On Saturday, the Russian president said he would station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus; Ukraine is calling for a meeting of the UN Security Council in response
By Dan Peleschuk KYIV (Reuters) -NATO on Sunday criticised Vladimir Putin for what it called his dangerous and irresponsible nuclear rhetoric, a day after the Russian president said he planned to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus. Putin likened the move on Saturday to the U.S. stationing its weapons in Europe, while insisting that Russia would not violate its nuclear non-proliferation promises. Although not unexpected, the plan is one of Russia s clearest nuclear signals since the beginning of its invasion of Ukraine 13 months ago, and Ukraine called for a meeting of the U.N. Security Council in response. While Washington, the world s other nuclear superpower, played down concerns about Putin s announcement, NATO said the Russian president s non-proliferation pledge and his description of U.S. weapons deployment overseas were way off the mark. Russia s reference to NATO s nuclear sharing is totally misleading. NATO allies act with full respect of their international commitmen
Putin has announced that he will station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus but insists Russia will not violate its nuclear non-proliferation promises.