Ignorance, the root and stem of all evil@ivan_8848
Emergency Alert
We are closer today than ever for nuclear weapons being used again. We are literally at the threshold of a nuclear war.
We have a Rear Admiral Brew Cannon in thenited States Strategic Command who speaks glibly about the America ready to have a nuclear exchange with the Russians.
Russia’s not bluffing.
– Scott Ritter
Bideoa: https://x.com/i/status/1860509658563153997
(9:11 m)
ooo
Nuclear War: What It Will Look Like—Scott Ritter, Steve Starr
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Hz5CeTpEdY)
Scott Ritter, former UN weapons inspector, and Steve Starr, nuclear weapons expert and director MU Clinical Laboratory Science program, go through what a nuclear war scenario would look like. This was taken from the 77th meeting of the International Peace Coalition on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024.
You can watch the full meeting here: https://schillerinstitute.com/blog/20…
Transkripzioa:
0:00
I’d like to begin by emphasizing that
0:03
Russia considers itself at war with the
0:05
United States and European nations
0:08
specifically the UK since the US and UK
0:11
have launched their missiles into the
0:13
territory of
0:14
Russia um and I I’ll this was a
0:18
statement made by President Putin in
0:19
September 12th when kir starmer came to
0:21
the White House when they were set to
0:23
initiate this attack but was delayed
0:25
until well after Trump was
0:28
elected for
0:57
[Music]
1:18
so they went ahead and attacked Russia
1:20
anyway and the US hides behind the Fig
1:23
leaf that it’s they’re allowing Ukraine
1:26
to make these decisions but as President
1:28
Putin pointed out
1:30
uh the decisions are made in Washington
1:33
the targeting decisions the programming
1:35
is all being done by the United States
1:37
technicians uh and the result was that
1:40
um the other day Russia used its new
1:43
intermediate range ballistic missile to
1:45
strike
1:46
Ukraine and this is a mved warhead which
1:49
means it can carry multiple uh
1:52
Warheads there looked like there were
1:54
six different uh War
1:58
separate groups of uh weapons so and
2:01
they some look some people say that
2:02
there were 36 total projectiles that hit
2:05
I don’t know I believe Larry Johnson
2:07
suggested it could have been six
2:08
missiles but at any rate these are
2:11
nuclear capable and um Russia was making
2:15
the point so what else has happened well
2:18
a couple days ago uh it was on Judge
2:22
napolitano’s uh broadcast Colonel
2:24
McGregor stated that Russia has placed
2:26
its nuclear forces on full
2:28
alert well I have a at least two sources
2:31
right now telling me that Russian
2:34
nuclear rocket forces are on full
2:37
alert they are at the highest level of
2:39
Readiness they have ever
2:41
achieved which means that they are
2:45
literally a short message away from
2:48
launching nuclear warheads on missiles
2:52
against anyone that threatens them
2:55
whether it’s the United States or it’s
2:58
surrogates in Eastern Europe Europe so
3:01
that much has happened which suggests to
3:04
me that the Russians have taken this
3:05
very
3:08
seriously uh I would think that the
3:10
United States would make a corresponding
3:13
increase in its Defcon status if Russia
3:15
if they detect that Russia has done that
3:17
so it’s very likely that both the United
3:19
States and Russia have moved to very
3:21
close to nuclear war fighting status
3:23
with their Defcon Russia has begun
3:25
production of mobile nuclear shelters
3:26
and distributing these These are
3:28
protected citizens from various threats
3:30
particularly radiation they can be
3:32
equipped with air
3:34
filters um Russia recently announced the
3:38
spokesperson for the foreign Ministry
3:39
announced that the uh agis ass Shore
3:42
missile base in Poland is now a priority
3:44
Target uh the US also has a similar base
3:47
in Romania the Polish base is 741 miles
3:50
away from Moscow that’s about the
3:52
distance of Quebec City from Washington
3:54
DC ranian base is 811 miles that’s like
3:58
Thunder Bay over on the North edge of
4:00
Lake Superior for Washington I suspect
4:02
the United States wouldn’t appreciate
4:04
that if they had missile bases placed in
4:07
those locations uh this these systems
4:09
use a mk41 vertical launch system and it
4:13
can be used to launch nuclear armed
4:14
Tomahawk cruise missiles this is a
4:17
selection of missiles that can be used
4:19
you know you can see uh in the center
4:21
anti-air Warfare the sm6 missile which
4:23
may eventually be replaced with a
4:25
Hypersonic weapon that can hit mosow in
4:28
four to five minutes I supposed to could
4:30
be fitted with a nuclear warhead but you
4:32
can see over here the Tomahawk missile
4:34
is is uh one of the weapons that’s
4:37
loaded into the Mark 41 this is an image
4:40
of the of the missile being loaded into
4:42
it on a ases of Shores ases systems are
4:45
