Moscow decries US move to allow its weapons to be
used on targets in Russia
Senior officials say decision marks serious escalation
and their threat to use tactical nuclear weapons is not a bluff
Pjotr Sauer
Fri 31 May
2024 15.23 BST
The Kremlin
has said Joe Biden’s decision to allow Ukraine to use US-supplied weapons
against targets in Russia demonstrates Washington’s deep involvement in the
conflict, as some of Vladimir Putin’s allies increased their nuclear threats
against the west.
The Kremlin
spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, told journalists on Friday that Moscow was already
aware of attempts by Ukraine to strike targets on Russian territory with
weapons provided by the US.
Biden’s
decision on Thursday to allow Kyiv to use US weapons for counter-fire purposes
inside Russia near the border with the Kharkiv region marked an important
shift, after warnings from Moscow that the move could trigger a global
conflict.
The
approval came after days of growing pressure on Biden from western allies and
the Ukrainian president, Volodomyr Zelenskiy, who argued that the delay in the
use of western weapons had cost lives.
“I think it
is absolutely illogical to have [western] weapons and see the murderers,
terrorists, who are killing us from the Russian side. I think sometimes they
are just laughing at this situation,” Zelenskiy told the Guardian in an
interview published on Friday.
The German
government announced on Friday that it would also give Ukraine permission to
use weapons it supplied against military targets in Russian territory bordering
the Kharkiv region to defend itself against Moscow’s attacks.
During a
visit to Uzbekistan earlier this week, Putin warned against western countries
allowing Ukraine to use their weapons to strike Russia. “This constant
escalation can lead to serious consequences,” the Russian president said on
Tuesday, without giving further detail.
Putin also
issued a thinly veiled threat against Nato’s smaller European members, saying
they “should be aware that they are playing with fire” because they had small
land areas and very dense populations.
In the
lead-up to Biden’s decision on Thursday, other western allies including the UK,
France and the Netherlands, and the Nato secretary general, also said Ukraine
should be able to use western weapons against military targets in Russia.
Dmitry
Medvedev, the hawkish former Russian president and current deputy chair of the
country’s security council, called Biden’s decision a “serious escalation of
the conflict”.
“Russia
regards all long-range weapons used by Ukraine as already being directly
controlled by servicemen from Nato countries. This is no military assistance,
this is participation in a war against us,” he said, adding that Russia would
destroy any western weaponry used to attack it “both in Ukraine and in the
territory of other countries”.
Medvedev
said it would be a “crucial mistake” on the part of the west to believe that
Russia was not ready to use tactical nuclear weapons against Ukraine. He also
spoke of the potential to strike unnamed hostile countries with strategic
nuclear weapons. “This is, alas, neither intimidation nor bluffing,” he said.
The Nato
secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, dismissed warnings by Moscow that the
decision to allow Ukraine to use western weapons to strike inside Russian
territory might lead to an escalation.
“This is
nothing new. It has ... been the case for a long time that every time Nato
allies are providing support to Ukraine, President Putin is trying to threaten
us to not do that,” Stoltenberg told reporters on Friday on the sidelines of a
Nato foreign ministers’ meeting in Prague. “And an escalation – well, Russia
has escalated by invading another country.”
Western
countries’ approval for the use of their weapons comes amid reports that France
is planning to send military trainers to Ukraine, making it the first to
publicly deploy troops on the ground.
The
country’s president, Emmanuel Macron, could announce the move next week during
a visit by Zelenskiy, who will attend a ceremony in Normandy to mark the 80th
anniversary of D-day.
Putin has
said the French move would escalate the situation toward a global conflict, and
some senior officials in Moscow have said French trainers would become
legitimate targets for Russian troops.
In the
early days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Putin frequently invoked Moscow’s
nuclear arsenal, pledging to use all means necessary to defend his country. He
later seemed to moderate his rhetoric, reportedly after Chinese officials
persuaded him to abandon his nuclear threats, but he has recently returned to
them.
Russian
forces started military drills near Ukraine last week that simulated the use of
tactical nuclear weapons, in a move that Moscow said was a warning to the west
not to escalate tensions further.
Since the
start of the war, Washington has voiced fears of provoking Putin into a nuclear
response and drawing the US and Nato into direct conflict with Moscow.
It has
reportedly expressed anger over two Ukrainian drone strikes in the last week
against Russian radar stations that provide warning of nuclear launches. At
least one of the strikes in the south-eastern Krasnodar region appeared to have
caused some damage, according to images circulating on social media.
“They are
sensitive locations because Russia could perceive that its strategic deterrent
capabilities are being targeted, which could undermine Russia’s ability to
maintain nuclear deterrence against the United States,” an unnamed US official
told the Washington Post.
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