Putin’s Nuclear Threat

Via Consortium News

The disconnect between the Western and Russian narratives in the current conflict could prove fatal to the world, writes Scott Ritter.

Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. (U.N. Photo/Cia Pak)

By Scott Ritter
Special to Consortium News

Vladimir Putin is a madman. He’s lost it. At least that is what the leaders of the West would like you to believe. According to their narrative, Putin — isolated, alone, confused, and angry at the unfolding military disaster Russia was undergoing in Ukraine — lashed out, ostensibly threatening the entire world with nuclear annihilation.

In a meeting with his top generals on Sunday, the beleaguered Russian president announced, “I order the defense minister and the chief of the general staff of the Russian armed forces to put the deterrence forces of the Russian army into a special mode of combat service.”

The reason for this action, Putin noted, centered on the fact that, “Western countries aren’t only taking unfriendly actions against our country in the economic sphere, but top officials from leading NATO members made aggressive statements regarding our country” in relation to the ongoing situation in Ukraine.

The “deterrence forces” Putin spoke of refers to Russia’s nuclear arsenal.

What made the Russian president’s words resonate even more was that last Thursday, when announcing the commencement of Russia’s “special military operation” against Ukraine, Putin declared that “no one should have any doubts that a direct attack on our country will lead to the destruction and horrible consequences for any potential aggressor.” He emphasized that Russia is “one of the most potent nuclear powers and also has a certain edge in a range of state-of-the-art weapons.”

When Putin issued that threat, The Washington Post described it as “empty, a mere baring of fangs.” The Pentagon, involved as it was in its own review of U.S. nuclear posture designed to address threats such as this, seemed non-plussed, with an anonymous official noting that U.S. policy makers “don’t see an increased threat in that regard.”

NATO’s Response

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and others representatives of NATO countries in a group photo at NATO Headquarters in Brussels, March 2021 . (State Department/Ron Przysucha)

For NATO’s part, the Trans-Atlantic military alliance, which sits at the heart of the current crisis, issued a statement in which it noted that:

“Russia’s actions pose a serious threat to Euro-Atlantic security, and they will have geo-strategic consequences. NATO will continue to take all necessary measures to ensure the security and defense of all Allies. We are deploying additional defensive land and air forces to the eastern part of the Alliance, as well as additional maritime assets. We have increased the readiness of our forces to respond to all contingencies.”

Hidden near the bottom of this statement, however, was a passage which, when examined closely, underpinned the reasoning behind Putin’s nuclear muscle-flexing. “[W]e have held consultations under Article 4 of the Washington Treaty,” the statement noted. “We have decided, in line with our defensive planning to protect all Allies, to take additional steps to further strengthen deterrence and defense across the Alliance.”

Under Article 4, members can bring any issue of concern, especially related to the security of a member country, to the table for discussion within the North Atlantic Council. NATO members Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland triggered the Article 4 consultation following the Russian incursion into Ukraine. In a statement issued on Friday, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg expanded on the initial NATO statement, declaring that NATO was committed to protecting and defending all its allies, including Ukraine.

Three things about this statement stood out. First, by invoking Article IV, NATO was positioning itself for potential offensive military action; its previous military interventions against Serbia in 1999, Afghanistan in 2001, Iraq in 2004, and Libya in 2011, were all done under Article IV of the NATO Charter. Seen in this light, the premise that NATO is an exclusively defensive organization, committed to the promise of collective self-defense, is baseless.

Second, while Article V (collective defense) protections only extend to actual NATO members, which Ukraine is not, Article IV allows the umbrella of NATO protection to be extended to those non-NATO members whom the alliance views as an ally, a category Stoltenberg clearly placed Ukraine in.

Finally, Stoltenberg’s anointing of Ukraine as a NATO ally came at the same time he announced the activation and deployment of NATO’s 40,000-strong Response Force, some of which would be deployed to NATO’s eastern flank, abutting Ukraine. The activation of the Response Force is unprecedented in the history of NATO, a fact that underscores the seriousness to which a nation like Russia might attach to the action.

When seen in this light, Putin’s comments last Thursday were measured, sane, and responsible.

What Happens if NATO Convoys or EU Jets Are Hit?

