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Monday, December 9, 2024

Dave Patterson: New Report Calls Russia Nukes ‘Acute Threat’


The Congressional Research Service portrays the Kremlin as eminently dangerous.

With each new report, Russia’s nuclear capability grows more ominous. Conversely, Americans are becoming desensitized to the disquieting assessments of a chief adversary and threat to the US. Over the past four years, nuclear threats have grown, but national security leaders appear not to have embraced the peril with enthusiasm equal to the danger. There has been a palpable malaise if not a desperate attempt to sustain the status quo. There is no sense of urgency to address a menacing nuclear foe like Russia.

Russia Has Warned the West

It’s not that there haven’t been persistent warnings about the nuclear threats. However, this most recent report from the Congressional Research Service (CRS) portrays a foreboding menace that should be on President-elect Trump’s list of to-dos on day one. Real Clear Defense carried an article titled “Report to Congress on Russia’s Nuclear Weapons” by the US Naval Institute (USNI) on the CRS report. USNI offered that Russia has built up its nonstrategic nuclear arsenal, “describing these weapons as an offset to US and NATO conventional superiority.” There’s a bit of irony with this point of view.

During the Cold War, the roles were reversed. NATO and the US believed developing tactical nuclear weapons was crucial to defend against the Soviet Union’s vastly superior number of tanks, artillery, and ground troops. The Allies assessed that the Soviet Union would use its advantage in tanks and other mechanized forces to move quickly through a lowland area known as the Fulda Gap. It was the direct path from East Germany into West Germany (before consolidation) through the town of Fulda (hence the name) to engage the NATO defenses. Because the NATO leadership did not believe containing the larger, fast-moving Soviet and Warsaw Bloc armies was possible, resorting to tactical nuclear weapons was one option.

In its November 22 assessment, the CRS called the Russian nuclear challenge an “acute threat.” By definition, that could mean American national security is facing grave danger. The CRS assessment of the Kremlin’s posture for the imminent use of tactical nukes can be broken down into four indicators:
  1. Russia has the quantity of nuclear weapons to strike first.
  2. Moscow recently modified its nuclear doctrine and employment plans to lower the threshold for using atomic weapons.
  3. The Kremlin pulled out of further nuclear arms control negotiations.
  4. Russian President Vladimir Putin has become more vocal in his signaling a willingness to employ nukes.
We’ve long known Russia has been modernizing its nuclear capability at a much more rapid pace than the US. The magnitude of Moscow’s programs to develop more capable delivery systems is particularly troubling. Independent nongovernment analysts assess the Kremlin’s tactical nuclear warhead inventory to be 1,558. “In 2018, President Putin announced that Russia was developing new delivery vehicles, including an ICBM- (Intercontinental Ballistic Missile) mounted hypersonic glide vehicle, a nuclear-powered cruise, and a nuclear-capable autonomous underwater system,” CRS explained.

Liberty Nation News reported recently that “Putin also authorized the use of an experimental intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) in an air attack on Ukraine. Reports assert the IRBM, called Oreshnik by the Russians, was based on the Russian RS-26 Rubezh intercontinental ballistic missile.” The Russians claim the Oreshnik can defeat any Western anti-missile defense.

Regarding the recent revision to the Russian doctrine for the use of nuclear weapons, the CRS report explains:

“The document also states that Russia considers ‘an aggression’ by ‘any nonnuclear state, but with participation or with support from a nuclear state’ a ‘joint attack’ against Russia. Russian political and military leaders have articulated a ‘strategic deterrence’ concept that combines nonmilitary means. Nonnuclear capabilities, and nuclear weapons in a spectrum of continuous actions aimed at deterrence, escalation management, and warfighting.”

This clearly is a reference to US and NATO support to Ukraine, providing long-range missiles capable of reaching into Russia.

The third indicator of Russia’s more likely inclination to resort to nuclear weapons is that there are no existing agreed-to norms of behavior in arms control. In an announcement in February 2023, Putin suspended any further Russian participation in renewing the 2010 New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) talks. Currently, START limits the US and Russia to 800 nuclear delivery platforms and 1,550 actively deployed nuclear warheads. Without even the symbolism of an arms control treaty, Putin has no restraint on growing Russia’s strategic and tactical nuclear capability – and he may have already begun that process. Russia withdrew ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty in November 2023.