used on Naval vessels so that’s why they
4:47
call it a Shore well Russia can’t verify
4:49
what’s in those containers you can see
4:51
over to the right that the missile goes
4:52
in the container and that’s the
4:54
structure so you can understand why
4:56
Russia would consider this to be a
4:57
priority Target because the Tomahawk
4:59
missile can hit Moscow in about an hour
5:01
or so and the Hypersonic weapons will
5:04
that soon defile will be in a matter of
5:08
minutes I think that if uh if they’re
5:10
foolish enough to attack the cursed
5:12
nuclear power plant they could start a
5:13
nuclear war Russia would retaliate with
5:15
the nuclear
5:16
strike the nuclear power plant is within
5:18
range of all the missiles the attack
5:21
them and Storm Shadow Scout missiles uh
5:24
and it has two older nuclear reactors
5:26
that are not protected by concrete
5:28
containment concered attack with the
5:30
swarm of missiles would could be you
5:32
know even though the Russians have been
5:33
shooting down the attack in the storm
5:34
Shadows it doesn’t mean if they get hit
5:36
with a swarm of them they’ll get every
5:37
single one each of these reactors and a
5:40
spent fuel pools contains at least 10
5:41
times more Long Live radiation than was
5:43
released by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster
5:46
you can see um this is a comparison the
5:49
rbmk Chernobyl type reactors that curse
5:52
these are the two there but a modern
5:55
reactor has this cylindrical concrete
5:57
Dome it’s about three feet thick and
5:58
lined with steel so they’re much more
6:01
difficult to hit the this is an interior
6:04
view of the Chernobyl 2 um reactor and
6:07
the curse reactor on the left is
6:09
Chernobyl uh that in the back that’s uh
6:12
is is the top of the reactors that’s a
6:15
top of the reactor in this one adjacent
6:17
to that is a spent fuel pool so they’re
6:19
right next to each other in a building
6:20
that doesn’t it’s not
6:22
protected U this this is a image that
6:26
the French nuclear irsn um organization
6:30
created to show the spread of CZ in 137
6:32
after the chal reactor blew up in
6:35
1986 uh these reactors have a graphite
6:38
core which will burn so the line at the
6:41
bottom down there U shows as a
6:43
progression over a 3-we period as
6:45
radiation spread throughout Europe and I
6:48
mean it went everywhere we got some in
6:51
North America too but uh uh the areas
6:54
around troville and bellus were were
6:56
really hard hit uh this is a map that
6:59
made in 1996 by the CIA the darkest red
7:02
areas are the exclusion zones are too
7:05
radioactive for people to live in
7:06
they’re still about 1,100 square mile
7:08
there C 137 has a 30-year halflife so um
7:13
to get five half life you will get down
7:15
to about 3% 10 half FES is 1% but you’re
7:19
talking about 200 to 300 years before
7:21
you can really live in an area like that
7:23
so that that shows you what the ram
7:25
implications of um hitting these
7:28
reactors well of course uh us and Russia
7:31
can each launch 800 to a th000 strategic
7:33
nuclear Wards at each other in a matter
7:35
of
7:36
minutes another thing they can do
7:38
Russia’s uh developed the this slide was
7:40
made by DR postl they have the Poseidon
7:43
robot unmanned submarine it’s a drone
7:45
it’s very large you can see the image of
7:47
the man standing above it and Dr postel
7:49
showed that it can fit a 100 Megaton
7:52
Warhead in the in the center in the tip
7:54
of this these things can go faster than
7:57
our Torpedoes they have unlimited range
7:59
they can loiter uh this is a picture of
8:02
the belgorod sub that carries them you
8:04
can see the six holes in the front where
8:05
they would be launched there are two of
8:07
these now that are
8:09
deployed this is an image of a 100 me
8:12
well this is a 50 Megaton bomb that was
8:14
detated in 1961 by the
8:23
Russians I believe this this Photograph
8:26
was taken at least 75 or 100 miles away
8:32
detonation was detonated a a remote area
8:36
where there weren’t a lot of forest or
8:38
anything but had it been detonated in an
8:41
area where it was heavily forested
8:43
Urban was set enormous
8:55
fires Dr postal created an image of what
8:57
it would like if what it would happen if
8:59
the Bel garod used six of these
9:02
Torpedoes these drone submarines to hit
9:04
the east coast and the the
9:09
largest yellow circular area depicts a
9:12
fire zone would be 177,000 square
9:14
kilometers for 6,500 square miles for
9:17
each one of these detonations would be
9:18
set on
9:20
fire now this is an a video I created
9:23
some time ago that shows what happens U
9:26
this is I shortened it a little bit but
9:28
it shows what happens when Russians
9:31
respond with an attack on NATO forces
9:32
and it goes from
9:40
there these are counter Force strikes
9:43
where the US responds and hitting
9:46
Targets in uh Russia
9:49
to take out its nuclear forces but it’s
9:51
not going to arrive in time for the to