Dassault Mirage F1CR jet operated by French Air Force and based at Reims. (Alan Wilson/Wikimedia Commons)

Since the Article IV consultations began, NATO members have begun to supply Ukraine with lethal military aid, with the promise of more in the days and weeks to come. These shipments can only gain access to Ukraine through a ground route that requires transshipment through NATO members, including Romania and Poland. It goes without saying that any vehicle carrying lethal military equipment into a war zone is a legitimate target under international law; this would apply in full to any NATO-affiliated shipment or delivery done by a NATO member on their own volition.

What happens when Russia begins to attack NATO/EU/US/Allied arms deliveries as they arrive on Ukrainian soil? Will NATO, acting under Article IV, create a buffer zone in Ukraine, using the never-before-mobilized Response Force? One naturally follows the other…

The scenario becomes even more dire if the EU acts on its pledge to provide Ukraine with aircraft and pilots to fight the Russians. How would these be deployed to Ukraine? What happens when Russia begins shooting down these aircraft as soon as they enter Ukrainian airspace? Does NATO now create a no-fly zone over western Ukraine?

What happens if a no-fly zone (which many officials in the West are promoting) is combined with the deployment of the Response Force to create a de facto NATO territory in western Ukraine? What if the Ukrainian government establishes itself in the city of Lvov, operating under the protection of this air and ground umbrella?

Russia’s Nuclear Doctrine

Night training for the Victory Day parade on Red Square, May 4, 2021. ( Micha? Siergiejevicz/Wikimedia Commons)

In June 2020, Russia released a new document, titled “On Basic Principles of State Policy of the Russian Federation on Nuclear Deterrence,” that outlined the threats and circumstances that could lead to Russia’s use of nuclear weapons. While this document declared that Russia “considers nuclear weapons exclusively as a means of deterrence,” it outlined several scenarios in which Russia would resort to the use of nuclear weapons if deterrence failed.

While the Russian nuclear policy document did not call for the preemptive use of nuclear weapons during conventional conflicts, it did declare that “in the event of a military conflict, this Policy provides for the prevention of an escalation of military actions and their termination on conditions that are acceptable for the Russian Federation and/or its allies.”

In short, Russia might threaten to use nuclear weapons to deter “aggression against the Russian Federation with the use of conventional weapons when the very existence of the state is in jeopardy.”

In defining Russia’s national security concerns to both the U.S. and NATO last December, Putin was crystal clear about where he stood when it came to Ukrainian membership in NATO. In a pair of draft treaty documents, Russia demanded that NATO provide written guarantees that it would halt its expansion and assure Russia that neither Ukraine nor Georgia ever be offered membership into the alliance.

In a speech delivered after Russia’s demands were delivered, Putin declared that if the U.S. and its allies continue their “obviously aggressive stance,” Russia would take “appropriate retaliatory military-technical measures,” adding that it has “every right to do so.”

In short, Putin made it clear that, when it came to the issue of Ukrainian membership in NATO, the stationing of U.S. missiles in Poland and Romania and NATO deployments in Eastern Europe, Russia felt that its very existence was being threatened.

The Disconnect

A bus burns Thursday on road from Kharkiv to Kiev as Russia enters the war. (Yan Boechat/VOA/Wikimedia Commons)

The Russian invasion of Ukraine, when seen from the perspective of Russia and its leadership, was the result of a lengthy encroachment by NATO on the legitimate national security interests of the Russian state and people. The West, however, has interpreted the military incursion as little more than the irrational action of an angry, isolated dictator desperately seeking relevance in a world slipping out of his control.

The disconnect between these two narratives could prove fatal to the world. By downplaying the threat Russia perceives, both from an expanding NATO and the provision of lethal military assistance to Ukraine while Russia is engaged in military operations it deems critical to its national security, the U.S. and NATO run the risk of failing to comprehend the deadly seriousness of Putin’s instructions to his military leaders regarding the elevation of the level of readiness on the part of Russia’s strategic nuclear forces.

Far from reflecting the irrational whim of a desperate man, Putin’s orders reflected the logical extension of a concerted Russian national security posture years in the making, where the geopolitical opposition to NATO expansion into Ukraine was married with strategic nuclear posture. Every statement Putin has made over the course of this crisis has been tied to this policy.

