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Why Putin’s nuclear saber-rattling on Ukraine sounds different this time

Over the course of the war in Ukraine, the Kremlin has drawn several “red lines,” only to seemingly do nothing when these lines are crossed by Ukraine or its Western backers.

But Russian President Vladimir Putin warned last Thursday that Moscow will consider it a direct act of war by NATO if British, French, or U.S.-made missiles are used by Ukraine to strike targets deep inside Russia. And both he and Russian experts say this time, things are different.

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The Kremlin has had little success invoking its nuclear arsenal to deter Ukraine and the West from deploying new tactics and modern equipment to stop Russia’s invasion. But that may be changing.

Mr. Putin distinguished the use of the weapon types being discussed – British, French, and American missiles – from previous red-line scenarios because he said such weapons would require hands-on NATO assistance and satellite targeting and guidance to effectively carry out strikes deep inside Russia.

The Kremlin sounds like it’s treating this challenge as the final straw.

“Russia’s frustration has been growing because the West appears to have lost all fear of nuclear war,” says Sergei Strokan, an international affairs columnist. “There is a growing feeling that the West needs some kind of a wake-up call, an event that would make them see they are flirting with World War III.”

Over the course of the war in Ukraine, the Kremlin has drawn several “red lines” – with ostentatious references to Russia’s huge strategic nuclear arsenal – only to seemingly do nothing when these lines are crossed by Ukraine or its Western backers.

It happened when Ukraine acquired new and more powerful Western arms. It happened when Kyiv used its own drones to hit Russian airfields, refineries, and even the Kremlin itself. Most recently, it happened when Ukrainian forces actually invaded Russian territory. That has led Ukrainians, and many NATO officials, to conclude that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear saber-rattling is an elaborate bluff.

But when Mr. Putin warned last Thursday that Moscow will consider it a direct act of war by NATO if British, French, or U.S.-made missiles are used by Ukraine to strike targets deep inside Russia, he said this time is different.

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The Kremlin has had little success invoking its nuclear arsenal to deter Ukraine and the West from deploying new tactics and modern equipment to stop Russia’s invasion. But that may be changing.

Many Russian experts agree. And for now, Washington seems to be heeding his threat and holding off on permitting Ukraine to use the weapons.

“Russia’s frustration has been growing because the West appears to have lost all fear of nuclear war. Deterrence is absent,” says Sergei Strokan, an international affairs columnist with the Moscow daily Kommersant. During the Cold War, he says, that fear drove both sides to the bargaining table, aiming to limit conflicts and control nuclear weapons.

“There is a growing feeling that the West needs some kind of a wake-up call, an event that would make them see they are flirting with World War III if they escalate these attacks against Russia,” he says.

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