Russia & FSU

Moscow ally announces snap nuclear drill

Belarus is following Russia in testing its weapons platforms that can carry atomic payloads A Belarusian Sukhoi Su-25 jet during a military exercise © Belarusian Ministry of Defense Telegram channel

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has ordered the military to test its nuclear-capable weapon systems, the Defense Ministry in Minsk announced on Tuesday.

Moscow announced a similar drill on Monday, citing hostile rhetoric by Western officials that it believes necessitates a show of force. Belarus hosts some of Russia’s nuclear arsenal as part of a sharing arrangement similar to the one NATO nations employ.

Defense Minister Viktor Khrenin said a battery of Iskander missile launchers and a squadron of Sukhoi Su-25 close air support jets will be involved in the snap exercise.

Russia possesses a full range of nuclear weapons, from powerful warheads mounted on intercontinental ballistic missiles to smaller versions suitable for shorter-range delivery systems. “Tactical” nukes are meant to be deployed at a lower level of military planning and are primarily meant for inflicting damage on enemy troops and fortifications. By contrast, strategic weapons create deterrence by guaranteeing an unacceptable level of destruction to any potential aggressor.

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced plans to store a small number of tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus last year, amid escalating tensions with the US and its allies over Ukraine.

READ MORE: Message to the West: What’s behind Russia’s tactical nuclear drills

Washington has had a similar arrangement with several NATO members for decades. Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Türkiye are estimated to host several dozen B-61 nuclear gravity bombs on their soil.

Moscow has long objected to that practice, as well as the training of other NATO members in how those weapons can be used. Those actions violate the spirit of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, Russia believes. The country’s leadership cited Western policies as justifying the agreement it sealed with Belarus.

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