While the U.S. and NATO can debate the legitimacy of the Russian concerns, to dismiss the national security strategy of a nation that has been subjected to detailed bureaucratic vetting as nothing more than the temper tantrum of an out of touch autocrat represents a dangerous disregard of reality, the consequences of which could prove to be fatal to the U.S., NATO, and the world.

President Putin has often complained that the West does not listen to him when he speaks of issues Russia deems to be of critical importance to its national security.

The West is listening now. The question is, is it capable of comprehending the seriousness of the situation?

So far, the answer seems to be no.

Scott Ritter is a former U.S. Marine Corps intelligence officer who served in the former Soviet Union implementing arms control treaties, in the Persian Gulf during Operation Desert Storm, and in Iraq overseeing the disarmament of WMD.

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26 Comments
Oldtoad of Green Acres
Oldtoad of Green Acres
March 2, 2022 8:04 am

Why is there so little talking making sense in D.C.?
Are they all deep state? Are they that ignorant?
Of course this Ukraine conflict, created in D.C. is simply a distraction.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Oldtoad of Green Acres
March 2, 2022 11:58 am

Hard to know what may be transpiring under the cover of this tragedy. One thing is for certain. More people died since this war started from Sino/Cartel fentanyl smuggled across Dementia Joe’s wide open border. Is not killing 1,900 plus Americans every week with fentanyl a fucking act of war?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Oldtoad of Green Acres
March 2, 2022 2:46 pm

Are they all deep state?

Yes and then some, here are some names.

https://www.voltairenet.org/article215879.html

Smedley Mulcher
Smedley Mulcher
March 2, 2022 8:25 am

Scott Ritter is a madman and a deep state tool of the establishment. Don’t believe a word he says. He is a pathological liar.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Smedley Mulcher
March 2, 2022 10:31 am

Please provide info supporting your assertion. I know nothing more about the man than what I just read in Wikipedia. It appears he has lied about a number of things, but he did have the support of Seymour Hersch, a jopurnalist whom I respect.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Montefrío
March 2, 2022 12:05 pm

He was involved, for or against, I don’t recall, the WMD in Iraq mess. He was getting a lot of press and then was hit with charges or claims that he was “Chester the Molester” and a pedo etc. Do not know if it was accurate or a fraudulent claim. I have first person accounts of lies about the Sandbox intrigues that destroyed my faith in anything claimed by “officials.”

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Harrington Richardson
March 2, 2022 1:39 pm

Thank you. He was against the WMD theory from all I’ve now read. The pedo thing may be true, at least in part.

Smedley Mulcher
Smedley Mulcher
  Montefrío
March 2, 2022 12:08 pm

What is important is that he is a part of the warmongering party in Washington that has dreamed of war with Russia from time everlasting. You can never rely on Wikipedia for the truth but the info on Ritter is out there if you dig for it. The only man in Washington, in recent history, that really understood the Russians was Stephen F. Cohen. The best journalist reporting today out of Asia and Eastern Europe is Pepe Escobar of the Asian Times.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Smedley Mulcher
March 2, 2022 1:42 pm

Thanks for the reply.

It appears from further reading (I don’t ever rely on Wiki) that he is NOT anti-Russia. I agree that Cohen has a very good understanding of Russia. Pepe, I’m afraid, is a paid flack, although much of his reporting and analysis is reasoably convincing.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Montefrío
March 3, 2022 8:11 am

Search it yourself. Ritter was the bellwether for WMD’s. If you don’t remember the role he played in turning nothing into something that resulted in hundreds of thousands of deaths, why comment on him?

Montefrío
Montefrío
  hardscrabble farmer
March 3, 2022 10:17 am

Thanks for the reply.

And we knew that while we couldn’t account for everything that the Iraqis said they had destroyed, we could only account for ninety to ninety-five percent, we knew that: (a) we had no evidence of a retained capability and, (b) no evidence that Iraq was reconstituting. And furthermore, the C.I.A. knew this. The British intelligence knew this; Israeli intelligence knew this; German intelligence. The whole world knew this. They weren’t going to say that Iraq was disarmed, because nobody could say that. But they definitely knew that the Iraqi capability regarding W.M.D. had been reduced to as near to zero as you could bring it and that Iraq represented a threat to no one when it came to weapons of mass destruction.

