Moscow won't deploy first despite 'rising' nuclear tensions
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a ceremony in Moscow, Russia, Dec. 8, 2022. (AFP Photo)


Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Moscow won't be the first to pull the trigger despite acknowledging that nuclear tensions were rising.

Putin insisted "we have not gone crazy" and Moscow would not be the first to deploy atomic weapons in the Ukraine conflict.

Speaking more than nine months after his forces launched their military operation, Putin warned the conflict could be "lengthy."

Russian forces have missed most of their key military goals since February, raising fears that the battlefield stalemate could see Russia resort to its nuclear arsenal to achieve a breakthrough.

"We have not gone crazy, we are aware of what nuclear weapons are," Putin said Wednesday at a meeting of his human rights council.

"We are not going to brandish them like a razor while running around the world."

But he acknowledged the growing tensions, saying "such a threat is rising. Why make a secret out of it here?"

He added, however, that Russia would use a nuclear weapon only in response to an enemy strike.

"When we are struck, we strike back," Putin said, stressing that Moscow's strategy was based on a "so-called retaliatory strike" policy.

"But if we aren't the first to use it under any circumstances, then we will not be the second to use them either, because the possibilities of using them in the event of a nuclear strike against our territory are very limited," he said.

His comments drew an immediate rebuke from the U.S.

"We think any loose talk of nuclear weapons is absolutely irresponsible," U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters.

"It is dangerous, and it goes against the spirit of that statement that has been at the core of the nuclear non-proliferation regime since the Cold War," he said.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, however, declared that the risk of nuclear weapons being used in the Ukraine conflict has lessened thanks to international pressure heaped on Russia.

"One thing has changed for the time being: Russia has stopped threatening to use nuclear weapons," Scholz said in an interview with Germany's Funke media group, saying it was "in response to the international community marking a red line."

"The priority now is for Russia to end the war immediately and withdraw its troops," he added.

Azov Sea

Meanwhile, intense shelling continued along the front in eastern Ukraine, with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announcing that strikes in Donetsk region's Kurakhove killed 10 civilians Wednesday.

"The Russian army carried out a very brutal, absolutely deliberate strike at Kurakhove, precisely at civilians," the president – who was named Time Magazine's "Person of the Year" earlier in the day – said during his nightly address.

The shelling in Kurakhove comes a day after Ukrainian artillery strikes killed six people in the Donetsk region's capital city of the same name, according to the Moscow-installed mayor.

Moscow had expected the fighting to last just days, but more than nine months after its forces entered Ukraine, Putin said its military operation could be a "lengthy process."

But he praised the announced annexation of four Ukrainian territories following September referendums held by Moscow proxies – denounced in the West as a sham.

"New territories appeared – well, this is still a significant result for Russia," Putin said, referring to Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions.

He also made special reference to Russia's gaining control of all the land along the Azov Sea.

"The Azov Sea has become an internal sea to the Russian Federation, that's a serious thing," he noted.

Despite its best efforts, Russian troops at no point have entirely controlled any of the annexed territories and were even forced out from the capital of Kherson after a months-long Ukraine counteroffensive.

Amid domestic fears of a new callup – which triggered an exodus of Russians abroad in September to avoid an emergency draft – Putin said "there is no need" for a new mobilization.

"Out of 300,000 of our mobilized fighters, our men, defenders of the fatherland, 150,000 are in the area of operations," including 77,000 in combat units, he said.