9:54
do that and a fullscale nuclear war
9:57
results and there’ll be more 4,000
10:00
nuclear detonations that incinerate all
10:01
the major cities in the US Europe China
10:04
would probably be involved too but the
10:06
massive nuclear firestorms from these
10:08
would cover literally cover hundreds of
10:09
thousands of square miles everything
10:12
that’s flammable in the fire zone would
10:14
burn uh there would be no survivors the
10:16
air temperatures get to above the
10:18
boiling point of
10:19
water so if you live in a city that
10:22
would be what you would be looking at
10:24
the scientific studies predict that 150
10:26
to 180 million tons of s smoke and S
10:29
would rise into the
10:30
stratosphere and in a matter of 10 days
10:34
to two weeks the high winds in the
10:35
stratosphere would spread it around the
10:37
world it caus a global stratospheric
10:39
smoke layer to form and this smoke would
10:42
block about 70% of the sunlight in the
10:45
Northern hammerer and 35% in the
10:47
southern it would also destroy the
10:48
protective ozone layer that wouldn’t be
10:50
noticed immediately but it would after
10:52
the smoke begins to dissipate that would
10:54
be actually about 10 years before it
10:57
really would go away um
10:59
so 70% of the sunlight means that it’s
11:03
going to be at at noon on a day in in
11:06
June say in the northern hemisphere it
11:08
would be like having a full moon out at
11:10
midnight that’s how much sunlight you
11:11
would
11:12
get uh southern hemisphere would be a
11:14
little bit less than that but it would
11:15
still cause temperatures to be too cold
11:18
for many years to grow crops and you
11:21
know the cold weather would cause the
11:23
death of most humans and land animals
11:26
initially the daily temperatures would
11:27
fall below freezing every day for up to
11:30
3 years in Central North America and
11:31
Central EUR Asia so that’s what we’re
11:34
looking at with a nuclear war um Kennedy
11:37
warned us about this and this is a
11:38
little you know we’re still at a point
11:39
where we can stop
11:41
this never have the nations of the world
11:45
had so much to lose or so much to
11:49
gain together we shall save our planet
11:53
or Together We Shall Perish in its
11:56
Flames save it we can
11:59
and save it we
12:01
must and then shall we
12:03
earn the Eternal thanks of
12:06
mankind and as
12:09
peacemakers the Eternal blessing of
12:20
God well Trump may be no Kennedy but I
12:24
agree with Scott Ritter that he needs to
12:25
act contact the Russians do everything
12:28
he can to stop it I would also suggest
12:30
that Biden needs to be impeached and
12:32
Francis Bole has written up articles of
12:34
impeachment that are
12:36
available thank you for your
12:39
attention thank you Professor star for
12:41
that and I actually would like to ask
12:44
especially given that you’re a former un
12:46
weapons inspector Scott Ritter uh if you
12:49
have a response to uh Professor Steve
12:56
star I think you’re muted there my
13:02
friend there we go okay there we go said
13:06
he uh I want to applaud him for laading
13:09
out the uh this this case succinctly
13:13
accurately um dispassionately almost too
13:16
dispassionately it’s not a criticism
13:18
it’s a reflection of his professionalism
13:21
except that uh people should be changing
13:24
their underwear in fear after listening
13:26
to what he said and yet I think his
13:28
soothing voice has calmed us into
13:30
believing that maybe this was just
13:32
another um you know academic
13:36
presentation it wasn’t he was laying out
13:39
uh the imminent demise of mankind
13:43
um and I I just I I I I I want to
13:47
reinforce that point um you know the the
13:52
Russian weapon that was used U you know
13:54
the the I’m getting ready to publish a
13:56
paper on this today if we make it
13:59
um that that breaks
14:03
down what I think it is there’s not much
14:06
literature out there but if you know the
14:08
history of Russian ballistic missile
14:10
design and and such this was a weapon
14:13
that
14:14
um
14:16
the it’s related to a weapon that the
14:19
Russians were developing the Soviets
14:20
were developing back in the early 1980s
14:22
called the
14:23
skorost and the skorost missile 15 J 66
14:28
um
14:30
was quickly developed by then U Minister
14:34
of Defense Ustinov to respond to the
14:39
planned deployment of persing 2 missiles
14:41
by the United States into Germany the
14:45
Russians were very afraid of the Persian
14:47
2 because once you launch the Persian 2
14:50
seven minutes later it hit Moscow and uh
14:54
the Russians were not happy about that
14:56
so they built this missile the skorost
14:58
which which was an amalgam of components
15:01
drawn from the ss20 Pioneer the mod 3
15:06
version of the pioneer the ss25 which
15:09
was still under development the SS 27
15:12
which was Top Secret Under development
15:14
nobody even knew it existed um and they
