UKRAINIAN GLORY

Looks Like Putin is Cooling his Nuclear Threats

by | Dec 20, 2024 | Spiritual Justice Warriors, updates

V2 (original ballistic missile) courtesy of Wikimedia Commons,  AElfwine at the French-language Wikipedia, under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version

UnderstandingWar.com reports:

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s continued fixation on the Russian “Oreshnik” ballistic missile and Russia’s non-nuclear deterrents suggests that the Kremlin may be searching for off-ramps from its continued nuclear saber-rattling narrative. Putin addressed the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) board on December 16 and discussed Russian military developments in 2024 and Russia’s military goals for 2025.[1] Putin stated that Russia is developing military capabilities and technologies alongside its nuclear triad and emphasized that the Oreshnik ballistic missile is Russia’s “latest powerful weapon,” of which Russia will soon serialize production. Putin also notably claimed that if Russia were to use the Oreshnik in a “complex manner” in tandem with other non-nuclear munitions, the resulting strike would be “comparable in power to the use of nuclear weapons.” Putin noted that the Oreshnik does not have a nuclear payload and therefore does not create nuclear contamination, emphasizing that the Oreshnik’s non-nuclear nature “is a very important element when deciding what means of armed struggle” Russia will employ. Putin has previously lauded the technical specifications of the Oreshnik ballistic missile, including by comparing it to a nuclear weapon or a meteorite in terms of the damage it can cause.[2]

Putin’s recent emphasis on the purported power of Oreshnik is notable and suggests that the Kremlin may seek an off-ramp from the intense nuclear saber-rattling it has employed thus far in the war. Putin’s December 16 MoD address, his statements at the Collective Security Treaty Organization’s (CSTO) Security Council in Astana, Kazakhstan, on November 28, and his speech to the MoD on November 22 all appear to be trying to establish the Oreshnik as the bastion of Russia’s non-nuclear deterrent.[3] Russia has repeatedly invoked the threat of nuclear retaliation in order to force Ukraine and the West into self-deterrence, but Ukrainian and Western actions have challenged Kremlin’s nuclear narrative every time the Kremlin has employed it, constantly undermining Russia’s self-defined thresholds for nuclear use.[4] ISW has previously assessed that there is nothing particularly new about the Oreshnik’s capabilities, so Putin is likely extolling its technical specifications in order to create fear and uncertainty about the damage the Oreshnik can inflict and to pressure Ukraine’s partners to push Ukraine to limit its strikes against Russia out of fear that he will actually conduct retaliation.[5] Putin likely introduced the Oreshnik as a new element in the Kremlin’s wider reflexive-control toolkit as the Kremlin increasingly comes to terms with the fact that Putin’s unwillingness to follow through on hints of nuclear threats is devaluing them such that he must find a rhetorical off-ramp in order to maintain its credibility in the international information space.

Slava Ukraine!

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