Ritter’s own words, as cited here:

  • https://www.democracynow.org/2005/10/21/seymour_hersh_and_scott_ritter_on
  • Yahsure
    Yahsure
    March 2, 2022 8:27 am

    it’s about who provides NG to Europe. A war for energy companies, same old BS.

    James
    James
    March 2, 2022 8:56 am

    All right folks,serious question here!

    I am wondering if there is a exchange of maybe small nuke cannon shells ect. in Europe and it ends there will the Iron Maiden tour still be on?I am looking forward to seeing them in America in fall as really liking their new album.I understand that European tour dates this summer may be cancelled and ironically enough the tour was to start in The Federation Of The Bear,can understand those shows being cancelled but will it affect the fall tour in U.S.!?

    This Maiden tune seems appropriate at the moment(and it’s Humpday!):

    “The killer’s breed or the Demon’s seed
    The glamour, the fortune, the pain
    Go to war again, blood is freedom’s stain
    Don’t you pray for my soul anymore”

    Todd Packer's Mentor
    Todd Packer's Mentor
      James
    March 2, 2022 10:23 am

    Two minutes to false flag nuclear detonation might be more like it.

    Stephen Morgan
    Stephen Morgan
      James
    March 2, 2022 11:48 am

    I agree with you. Hopefully this is all held off until I see Iron Maiden.. WOuld it be possible to reach out to President Putin to see if he’s a fan?

    Glock-N-Load
    Glock-N-Load
    March 2, 2022 8:59 am

    The photo of all those masked fools at the UN headquarters is particularly frightening to me.

    Conformity, to me, is frightening.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
      Glock-N-Load
    March 2, 2022 9:57 am

    Right. That’s not a photo of free people. Much less leaders of free people.

    That’s what people “just following orders” look like.

    Mista Ed - Shape Shifta
    Mista Ed - Shape Shifta
      Anonymous
    March 2, 2022 12:47 pm

    Our reptilian overlords see human mouth parts as particularly ugly.

    Walt
    Walt
      Mista Ed - Shape Shifta
    March 2, 2022 9:55 pm

    …And the noises that come out of them intolerably annoying.

    Card802
    Card802
    March 2, 2022 10:19 am

    Didn’t something similar happen between the US and Japan before the “surprise” attack on Pearl?

    Bankers get what bankers want……..fathers, mothers, sons and daughters, please grab your gun and line up to die for the goddamn banker and the goddamn politician who will stay at home and cheer on your beautiful unquestioning patriotism.

    The US is a hammer in search of a nail, only this time the nail has big friends, and they all have hammers too.

    Harrington Richardson
    Harrington Richardson
      Card802
    March 2, 2022 12:09 pm

    Look at the damned fool wielding our hammer.

    Note from Nevada
    Note from Nevada
    March 2, 2022 10:56 am

    The United States buys Russian oil, The E.U. buys Russian oil and gas….The united States supply weapons to Ukraine to fight Russians..E.U. and NATO nations dependent on Russian oil and gas, supply weapons to Ukraine to fight Russians.

    Only a corrupt insane world lead by Idiots would participate in such a ‘circle jerk’

    daddy Joe
    daddy Joe
    March 2, 2022 1:24 pm

    The drumbeats of war always trump sanity and rationality. That’s why they are so often used–they are a surefire method of people control.

    Toujours Pret
    Toujours Pret
    March 2, 2022 5:33 pm

    Which putin? Have been looking at pics and vids going back to around 2004 and there appear to be at least 4 different putins and one of them reminded me of mel brooks.

    Muscledawg (not to be known as Delusionaldawg)😉
    Muscledawg (not to be known as Delusionaldawg)😉
    March 3, 2022 8:01 am

    Beware of Ritter

    hardscrabble farmer
    hardscrabble farmer
    March 3, 2022 8:08 am

    Not this guy again.

    Was he right about anything? Why do they keep dragging out these discredited CIA assets every time they want to juge up a war?