Believe Your Enemies

Lastly, according to well-known author and spokesperson on current events, Diane Bederman, “One of the lessons that I took from his [Machiavelli] writings: if someone says they are going to kill you — believe them.” To that end, “since February 2022, President Putin has invoked Russia’s nuclear weapons in an apparent attempt to deter Western military intervention against Russia in Ukraine,” the CRS report explains. “Russia may continue its nuclear signaling to the West as the war in Ukraine progresses.” Believing Putin is bluffing is a dangerous gambit. The problem for the US is predicting when the nuclear signaling becomes a nuclear strike.

Dave is a retired U.S. Air Force Pilot with over 180 combat missions in Vietnam. He is the former Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, Comptroller and has served in executive positions in the private sector aerospace and defense industry. This article was first published HERE

12 comments:

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

More scare-mongering.
The hidden message here is that if we (the West) stop pressuring Russia we will be facing hordes of them streaming into Europe and/or volleys of nuclear ICBMs. The reality is that we can defuse the situation by taking the pressure off them by continuously adding fuel to the Ukraine fire and expanding NATO (as they see it) which has been redundant since 1991 and is an instrument of the warmongers in Washington.
The bear is being poked and prodded to raise its ire. But those doing the tormenting would be well advised to recall what happens when the bear finally loses its patience and comes out fighting.

Anonymous said...

There is a rather large missing piece here.

Russia can deliver nuclear like devastation with conventional hypersonic weapon platforms.

This was recently demonstrated in Dnipro with Oreshnik

Russia no longer needs to rely on their nuclear deterrent

Anonymous said...

Which part of "if someone says they are going to kill you then believe them" don't you understand Barend? Russia is going to set the rules for how it uses its nuclear weapons whatever the West does or does not do. But to buckle to bluster and threats would be unthinkable. If resisting aggression is somehow poking the bear then Barend has a very strange view of the world.

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Of course Russia will set the rules for how it utilises its nukes. So does the US, so does China, etc.
I have seen sentiments paralleling "to buckle to bluster and threats is unthinkable" in essays on Russia Today. Their case is that NATO and the West are the aggressors.
My view of the world includes looking at these conflict situations from both points of view. Anon 8:51 should give that a try some time.

Anonymous said...

Anon 8:51 here, responding to Barend Vlaardingerbroek, who thinks I need to look at "conflict situations from both points of view". In the case of the Ukraine, "conflict situation" is a just a euphemism for Russia's illegal and brutal invasion. He therefore clearly considers there are two points of view about an attack on a peaceful democratic State that posed no threat to Russia. Which means he considers there are two points of view on the premeditated murder of Ukranian civilians in their beds. It follows that he must think there are two points of view on the deliberate destruction of non-combatant civilian infrastructure, including maternity hospitals and public buildings clearly marked as shelters for women and children. This is the same commentator that has previously expressed admiration on this platform for Islamic terrorists. Next he will be saying there are two points of view on the holocaust. No Barend. Ukraine is not the Oxford Union debating society where they all go home after a jolly good intellectual argument. There can only be one point of view about the Ukraine war. You don't debate anything with a madman like Putin who mixes paranoia over the West with delusions of grandeur over a return to Russia's imperial past. He is morally corrupt. You don't poke a bear like that. You have it put down.

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Poor Unknown obviously has a very limited mind which sees everything in black and white. His statement that "This is the same commentator that has previously expressed admiration on this platform for Islamic terrorists" is factually incorrect (and may even be actionable) as the case I made was that Hezbollah are not 'terrorists' by any rational definition. It is difficult to discuss any complex issues with simpletons who fall back on libel and so I will not try to. Was it Mark Twain that said it is hard to win an argument against a clever person but impossible to win an argument against a fool?

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Woops, that should read 'Poor Anonymous' not 'Poor Unknown'.

TJS said...

