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

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In response, <strong>Russian</strong> leaders threatened to retaliate<br />

with nuclear weapons to destroy the offending facilities.<br />

In September 2006, Interfax quoted retired Major<br />

General Vladimir Belous as stating that his country’s<br />

“military doctrine envisages that <strong>Russian</strong> Armed<br />

Forces are allowed to attack installations in foreign<br />

countries that threaten its security.” 35 That same<br />

month, two <strong>Russian</strong> submarines—one based in the<br />

North Pole <strong>and</strong> the other in the Pacific Ocean—each<br />

launched a ballistic missile towards the Kizha missile<br />

range in northwest Russia rather than the traditional<br />

Kamchatka test range in the <strong>Russian</strong> Far East. If the<br />

<strong>Russian</strong> Navy sought to attack targets in Pol<strong>and</strong> or<br />

other Eastern European countries, they would launch<br />

them in that direction. 36 Another <strong>Russian</strong> defense<br />

analyst, Alex<strong>and</strong>er Pikayev, acknowledged that Russia<br />

could use tactical nuclear weapons to ensure the<br />

elimination of threatening BMD systems in Eastern<br />

Europe. 37 In October 2006, Yevgeny Buzhinsky, the<br />

head of the international military cooperation department<br />

of the <strong>Russian</strong> Ministry of Defense, told the daily<br />

Izvestia that the <strong>Russian</strong> Government would consider<br />

NATO’s deployment of BMD near Russia’s borders as<br />

“a real threat to our deterrent forces” <strong>and</strong> “as an unfriendly<br />

gesture on behalf of the United States, some<br />

Eastern European nations <strong>and</strong> NATO as a whole.” He<br />

cautioned: “Such actions would require taking adequate<br />

retaliatory measures of a military <strong>and</strong> political<br />

character.” 38<br />

As U.S. BMD deployment plans continued in the<br />

following years, so did <strong>Russian</strong> threats of nuclear retaliation.<br />

Colonel-General Nikolai Solovtsov, the comm<strong>and</strong>er<br />

of Russia’s <strong>Strategic</strong> Missile Forces, warned<br />

in 2008 that should the governments of Pol<strong>and</strong>, the<br />

Czech Republic, or other neighboring countries agree<br />

381

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