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Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future - Strategic ...

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sia is a great nuclear power. No one disputes or doubts<br />

this. And the United States <strong>and</strong> Russia definitely have<br />

a shared interest in ensuring security on this planet. 46<br />

The Putin government offered full support to the<br />

<strong>Strategic</strong> <strong>Nuclear</strong> Forces <strong>and</strong> parts of the military-industrial<br />

complex (MIC) responsible for the development,<br />

maintenance <strong>and</strong> modernization of the country’s<br />

missile-nuclear shield. In a typical statement<br />

dated June 9, 2006, at an important meeting with heads<br />

of enterprises belonging to MIC, the second <strong>Russian</strong><br />

President declared:<br />

Our country’s nuclear potential is of vital importance<br />

for our national security interests. The reliability of our<br />

‘nuclear shield’ <strong>and</strong> the state of our nuclear weapons<br />

complex are a crucial component of Russia’s world<br />

power status. I do stress that our work to develop our<br />

nuclear arsenal must go h<strong>and</strong> in h<strong>and</strong> with the most<br />

stringent dem<strong>and</strong>s on reliability <strong>and</strong> security of operation<br />

<strong>and</strong>, of course, with strict compliance with all<br />

non-proliferation regimes. In this respect Russia’s position<br />

is firm <strong>and</strong> unchanging. 47<br />

The idea of using nuclear weapons in limited war<br />

was also gaining momentum under Vladimir Putin’s<br />

presidency. Senior <strong>Russian</strong> generals started talking<br />

about using them in exercises <strong>and</strong> in limited war already<br />

in the late-1990s. 48 The new version of the RF<br />

Military Doctrine of April 21, 2000, developed under<br />

Boris Yeltsin but signed by Vladimir Putin in his capacity<br />

of Interim President, elaborated the provisions<br />

pertaining to the limited use of nuclear weapons that<br />

were set out four months earlier in the “National Security<br />

Concept” <strong>and</strong> in this regard marked a qualitatively<br />

new stage in the development of <strong>Russian</strong> nuclear<br />

doctrine. 49 In particular, it stated:<br />

116

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