Vladimir Putin has announced what appears to be a dramatic strengthening of Russia’s nuclear doctrine. The Russian president was responding to speculation that the West may relax its restrictions on Ukraine’s use of its weapons to attack targets inside Russia.
He told his security council that Russia would consider using nuclear weapons if it was attacked by any state with conventional weapons. The trigger for the launch of nuclear missiles against Ukraine or any of its allies, he said, would be “reliable information about a massive launch of aerospace attack means and their crossing of our state border.”
Whether this will affect the thinking of Ukraine’s Western allies about the use of its long-range missiles has yet to be seen. But one of the major features of the public discourse about the Ukraine war has been the risk of the use of nuclear weapons.
Nuclear threats have been a standard tactic for the Russian leadership. Whenever Ukraine receives new weapons from the West or is allowed to use Western arms to target Russian territory, Moscow has responded by either referring to the devastation it could wreak with its nuclear arsenal or by holding a drill to remind the West of its existence.
But there have recently been reports of a growing realization among Putin’s close advisers that these threats are beginning to wear thin, as one after another of Moscow’s “red lines” are ignored.
Nevertheless, despite providing Ukraine with the most advanced air defense systems and offensive missiles that could strike targets deep within Russia – and perhaps even influence the course of the war – NATO countries are maintaining a strict limit on their use. It’s an indication that despite skepticism about Putin’s willingness to use nuclear weapons, deterrence remains robust – in Western minds, anyway.
Nuclear deterrence is based on the threat to inflict “unacceptable damage” on an enemy. It is credible only if the adversary believes that the threat is accompanied by the capability and will to follow through.
Nuclear powers have generally conducted nuclear messaging by publicizing guidelines for the use of their arsenals. NATO’s current strategic concept was adopted by heads of state and government at the alliance’s summit in Madrid in June 2022. It states: “The circumstances in which NATO might have to use nuclear weapons are extremely remote.”
But the document stresses that if nuclear weapons were used against any NATO member state it would “fundamentally alter” any conflict in which NATO was engaged. It goes on to warn that: “The alliance has the capabilities and resolve to impose costs on an adversary that would be unacceptable and far outweigh the benefits that any adversary could hope to achieve.”
Russia, meanwhile, is reportedly updating its nuclear doctrine in response to what it says is “Western escalation” in the war in Ukraine. The current doctrine, established by a decree in 2020, says Russia can use nuclear weapons to respond to a nuclear attack by an enemy, or to a conventional attack that “threatens the existence of the state.”
The latest statement by Putin is apparently the “draft” of a reworked nuclear doctrine. It certainly appears to lower the bar on resorting to the use of nuclear weapons.
Nuclear saber-rattling
The Russian leader made his first overt threat to use nuclear weapons in the conflict in Ukraine in September 2022. He was overseeing the annexation of four occupied Ukrainian provinces after hastily arranged plebiscites, which were generally regarded in the West as being rigged.
He stated that “the US is the only country in the world that twice used nuclear weapons, destroying the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Incidentally, they created a precedent.”
He went on to assert that during the Second World War, the US and Britain had deliberately bombed several German cities to rubble. This, he insisted, had the “sole goal, just like in the case of nuclear bombardments in Japan, to scare our country and the entire world”.
But CIA director William Burns recently said the West should not take Putin’s threats seriously: “Putin’s a bully. He’s going to continue to saber rattle from time to time.”
Burns told a festival organized by the Financial Times on September 7 that: “There was a moment in the fall of 2022 when I think there was a genuine risk of potential use of tactical nuclear weapons … I never thought … we should be unnecessarily intimidated by that.”
He said he had subsequently passed on a message from US President Joe Biden to Sergey Naryshkin, the head of the Russian foreign intelligence service at a meeting in Turkey in November 2022, “to make very clear what the consequences of that kind of escalation would be.”
US satellite networks and other intelligence sources have shown no evidence of any preparations for the employment of nuclear weapons. This is despite Russian claims that the alert status of Russian forces has been raised.
But Putin’s proxies have been busily putting out propaganda messages to reinforce their leader’s threats.
According to the Washington Post, Alexander Mikhailov, the director of the Bureau of Military Political Analysis, recently called for Russia to bomb plywood mock-ups of London and Washington to simulate a nuclear attack so that it would “burn so beautifully that it will horrify the world.”
The speaker of the lower house, Vyacheslav Volodin, warned that strikes on Russia would lead to war with nuclear weapons and warned that the European parliament in Strasbourg was only a three-minute flight for a Russian nuclear missile.
So far Putin’s threats have been sufficient to limit the scope of Western involvement. Whether the Russian president’s latest threat will be effective is now the question.
Christoph Bluth is professor of international relations and Security, University of Bradford
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


Russia’s new Satan II missile just exploded in the silo leaving a 50m crater in the ground! Right now the West is questioning if Russia even has a nuclear deterrent at all. Do their 50 year old missiles even work anymore?
“the West is questioning if Russia even has a nuclear deterrent at all”
Only morons would do that…
At the start of the war the Russian armed forces were weak and incompetently led. After the misadventure near Kiev, at the 2022 Victory Day parade President Putin looked worried. The military had been rotted out by corruption, including promotions by graft. They have recovered now.
Corruption is the perennial problem in Russia. Reading the world’s media I have come to the conclusion that most writers don’t understand Putin. Some liken him to a Don Corleone character. He is capable of such action but that is not his character. He is a nationalist and reformer. Reformer you say? Yes, but eradicating corruption in Russia is a hopeless task, so instead he moderates and manages it, to achieve his objectives. When it was disclosed last year that the Wagner Group had received a billion dollars the previous year, a reporter reporter suggested that Prigozhin might have syphoned some off, to which Putin replied, “I hope it wasn’t too much.”
So what has this got to do with nuclear threats. Rating him clever and subtle, his threats should not be dismissed. Most think-tank writers are talking about tactical weapons, which indicates a want for an escalation ladder. He could use them at a size that pulls away the escalation ladder.
This war should be closed down, the sooner the better.
Launching nuke on a non-nuke state like Ukraine is at minimal cost, anyway USA and China is far away.
Nuking Ukraine only EU and Russia effected, just another Chernobyl is ok after some year
Recall 1963, the Cuban Crisis. The basing of nukes there by the Soviets set off a set of events that indicated the Soviet intrusion was unacceptable for the USA. Now, a Ukraine membership in NATO and economic/political incorporation of Ukraine with the USA/West would endanger the very existence of the Russian Federation and Putin views the situation as such. Even worst, the whole of the Russian leadership and patriotic segment lines up behind Putin on this issue.
Launching missiles at a nuclear armed superpower is pretty stupid.
The West is becoming desperate as Russia is winning the war in Ukraine.
On a side note, almost every article here at Asia Times seems geared toward at conflict. War with China. War with Russia, etc.
Winning the war? With casualties of 600k vrs 100k for Ukr (and zero for NATO).
This is the smartest war the USA has ever fought. Set off 2 brother nations with 300yrs of shared history (suffering, fighting and intermarriage) by a dumb invasion by Putin. Leading to generations of hatred.
The same will be with China attempting to invade Taiwan. All the neighboring nations will be lining up to take a pop at China, with US supplied weapons.
“With casualties of 600k vrs 100k for Ukr”
Your NAFO numbers are laughable!
The West is laughing at the East. Big bad Russia couldn’t even handle Ukraine. That means you wouldn’t stand a chance against NATO. The East is all talk. Yak yak yak.
Yeah, I hear the West ‘laughing’; the laugh of a maniac!