15:17
put it all together in a TW stage
15:19
missile uh topped with um conventional
15:23
warheads and they were going to flood
15:26
Czechoslovakia and East Germany with
15:28
these systems
15:29
uh and monitor on a continuous basis uh
15:33
the Persian two bases in the moment the
15:37
Persian 2 went to the field in a suspect
15:40
you know in in in a manner that looks
15:42
you know suspicious they would take it
15:44
out preemptively that was what the scst
15:47
was all about to preemptively take out
15:50
emerging threats um the the the the
15:54
system was nearing uh production
15:59
when the INF fact is it was ready to go
16:01
into production in March of
16:03
1987 um but in December uh Ronald Reagan
16:07
and Mikel gorbachov signed the
16:08
intermediate nuclear forces treaty so
16:10
the skuro went the way of history and in
16:13
doing so the skuro
16:15
um people need to understand again I I I
16:18
keep telling people you know there was a
16:21
time when we talked to the Soviets
16:23
there’s a time when we talk to the
16:24
Russians
16:26
um I I spent a lot of time at the
16:29
Russian Embassy in the last two years
16:31
attending functions and talking to anat
16:33
Antonov the Ambassador and talking to uh
16:37
Major General bobkin the defense ate and
16:39
talking to his officers uh and having
16:41
very detailed conversations I just you
16:44
know remind bobkin was a former um when
16:47
we started talking uh he was he’s a
16:51
strategic rocket forces guy who was in
16:53
an ss25 unit in Nova seers when I
16:56
inspected it in 1990
16:59
um what a small world we live in um and
17:02
he was sent to the United States to help
17:04
facilitate Arms Control talks how to
17:06
prevent the very crisis that we’re in
17:09
anaton Antonov is an expert on the
17:11
United States he speaks English fluently
17:14
um and he uh was of course the man who
17:17
negotiated the new start treaty with um
17:21
uh Rose gut Miller um he was ready to
17:24
engage again on extending the new start
17:26
to prevent exactly what’s happening Anon
17:29
Antonov was here for seven years and the
17:31
US didn’t talk to him uh bobkin arrived
17:35
and the first thing that happened is
17:36
that the ukrainians got him blackballed
17:39
in the defense adese circuit so nobody
17:41
talked to him had they talked to him as
17:44
I did they would have gotten an insight
17:48
into how the Strategic rocket forces
17:50
felt about the INF treaty about the
17:53
start treaty about disarmament about
17:56
what gorbachov did to them
17:59
um and what how they feel that impacted
18:01
their National Security and you would
18:04
understand that they were very bitter
18:06
about this entire experience they felt
18:08
that they had been weakened by it and
18:10
that they were ready to regain the
18:13
former glory of the Soviet rocket
18:16
strategic rocket forces um if you know
18:21
anything again if you’ve studied Russian
18:23
military history Soviet military history
18:25
you understand that the present day is
18:27
very much influenced by the
18:30
past so when the United States withdraws
18:35
from the intermediate nuclear forces
18:36
treaty in 2019 under President Reagan
18:41
Putin said you know we view this treaty
18:44
as being very important uh to prevent
18:48
war and so we will not develop new
18:51
intermediate Range Systems and will act
18:53
as if the treaty is in force so long as
18:56
you don’t deploy intermediate systems
18:59
into Europe of course earlier this year
19:02
and in NATO exercise in Denmark we
19:05
deployed intermediate nuclear forces
19:09
intermediate range missiles nuclear
19:11
capable to Denmark and the and Putin
19:14
said okay we’re uh we’re moving forward
19:17
and the byproduct of this is the missile
19:20
that was tested the other day um but
19:23
people don’t understand what this
19:24
missile is this missile is the
19:27
modern-day version of the
19:29
skorost you see the Russians are
19:31
building a missile that can be pushed
19:35
forward and be ready to
19:37
preempt dark Eagle our intermediate
19:40
missile uh the Russians just put the uh
19:44
Mark 41 AES of shore on notice in Poland
19:47
that is a target the target that will
19:48
destroy it is this look at what this was
19:51
this is a missile that makes use of not
19:55
the yars which is the what the rubz the
19:59
S rs26 which was this is derived from
20:03
used the yars first stage this uses the
20:06
cther first stage the cedar now most
20:09
people don’t know what the cedar is but
20:11
the ukrainians just came out and said
20:12
that it’s the cedar how would they know
20:15
well they have the debris and on the
20:17
debris are serial numbers and the serial
20:19
numbers show what the booster was this
20:22
is the most modern booster that the
20:25
Russians have um similar in size to the
20:28
RS so it doesn’t change the
20:29
configuration of the system but it has
20:31
unique solid fuel principles that allow
20:34
