from Russia again there are nuclear outbreaks
Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in the environment that “The Western threat speaks of a nuclear power like Russia, for danger in the face of danger, there may be terrorist-related threats that may arise.”
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sparked the most serious crisis in relations between Russia and the West since the temporary crisis of 1962, when many feared the world was on the brink of a nuclear war.
According to Medvedev, who currently holds the post of chairman of the Russian Security Council, courts or tribunals will subsequently be used to investigate Russian actions in Ukraine, which will be useless and fraught with global catastrophe.
“The idea of punishing a country that has nuclear capability is absurd in itself. And he proposes to create a threat to humanity, ”- wrote Dmitry Medvedev in Telegram.
According to the Federation of American Scientists, Russia and the US control about 90% of the world’s nuclear warheads, and their military stockpiles are about 4,000 warheads each.
Another material from the Polygraph project, an online resource created by the Voice of America to prevent the spread of disinformation in foreign media and social networks (Polygraph.info), seems to have set the tone for this nuclear threat Putin himself.
Just three days after the start of the invasion of Ukraine, faced with what happened and the unanimous response of the West, Vladimir Putin ordered the transfer of Russian nuclear forces to a special mode of combat duty. This move, perceived as an escalation, causes and fears the outbreak of nuclear war around the world.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg then called Putin’s decree “dangerous rhetoric” and “irresponsible behavior.”
President of the U.S.A Joe Biden it is recommended to ease stress, to say that Americans should not worry about nuclear threats from Russia. A White House spokesman told Reuters that “the nuclear danger is impossible and impossible to locate.”
However, Putin’s “nuclear” order of February 27 was not enforced by an isolated event. He carried out nuclear attacks before and after. Putin made so many such threats that on June 23, 65, the countries that ratified the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons issued a joint declaration in Vienna condemning the Russian nuclear threat.
“In response to Russia’s nuclear threats and the increasing danger of nuclear war, the States Parties to the Weapons Ban Treaty have unequivocally condemned any and all nuclear threats, explicit or implicit, independent of events,” the document says.
This declaration became the basis for the creation of a new global alliance “to counter unacceptable and illegal nuclear threats and threats of nuclear war.”
In June, a group of US Republican congressmen bought the White House a “stronger response” to Russia’s gunfight in Ukraine and beyond.
Lawmakers pointed specifically to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who threatened “those who stand in his way,” saying “the consequences will be built, no one has ever seen in all of history,” The Hill reported.
Earlier, shortly after the start of the invasion of Ukraine, speaking at the Georgia Institute of Technology, the director of the CIA William Burns referred to “possible recklessness” and Putin’s failures, the probabilities that could lead to excessive deaths and were at risk to come from the danger in northern Ukraine after the unsuccessful subsequent capture of Kyiv.
In all of this, “none of us can be lightly challenged by the threat posed by the potential use of tactical or low-yield weapons,” then CIA director.