Russian President Vladimir Putin earned fresh condemnation from President Joe Biden’s administration on Thursday after moving forward with a plan to station tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring ally Belarus.
The deployment marks the first time Russian tactical nuclear weapons have been deployed outside of Russia since 1991 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said that Russia has armed Belarus with Iskander-M missiles, which are hypersonic missiles that can carry conventional or nuclear warheads. He also said Russia had transferred some Su-25 aircraft that have been converted to be able to launch nuclear weapons.
Tactical Nuke Deployment ‘Irresponsible and Provocative’: White House
Tactical nuclear weapons are envisioned as a means of delivering the destructive power of a nuclear weapon in a relatively limited battlefield space. These weapons are usually smaller in yield than the strategic nuclear weapons designed to destroy entire cities during the Cold War.“We’ve seen the reports of the Russia, Belarus arrangement and will continue to monitor, certainly, the implications here,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during a Thursday White House press briefing.
Jean-Pierre said the U.S. side has not seen indications that Russia is preparing to use a nuclear weapon and so the United States will not change its own nuclear posture in response. She did, however, condemn the move.
“This is yet another example of [Putin] making irresponsible and provocative choices,” she said. “We remain committed to a collective defense of the NATO alliance, and I'll just leave it there.”
State Department spokesman Matthew Miller similarly criticized the tactical nuclear weapon deployment in Belarus.
“We strongly condemn the arrangement,” Miller told reporters at a Thursday press briefing. “It’s the latest example of irresponsible behavior that we have seen from Russia since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine over a year ago.”
Tit-For-Tat Escalations
Russian officials have tied the tactical nuclear deployment in Belarus to U.S. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) support for the Ukrainian government, which has been fighting Russian invasion forces since February of last year.“The collective West is essentially waging an undeclared war against our countries,” Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, said at a meeting with his Belarusian counterpart in Minsk, according to Russia’s defense ministry.