the the the the missile to burn
20:37
invariable speeds making it impossible
20:40
to Target the other thing it does is it
20:43
has the U it doesn’t use traditional mvs
20:46
I keep hearing people say multiple U you
20:49
know independently targeted Warheads
20:52
that’s not what this was not at all this
20:55
is the new system the new system is
20:58
instead of a bus a plate so to speak
21:03
where the WarHeads are attached that
21:05
separates from the the the missile and
21:07
then comes in and releases the WarHeads
21:10
to their target on a trajectory though
21:12
because it’s still moving as this
21:14
happens what we have now is independent
21:19
mini
21:20
missiles that are there and they fire
21:24
themselves so the the first stage takes
21:26
it up second stage puts it in then you
21:28
fire these independent missiles and
21:31
these missiles each one of them had six
21:34
large submunitions on them this is where
21:36
the name hazelnut comes from because if
21:39
you look at a hazelnut tree you look at
21:41
the Pod of nuts it’s exactly what you
21:45
see with these submunitions coming down
21:48
um this missile was developed
21:52
specifically to take out dark Eagle
21:56
missile arrays if you take a look at the
21:58
layout out the footprint of the dark
21:59
Eagle where the radar is where the
22:01
command and Communications are where
22:03
this this missile is designed to
22:05
annihilate that people kept saying
22:07
where’s the explosion it’s not meant to
22:09
be high explosive it’s meant to be a
22:12
kinetic kill and these submunitions come
22:15
down and they will kinetically kill
22:17
everything on the ground these
22:19
submunitions come down at such velocity
22:21
that if they hit the ages of shore it
22:23
will be a smoking hole in the ground
22:26
this is what this missile is designed
22:29
Putin just put us on notice that he has
22:33
a conventional missile system that is
22:35
designed to preempt anything and
22:38
everything NATO plans on doing to Russia
22:41
and there is no NATO response there’s
22:45
nothing they can do about it this is
22:48
literally the equivalent of the most
22:51
alpha wolf in the world coming in and
22:53
pissing all over your home that’s what
22:56
Putin just did and it didn’t have to be
22:58
there this way Putin said right there
23:00
your withdrawal from the INF treaty was
23:03
the greatest mistake you have ever made
23:08
because now you have compelled us to do
23:10
this and here we are we didn’t want to
23:13
be here but because of all the
23:15
provocations you’ve done we have
23:18
checkmated you and that’s the case I
23:20
don’t think the West has woken up to
23:22
what has just happened it is over over
23:26
for the West the only thing we can
23:31
do is nuclear
23:33
war and sadly we have somebody who
23:36
believes that we can have a nuclear
23:37
exchange I just again want to reflect
23:39
have people reflect on what that means
23:41
it means the Biden
23:43
Administration is ready to sacrifice 100
23:46
million
23:48
Americans for
23:50
Ukraine the Biden Administration is
23:52
ready to sacrifice 100 million Americans
23:55
for
23:57
Ukraine and is that what we want so I
23:59
want to thank uh Professor star for his
24:01
presentation was fantastic um you know
24:05
but guys this is as real as it gets this
24:07
isn’t theoretical the reason why I went
24:09
through all this the the stuff about the
24:12
uh this this missile is to point out
24:14
that sometimes when people talk about
24:15
weapon systems and all that people feel
24:18
a little remote from it they they they
24:19
they don’t they don’t identify with it
24:21
because it’s something they don’t
24:23
understand so I wanted to bring it in a
24:25
way that hopefully everybody understood
24:27
what’s going on what this represents how
24:29
real this missile is and what the
24:32
consequences of our actions are in
24:34
compelling Russia to develop this
24:36
missile and now the impossible situation
24:39
it’s put us in because understand it has
24:41
put us in an impossible situation a very
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dangerous
24:46
situation by ex by revealing this
24:49
missile and showing his willingness to
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use this Putin has literally given the
24:54
West two
24:56
options capitulate
24:59
or nuclear
25:02
war we have to find a way to find a
25:04
third option
oooooo
Scott Ritter/U.S. Tour of Duty@USTourofDuty
Read “On the Brink,” the latest from @RealScottRitterat http://ScottRitter.com.
(https://substack.com/@scottritter865190/p-152042997)
Nov 24, 2024
There’s an old saying, “Fool around and find out.” On November 19, Ukraine fired six US-made missiles at a target located on Russian soil. On November 20, Ukraine fired up to a dozen British-made Storm Shadow cruise missiles against a target on Russian soil. On November 21, Russia fired a new intermediate-range missile against a target of Ukrainian soil.
