Russia's Medvedev warns of nuclear response if Ukraine hits missile launch sites
Russia's
Deputy head of the Security Council Dmitry Medvedev, accompanied by
Deputy Defence Minister Nikolay Pankov, visits the Prudboi military
training ground in Volgograd region, Russia June 1, 2023.
Sputnik/Yekaterina Shtukina/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
MOSCOW,
Jan 11 (Reuters) - A senior ally of President Vladimir Putin warned on
Thursday that any Ukrainian attacks on missile launch sites inside
Russia with arms supplied by the United States and its allies would risk
a nuclear response from Moscow.
Former
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy chairman of Russia's
Security Council, said that some Ukrainian military commanders were
considering hitting missile launch sites inside Russia with
Western-supplied long-range missiles.
He
did not name the commanders or disclose more details of the alleged
plan and there was no immediate reaction from Ukraine to his threat.
"What
does this mean? It means only one thing – they risk running into the
action of paragraph 19 of the fundamentals of Russia's state policy in
the field of nuclear deterrence," Medvedev wrote on the Telegram
messaging app.
"This should be remembered," Medvedev said.
Paragraph
nineteen of Russia's 2020 nuclear doctrine sets out the conditions
under which a Russian president would consider using a nuclear weapon:
broadly as a response to an attack using nuclear or other weapons of
mass destruction, or to the use of conventional weapons against Russia
"when the very existence of the state is put under threat."
Medvedev
made specific mention of point "g" of paragraph nineteen which deals
with the nuclear response to a conventional weapons attack.
Putin
is the decision-maker when it comes to Russia's vast nuclear arsenal,
but diplomats say Medvedev's views give an indication of hawkish
thinking at the top of the Kremlin which has cast the war as an
existential struggle with the West.
Kremlin
critics have dismissed some of Medvedev's nuclear threats in the past
as attempts to grab attention or to dissuade the West from supplying
Ukraine with more weapons. The United States and its allies have pledged
nearly $250 billion in military and other support to Kyiv.
The
risk of nuclear escalation has hung over the Ukraine war since Russia
sent thousands of troops into its neighbour in February 2022.
Washington
feared a Russian nuclear escalation in late 2022 and Jake Sullivan, the
White House national security adviser, that year communicated concerns
to Moscow about any steps towards the use of a nuclear device.
Russia
and the United States are by far the world's biggest nuclear powers:
Putin controls 5,889 nuclear warheads while U.S. President Joe Biden
controls about 5,244 nuclear warheads, according to the Federation of American Scientists.
Medvedev
cast himself as a liberal moderniser when he was president from
2008-2012, but now presents himself as one of the fiercest anti-Western
Kremlin hawks.
Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge
Editing by Andrew Osborn