Yes, but I got it anyway Barend, poor unknown applies equally well.

Zelensky need not have sent all his young men to die on its killing fields.
Russia is asserting itself to be fairly treated and recognized, not one to kowtow to the US hegemony and not to be victim of their continuous onslaught of colour revolutions so the US may control the world's resources. By the US I mean a particular group within the US.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 8:51 here again. Barend says "Hezbollah are not terrorists by any rational definition". So is he accusing the Government of New Zealand of being irrational? How about the Government of the United States? Or the United Kingdom?Or Canada? Or Australia? They all say Hezbollah is a terrorist organisation. Even the United Nations considers them a terrorist organisation. So excuse me if I conclude that Hezbollah is in fact a terrorist organisation. If that makes me a fool then I plead guilty as charged. But I don't need to stoop to desperate ad hominem attacks to make my case. I prefer to rely on the verifiable evidence.

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Western governments are allowing themselves to be led by the Yanks. If the Yanks say it's in the wrong, then it's in the wrong, end.
But rather than using what various political entities with dubious ethical credentials as evidence, let's focus on objective evidence such as the nature of the organisation in question.
A search of the internet reveals that 'terrorist/ism' are hard words to define. A comprehensive definition of terrorism by Britannica runs as follows: "calculated use of violence to create a general climate of fear in a population and thereby to bring about a particular political objective. Terrorism has been practiced by political organizations with both rightist and leftist objectives, by nationalistic and religious groups, by revolutionaries, and even by state institutions such as armies, intelligence services, and police."
Now it may well be the case that the Yanks in their usual simplistic manner regard the definition of terrorism to be an open and shut case, but many disagree. The EU, France and Bulgaria recognise legitimate political functions of the organisation, and about 20 other countries refuse to label Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation including India, Egypt, Indonesia and Thailand - hardly a line-up of terrorist governments.
Hezbollah is part of the government of the Lebanese State through elected parliamentarians and cabinet ministers.
But of course the real sticking point is its stance towards Israel, which by the above definition has a better claim to the label of 'terrorist' than does Hezbollah. They believe alongside their Shia allies that the Israeli occupation of Palestine is illegal and that resistance to it is justified. Many in international law would agree.
I am of the opinion that the US-led West has it wrong. That does not make me a supporter of terrorism but a critical questioner of who defines what terrorism is.

Anonymous said...

Barend, I detect a hint of paranoia in your accusation that the various governments I cited, and the UN, all have "dubious ethical credentials". So which particular ethical standards does the New Zealand Government lack? Are those different from those lacking in the UK? Or Australia? You must have a pretty low regard for the ability of democratic countries, including your own, to distinguish between right and wrong. And by the way, the EU treats Hezbollah's military wing as a terrorist organisation and last time I looked both France and Bulgaria were members of the EU. And the fact that that Hezbollah has Members of Parliament in what is essentially failed State is hardly a ringing endorsement of its integrity. They have fully embraced Chairman Mao's philosophy that all political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Their political ambition was never to serve the people of Lebanon but rather prolong Lebanon's instability to enable the ambitions of Islam in general, and Iran in particular, to prevail. So who has the "dubious ethical credentials" in that scenario?

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Geopolitics is a dirty business, Anonymous. Subterfuge, sabotage, misinformation........ it's a long list and they're all at it.
Yes, France and Bulgaria are members of the EU but the EU allows member states to have their own policies about certain external matters. I note the inclusion of the term "military wing" in that sentence, which makes it at least partially correct.
True, being part of a failed state isn't exactly a brownie point earner but the rot in Lebanese politics stemmed from Sunni and Christian elites. I would go so far as to argue that Hezbollah kept Lebanon from going the way of Libya and Yemen, i.e. they were a positive influence. This is quite the opposite of your assertion that Hezbollah was prolonging Lebanon's instability.
'Right' and 'wrong' are relative terms. Between Hezbollah and the elites who have destroyed the country, I'd say Hezbollah has been the party in the 'right'.
Next time you run into a Hezbollah member, ask him/her about Mao's philosophy. I don't think they'd agree with you.