Ukraine and its American and British allies fooled around.
And now they have found out: if you attack Mother Russia, you will pay a heavy price.
In the early morning hours of November 21, Russia launched a missile which struck the Yuzmash factory in the Ukrainian city of Dnipropetrovsk. Hours after this missile, which was fired from the Russian missile test range in Kapustin Yar, struck its target, Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared on Russian television, where he announced that the missile fired by Russia, which both the media and western intelligence had classified as an experimental modification of the RS-26 missile, which had been mothballed by Russia in 2017, was, in fact, a completely new weapon known as the “Oreshnik,” which in Russian means “hazelnut.” Putin noted that the missile was still in its testing phase, and that the combat launch against Ukraine was part of the test, which was, in his words, “successful.”
Russian President Putin announces the launching of the Oreshnik missile in a live television address
Putin declared that the missile, which flew to its target at more than ten times the speed of sound, was invincible. “Modern air defense systems that exist in the world, and anti-missile defenses created by the Americans in Europe, can’t intercept such missiles,” Putin said.
Putin said the Oreshnik was developed in response to the planned deployment by the United States of the Dark Eagle hypersonic missile, itself an intermediate-range missile. The Oreshnik was designed to “mirror” US and NATO capabilities.
The next day, November 22, Putin met with the Commander-in-Chief of the Strategic Missile Forces, Sergey Karakayev, where it was announced that the Oreshnik missile would immediately enter serial production. According to General Karakayev, the Oreshnik, when deployed, could strike any target in Europe without fear of being intercepted. According to Karakayev, the Oreshnik missile system expanded the combat capabilities of the Russian Strategic Missile Forces to destroy various types of targets in accordance with their assigned tasks, both in non-nuclear and nuclear warheads. The high operational readiness of the system, Karakayev said, allows for retargeting and destroying any designated target in the shortest possible time.
Scott will discuss this article and answer audience questions on Ep. 215 of Ask The Inspector
“Missiles will speak for themselves”
The circumstances which led Russia to fire, what can only be described as a strategic weapons system against Ukraine, unfolded over the course of the past three months. On September 6, US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin traveled to Ramstein, Germany, where he met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who pressed upon Lloyd the importance of the US granting Ukraine permission to use the US-made Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) missile on targets located inside the pre-2014 borders of Russia (these weapons had been previously used by Ukraine against territory claimed by Russia, but which is considered under dispute—Crimea, Kherson, Zaporizhia, Donetsk, and Lugansk). Zelensky also made the case for US concurrence regarding similar permissions to be granted regarding the British-made Storm Shadow cruise missile.
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin (left) and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (right)
Ukraine was in possession of these weapons and had made use of them against the Russian territories in dispute. Other than garnering a few headlines, these weapons had virtually zero discernable impact on the battlefield, where Russian forces were prevailing in battle against stubborn Ukrainian defenders.
Secretary Austin listened while Zelensky made his case for the greenlight to use ATACMS and Storm Shadow against Russian targets. “We need to have this long-range capability, not only on the divided territory of Ukraine but also on Russian territory so that Russia is motivated to seek peace,” Zelensky argued, adding that, “We need to make Russian cities and even Russian soldiers think about what they need: peace or Putin.”
Austin rejected the Ukrainian President’s request, noting that no single military weapon would be decisive in the ongoing fighting between Ukraine and Russia, emphasizing that the use of US and British weapons to attack targets inside Russia would only increase the chances for escalating the conflict, bringing a nuclear-armed Russia into direct combat against NATO forces.
On September 11, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, accompanied by British Foreign Secretary David Lammy, traveled to the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, where Zelensky once again pressured both men regarding permission to use ATACMS and Storm Shadow on targets inside Russia. Both men demurred, leaving the matter for a meeting scheduled between US President Joe Biden and British Prime Minister Kier Starmer, on Friday, September 13.
The next day, September 12, Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke to the press in Saint Petersburg, Russia, where he addressed the question of the potential use by Ukraine of US- and British-made weapons. “This will mean that NATO countries – the United States and European countries – are at war with Russia,” Putin said. “And if this is the case, then, bearing in mind the change in the essence of the conflict, we will make appropriate decisions in response to the threats that will be posed to us.”
President Biden took heed of the Russian President’s words, and despite being pressured by Prime Minister Starmer to greenlight the use of ATACMS and Storm Shadow by Ukraine, opted to continue the US policy of prohibiting such actions.
And there things stood, until November 18, when President Biden, responding to reports that North Korea had dispatched thousands of troops to Russia to join in the fighting against Ukrainian forces, reversed course, allowing US-provided intelligence to be converted into data used to guide both the ATACMS and Storm Shadow missiles to their targets. These targets had been provided by Zelensky to the US back in September, when the Ukrainian President visited Biden at the White House. Zelensky had made striking these targets with ATACMS and Storm Shadow missiles a key part of his so-called “victory plan.”
