No need to appeal: the Kremlin explained why they did not use nuclear weapons after a massive attack
The Kremlin explained that they plan to formalize the change in nuclear doctrine and advise the media not to pay too much attention to a new solution. The speaker of the President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Peskov told about Moscow's position on the use and non-application of nuclear weapons, the Telegram channel Roszma TASS. Russia posted a fragment of Peskov's answer to the questions of journalists about the absence of the consequences of the attack of 125 drones on the Russian territory.
Among other things, the Russians were interested in two questions. The first question is whether this attack can be considered provocation and a test for determination. The second is whether the Russian Federation will correspond to a nuclear blow to such actions of Ukraine, since the corresponding concept is laid in the latest nuclear doctrine. Peskov explained that it is not necessary to pay too much attention to the updated document.
According to him, a number of other legislative acts are formulated to him, and in the meantime, the Russian-Ukrainian war will continue. "Honestly, it is not necessary to appeal to this document. [Important decisions - ed. ] Will be formalized accordingly. The war will go in its own course, and here you do not need to look for references every time," - explained the Russian presidential spokesman.
It should be noted that on September 25, 2024 a meeting of the Security Council of the Russian Federation, at which Vladimir Putin spoke. The Kremlin head stated that he was updating the nuclear doctrine of the Russian Federation. According to his proposals, Russia will strike a nuclear blow even in a non -nuclear country if the attack occurs with the help of a nuclear country. In addition, they took the territory of Belarus.
Putin stated that the team would be launched at the crossing of the Russian border with air and space. A number of Ukrainian top officials responded to Putin's statement about nuclear strike. For example, representatives of the President's office stated that it was the last tool of the Russian Federation, so as not to allow the event to abolish restrictions on strikes in the Russian territory.
In his turn, the military observer and editor of "Military Focus" Igal Levin stressed that such statements of the Kremlin were talking about fear of Ukrainian attacks. The observer suggested that the forces of defense strike the Russian Federation without waiting for the permission of Western partners. Meanwhile, on the night of September 29, one of the most massive air attacks of defense forces for military purposes of the Russian Federation took place.