals if Russia was actually preparing to launch a
NSNW.
These would include the movement of weapons from a central storage
facility to an air base, and possibly conventional strikes near the
planned target area in order to cripple radar and anti-missile
defences.
Putin at that point would probably move to a nuclear shelter and put
Russia's entire nuclear command and control system on high alert in
case of a major nuclear response by the United States, he said.
Alberque said any Russian use of NSNW would require Moscow to
calculate the right "dose" to coerce its adversaries to back down
rather than triggering a cycle of escalation.
The question of how to respond to such a scenario is what "keeps
U.S. planners awake all night", said Alberque, who has previously
worked at the Pentagon and NATO.
"Once the other side crosses the nuclear threshold, how do you
prevent the logic of escalation, escalation, escalation to
annihilation? How do you contain it, how do you keep it down? This
is one of the hardest problems, this is a problem that has existed
since the dawn of the nuclear age."
(Reporting by Mark Trevelyan; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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