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US says no indication Russia has moved nuclear weapons
US says no indication Russia has moved nuclear weapons
by AFP Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 26, 2023

The United States has seen no indication that Russia has yet moved any nuclear weapons, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said Sunday, after Moscow announced it would station tactical nuclear arms in Belarus.

President Vladimir Putin's announcement on Saturday that Russia would station tactical nuclear weapons in neighbor and ally Belarus sparked condemnation from the international bodies and Ukraine, which Moscow invaded last February.

"We have not seen any indication that he (Putin) has made good on this pledge or moved any nuclear weapons around," Kirby told CBS's "Face the Nation."

With fears of a nuclear war rising since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, experts believe that any strike carried out by Moscow would likely involve small-size battlefield weapons, called "tactical" as opposed to "strategic" high-powered long-range nuclear weapons.

Kirby said, however, that Washington has "seen no indication he has any intention to use nuclear weapons, period, inside Ukraine."

The United States monitors the situation daily, he added, but that so far there was "nothing that would cause us to change our own strategic deterrent posture."

Putin said the deployment was similar to moves from the United States, which stores such weapons in bases across Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Turkey, an analogy western allies called "misleading".

Russia is due to start training crews on April 3 and plans to finish the construction of a special storage facility for tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus by July 1.

Kyiv on Sunday said it was seeking an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council over the announcement.

The NATO alliance branded the move as "dangerous and irresponsible."

Berlin condemns Russian nuclear weapon deployment in Belarus
Berlin (AFP) March 26, 2023 - Germany on Sunday condemned a decision by Russian President Vladimir Putin to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, bringing the arms closer to the European Union.

The announcement was "another attempt at nuclear intimidation by Russia", an official in the foreign office told AFP.

Germany would not allow itself to be "put off our course" by Moscow's move, the source said on condition of anonymity.

"The comparison made by President Putin to nuclear sharing in NATO is misleading and does not justify the step announced by Russia," the source said.

Belarus would also "contradict" its own international declarations to be a nuclear weapons-free zone, they said.

Putin justified the move on Saturday, saying: "There is nothing unusual here either. The United States has been doing this for decades.

"They have long placed their tactical nuclear weapons on the territory of their allies," Putin said in an interview on Russian television.

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Kyiv on Sunday said Russia was holding Minsk as a "nuclear hostage" after Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the deployment of tactical nuclear weapons to ally Belarus. "The Kremlin took Belarus as a nuclear hostage," the secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defence Council, Oleksiy Danilov, wrote on Twitter. He added that the move was "a step towards the internal destabilization of the country". Strongman Alexander Lukashenko, who has been in power in Belarus for almost 30 y ... read more

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