The US withdrawal from the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty is
raising concerns in Russia that it would lead to the deployment of
land-based US missiles along their borders in Eastern Europe. Russian
officials warn this could create a crisis comparable to the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.
This is not a totally unfounded concern. The INF treaty’s dissolution,
and the expansion of NATO all the way to Russia’s border indeed would
create such a possibility. Russian officials have made clear they would
respond to try to maintain deterrence, and prevent NATO having an
overwhelming nuclear advantage. Though there are no formal plans for
such deployments by NATO announced publicly yet, the Eastern European
members are overwhelmingly hostile to Russia, and would endorse such
deployments.
Russian Deputy FM Sergei Ryabkov warned that such a deployment meant the
situation “won’t just get more complicated, it will escalate right to
the limit,” saying it would be worse that nuclear scares of the 1980s
and comparable to the Cuban crisis, generally believed to be the closest
the nations came to a nuclear exchange during the Cold War.
This could be particularly dangerous at this time, as US-Russia
relations are at what some officials are calling an all-time low, and
there is an extreme lack of diplomatic engagement of the sort that could
prevent this sort of dangerous escalation.
Did you know that one sub commander ordered his nuclear armed missile fired at the USA during the Cuban missile crisses . He was talked out of this by the man that saved the world . The man that saved the world never received the glory he deserved either . Not from Russia or the USA . This is a very interesting story And could teach us all something .
Yup, the peacemakers walk unnoticed while the warmongers bray unendingly.
That’s just another increasingly likely way that the world as we know it may come to an end in the near future, with the US self-righteously leading everyone off a cliff. We have such power, if only it were used for good.