Russia warns of nuclear weapons in Baltic if Sweden and Finland join Nato
Moscow has
said it will be forced to strengthen its defences in the Baltic if Finland and
Sweden join Nato, including by deploying nuclear weapons, as the war in Ukraine
entered its seventh week and the country braced for a major attack in the east.
However, the
Lithuanian defence minister, Arvydas Anušauskas, claimed on Thursday that
Russia already had nuclear weapons stored in its Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad,
which borders Lithuania and Poland. That claim has not been independently
verified, but the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) reported in 2018 that
nuclear weapon storage bunkers in Kaliningrad had been upgraded.
The Russian
former president Dmitry Medvedev, a senior member of Russia’s security council,
said on Thursday that all its forces in the region would be bolstered if the
two Nordic countries joined the US-led alliance.
Medvedev’s
threat is the latest of many instances of nuclear sabre-rattling from the
Kremlin aimed at deterring western military intervention on behalf of Ukraine.
“We’re
obviously very concerned,” said the CIA director, William Burns. “Given the
potential desperation of President Putin and the Russian leadership, given the
setbacks that they’ve faced so far militarily, none of us can take lightly the
threat posed by a potential resort to tactical nuclear weapons or low-yield
nuclear weapons.”
But Burns
added: “While we’ve seen some rhetorical posturing on the part of the Kremlin,
moving to higher nuclear alert levels, so far we haven’t seen a lot of
practical evidence of the kind of deployments or military dispositions that we
would reinforce that concern.”
Finland and
Sweden are deliberating over whether to abandon decades of military
non-alignment and join Nato, with the two Nordic countries’ leaders saying
Russia’s onslaught on Ukraine has changed Europe’s “whole security landscape”.
Their
accession to the alliance would more than double Russia’s land border with Nato
members, Medvedev said. “Naturally, we will have to reinforce these borders” by
bolstering ground, air and naval defences in the region, he said.
Medvedev, a
close ally of Vladimir Putin, explicitly raised the nuclear threat, saying
Finnish and Swedish Nato membership would mean there could be “no more talk of
any nuclear-free status for the Baltic – the balance must be restored”.
Russia had
“not taken such measures and was not going to”, he said. “But if our hand is
forced, well … take note it wasn’t us who proposed this.”
Russia
borders the Baltic states of Estonia and Latvia, and the Russian exclave of
Kaliningrad is sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania.
Russia’s
deputy foreign minister, Alexander Grushko, said Moscow would take the security
and defence measures that it would deem necessary if Sweden and Finland join
Nato, adding that the move would seriously worsen the military situation and
lead to “the most undesirable consequences”.
Anušauskas
described the Russian threat as “rather strange” because, he said, nuclear
weapons “have always been kept” in Kaliningrad. “They keep nuclear weapons,
delivery vehicles, and have warehouses,” he told the Baltic News Service. “The
international community and countries in the region are perfectly aware of
that.”
In 2018 the
FAS analysed satellite images and concluded that the Russians had carried out a
major renovation of what appeared to be “an active nuclear weapons storage site
in the Kaliningrad region”. However, the analysts were unable to determine
whether nuclear warheads were already being stored there, were imminently about
to arrive, or would be moved there in a crisis.
“There is
indeed a storage site in Kaliningrad, known as Kolosovka. That is where nuclear
weapons for all units located in Kaliningrad would be,” said Pavel Podvig, a
military expert based in Geneva who runs a research project on Russian nuclear
forces. “There are conflicting reports about whether Russia actually has any
weapons in Kolosovka. We don’t really know.”
Hans
Kristensen, the director of the nuclear information project at FAS, said work
was still going on at the storage bunkers. “They’re working on security
perimeter now. So I doubt there are warheads in there,” Kristensen said.
Finland’s
prime minister, Sanna Marin, said on Wednesday that Finland, which shares an
810-mile (1,300km) border with Russia, was likely to decide on a Nato
application “within weeks”, while her Swedish counterpart, Magdalena Andersson,
said there was “no point delaying” the decision.
Ukraine’s
president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said Russian forces who have pulled back from
northern Ukraine after failing to take the capital were “increasing their
activities on the southern and eastern fronts, attempting to avenge their
defeats”.
The deputy
defence minister, Hanna Malyar, said on Thursday that Russia was massing forces
along the Russia-Ukraine border, in Belarus and in the breakaway Transdniestria
region of Moldova, with the eastern cities of Kharkiv, Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia
coming under missile attack.
Moldova
accused the Russian army of trying to recruit its citizens after British
military intelligence said Moscow was attempting to enlist fighters in
Transdniestria, a narrow strip of land held by pro-Russia separatists that is
within about 25 miles of the Ukrainian port of Odesa.
“Such
actions do not promote peace for all of us, our fellow citizens, for our
families. Such things are very dangerous and they must be stopped,” said the
Moldovan foreign minister, Nicu Popescu, without giving further details. The
Kremlin did not immediately comment.
The chief
military development of the day was the loss of Russia’s flagship missile
cruiser, Moskva, which sank in “stormy seas” while being towed to a port in the
Black Sea after an explosion.
The
Ukrainian southern military command claimed late on Wednesday to have struck
the Moskva with Neptune anti-ship cruise missiles, while distracting its crew
with an aerial drone, causing it to start sinking and forcing the crew to
abandon ship.
Russia’s
defence ministry initially denied reports that it had sunk and claimed the
fires had been extinguished. Four Russian ships that had gone to the Moskva’s
rescue were being hampered by stormy weather and by ammunition blowing up
onboard, it said.
But late on
Thursday, the ministry said in a statement: “The cruiser ship Moskva lost its
stability when it was towed to the port because of the damage to the ship’s
hull that it received during the fire from the detonation of ammunition. In
stormy sea conditions, the ship sank.” The crew had been safely evacuated, but
it marks the most significant military loss of a naval vessel since the
Argentinian cruiser the General Belgrano was torpedoed by a British submarine
in 1982.
Moscow said
the port of Mariupol was under its full control, but Vadym Denysenko, an
adviser to Ukraine’s interior minister, said on Thursday that the battle over
the seaport was “still ongoing today”.
Mariupol is
a key target in Moscow’s push to secure a land corridor between the self-proclaimed
republics in Donetsk and Luhansk in Donbas and Crimea, which Russia occupied
and annexed in 2014, and its capture would allow the Kremlin’s military
planners to redeploy vital resources farther east.
Russian
officials accused Ukraine of using helicopters to bomb a town in the southern
Bryansk region, about 6 miles from the border, saying seven people were injured
in shelling and describing the attack as a “deliberate strike on residential
buildings”. The claim could not be independently verified.
The Russian
retreat from around Kyiv has led to the discovery of large numbers of
apparently massacred civilians, drawing international condemnation and calls
for a war crimes investigation. The Hague-based international criminal court,
which deals with rights abuses, said Ukraine had become a “crime scene”.
The ICC’s
chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, said on a visit to Bucha, where officials say
more than 400 civilians died: “We’re here because we have reasonable grounds to
believe that crimes within the jurisdiction of the court are being committed.”
Moscow has rejected all reports of atrocities, which Putin has dismissed as
“fakes”.