After the approval had been given by the US, Zelensky spoke to the press. “Today, there is a lot of talk in the media about us receiving a permit for respective actions,” he said. “Hits are not made with words. Such things don’t need announcements. Missiles will speak for themselves.”
The next day, November 19, Ukraine fired six ATACMS against targets near the Russian city of Bryansk. The day after—November 20—Ukraine fired Storm Shadow missiles against a Russian command post in the Kursk province of Russia.
The Ukrainian missiles had spoken.
The Russian response
Shortly after the Storm Shadow attacks on Kursk occurred, Ukrainian social media accounts began reporting that Ukrainian intelligence had determined that the Russians were preparing an RS-26 Rubezh missile for launch against Ukraine. These reports suggested that the intelligence came from US-provided warnings, including imagery, as well as intercepted radio communications from the Kapustin Yar missile test facility, located east of the Russian city of Astrakhan.
Test launch of an RS-26 missile
The RS-26 was a missile that, depending on its payload configuration, could either be classified as an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM, meaning it could reach ranges of over 5,500 kilometers) or an intermediate-range missile (IRBM, meaning it could fly between 1,000 and 3,000 kilometers). Given that the missile was developed and tested from 2012-2016, this meant the RS-26 would either be declared as an ICBM and be counted as part of the New Start Treaty, or as an IRBM, and as such be prohibited by the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. The INF Treaty had been in force since July 1988 and had successfully mandated the elimination of an entire category of nuclear-armed weapons deemed to be among the most destabilizing in the world.
In 2017, the Russian government decided to halt the further development of the RS-26 given the complexities brought on by the competing arms control restrictions.
In 2019, then-President Donald Trump withdrew the US from the INF Treaty. The US immediately began testing intermediate-range cruise missiles and announced its intention to develop a new family of hypersonic intermediate range missiles known as Dark Eagle.
Despite this provocation, the Russian government announced a unilateral moratorium of producing and deploying IRBMs, declaring that this moratorium would remain in place until the US or NATO deployed an IRBM on European soil.
In September 2023, the US deployed a new containerized missile launch system capable of firing the Tomahawk cruise missile to Denmark as part of a NATO training exercise. The US withdrew the launcher from Denmark upon conclusion of the training.
In late June 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that Russia would resume production of intermediate-range missiles, citing the US deployment of intermediate-range missiles to Denmark. “We need to start production of these strike systems and then, based on the actual situation, make decisions about where — if necessary to ensure our safety — to place them,” Putin said.
At that time the western media speculated about the mothballed RS-26 being brought back into production.
When Ukraine announced that it had detected an RS-26 being prepared for launch on November 20, many observers (including me) accepted this possibility, given the June announcement by President Putin and the associated speculation. As such, when on the night on November 21, the Ukrainians announced that an RS-26 missile had been launched from Kapustin Yar against a missile production facility in the city of Dnipropetrovsk, these reports were taken at face value.
As it turned out, we were all wrong.
Ukrainian intelligence, after examining missile debris from the attack, seems to support this assertion. Whereas the RS-26 was a derivative of the SS-27M ICBM, making use of its first and second stages, the Orezhnik, according to the Ukrainians, made use of the first and second stages of the new “Kedr” (Cedar) ICBM, which is in the early stages of development. Moreover, the weapons delivery system appears to be taken from the newly developed Yars-M, which uses independent post-boost vehicles, or IPBVs, known in Russian as blok individualnogo razvedeniya (BIR), instead of traditional multiple independently targeted re-entry vehicles, or MIRVs.
In the classic weapons configuration for a modern Russian missile, the final stage of the missile, also known as the post-boost vehicle (PBV or bus), contains all the MIRVs. Once the missile exits the earth’s atmosphere, the PBV detaches from the missile body, and then independently maneuvers, releasing each warhead at the required point for it to reach its intended target. Since the MIRVs are all attached to the same PBV, the warheads are released over targets that are on a relatively linear path, limiting the area that can be targeted.
A missile using an IPBV configuration, however, can release each reentry vehicle at the same time, allowing each warhead to follow an independent trajectory to its target. This allows for greater flexibility and accuracy.
The Oreshnik was designed to carry between four and six IPBVs. The one used against Dnipropetrovsk was a six IPBV-capable system. Each war head in turn contained six separate submunitions, consisting of metal slugs forged from exotic alloys that enabled them to maintain their form during the extreme heat generated by hypersonic re-entry speeds. These slugs are not explosive; rather they use the combined effects of the kinetic impact at high speed and the extreme heat absorbed by the exotic alloy to destroy their intended target on impact.
