NewsRussia's new nuclear stance: A strategic warning to the West

Russia's new nuclear stance: A strategic warning to the West

The revised nuclear doctrine of Russia lowers the declared threshold for using nuclear weapons, aiming to deter the West from further increasing support for Ukraine, says Artur Kacprzyk, a nuclear deterrence analyst.

Russia's new nuclear doctrine
Russia's new nuclear doctrine
Images source: © Wikimedia Commons
Beata Bialik

19 November 2024 20:14

The new version of the doctrine, signed by President Vladimir Putin, introduces additional situations in which Moscow reserves the right to use nuclear weapons.

The main reason for the change in doctrine is the desire to deter the West from further increasing support for Ukraine, explains Kacprzyk.

The analyst notes that the mere signing of the doctrine by Putin "is not surprising," as he announced most of these changes as early as September 25. This moment seems intentional, as it occurred less than two days after media reports about the U.S. approving Ukraine's long-range missile attacks in some Russian regions.

Russia most likely wants to show that it is reacting and intends to increase pressure on the U.S. to reverse its decision, or at least not ease restrictions on missile strikes further, the expert assesses.

The key changes in the doctrine concern lowering the declared threshold for using nuclear weapons. In the previous version, Russia declared the possibility of using nuclear weapons in response to a conventional attack "threatening the existence of the state." Now it discusses responding to a conventional attack "posing a critical threat to sovereignty and territorial integrity."

The new doctrine also introduces the possibility of a nuclear response to a conventional attack on Belarus.

The analyst predicts that if Russia decides on further actions, they may be "below the threshold of open aggression against NATO and other than the use of nuclear weapons." This could include "intensifying acts of sabotage against Western countries, aggressive actions near NATO reconnaissance planes, or further nuclear threats."

Kacprzyk reminds us that Russia did not decide to escalate when Ukraine conducted operations on Russian territory, such as entering parts of the Kursk Oblast or drone attacks deep in the country.

The expert points out that heightening fears about the use of nuclear weapons is part of attempts to build a negotiating position on Ukraine before Donald Trump takes power in the U.S.

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