Oreshnik missile impact on the Dnipropetrovsk military industrial complex
The military industrial target struck by the Oreshnik was hit by six independent warheads, each containing six submunitions. In all, the Dnipropetrovsk facility was struck be 36 separate munitions, inflicting devastating damage, including to underground production facilities used by Ukraine and its NATO allies to produce short- and intermediate-range missiles.
These facilities were destroyed.
The Russians had spoken as well.
Back to the future
If history is the judge, the Oreshnik will likely mirror in terms of operational concept a Soviet-era missile, the Skorost, which was developed beginning in 1982 to counter the planned deployment by the United States of the Pershing II intermediate-range ballistic missile to West Germany. The Skorost was, like the Oreshnik, an amalgam of technologies from missiles under development at the time, including an advanced version of the SS-20 IRBM, the yet-to-be deployed SS-25 ICBM, and the still under development SS-27. The result was a road-mobile two-stage missile which could carry either a conventional or nuclear payload that used a six-axle transporter-erector-launcher, or TEL (both the RS-26 and the Oreshnik likewise use a six-axle TEL).
In 1984, as the Skorost neared completion, the Soviet Strategic Missile Forces conducted exercises where SS-20 units practiced the tactics that would be used by the Skorost equipped forces. A total of three regiments of Skorost missiles were planned to be formed, comprising a total of 36 launchers and over 100 missiles. Bases for these units were constructed in 1985.
The Skorost missile and launcher
The Skorost was never deployed; production stopped in March 1987 as the Soviet Union prepared for the realities of the INF Treaty, which would have banned the Skorost system.
The history of the Skorost is important because the operational requirements for the system—to mirror the Pershing II missiles and quickly strike them in time of war—is the same mission given to the Oreshnik missile, with the Dark Eagle replacing the Pershing II.
But the Oreshnik can also strike other targets, including logistic facilities, command and control facilities, air defense facilities (indeed, the Russians just put the new Mk. 41 Aegis Ashore anti-ballistic missile defense facility that was activated on Polish soil on the Oreshnik’s target list).
In short, the Oreshnik is a game-changer in every way. In his November 21 remarks, Putin chided the United States, noting that the decision by President Trump in 2019 to withdraw from the INF Treaty was foolish, made even more so by the looming deployment of the Oreshnik missile, which would have been banned under the treaty.
On November 22, Putin announced that the Oreshnik was to enter serial production. He also noted that the Russians already had a significant stockpile of Oreshnik missiles that would enable Russia to respond to any new provocations by Ukraine and its western allies, thereby dismissing the assessments of western intelligence which held that, as an experimental system, the Russians did not have the ability to repeat attacks such as the one that took place on November 21.
As a conventionally armed weapon, the Oreshnik provides Russia with the means to strike strategic targets without resorting to the use of nuclear weapons. This means that if Russia were to decide to strike NATO targets because of any future Ukrainian provocation (or a direct provocation by NATO), it can do so without resorting to nuclear weapons.
Ready for a nuclear exchange
Complicating an already complicated situation is the fact that while the US and NATO try to wrestle with the re-emergence of a Russian intermediate-range missile threat that mirrors that of the SS-20, the appearance of which in the 1970’s threw the Americans and their European allies into a state of panic, Russia has, in response to the very actions which prompted the reemergence of INF weapons in Europe, issued a new nuclear doctrine which lowers the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons by Russia.
The original nuclear deterrence doctrine was published by Russia in 2020. In September 2024, responding to the debate taking place within the US and NATO about authorizing Ukraine to use US- and British-made missiles to attack targets on Russian soil, President Putin instructed his national security council to propose revisions to the 2020 doctrine based upon new realities.
The revamped document was signed into law by Putin on November 19, the same day that Ukraine fired six US-made ATACMS missiles against targets on Russian soil.
After announcing the adoption of the new nuclear doctrine, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitri Peskov was asked by reporters if a Ukrainian attack on Russia using ATACMS missiles could potentially trigger a nuclear response. Peskov noted that the doctrine’s provision allows the use of nuclear weapons in response to a conventional strike that raises critical threats for Russia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Peskov also noted that the doctrine’s new language holds that an attack by any country supported by a nuclear power would constitute a joint aggression against Russia that triggers the use of nuclear weapons by Russia in response.
Shortly after the new Russian doctrine was made public, Ukraine attacked the territory of Russia using ATACMS missiles.
The next day Ukraine attacked the territory of Russia using Storm Shadow missiles.
Under Russia’s new nuclear doctrine, these attacks could trigger a Russian nuclear response.
The new Russian nuclear doctrine emphasizes that nuclear weapons are “a means of deterrence,” and that their use by Russia would only be as an “extreme and compelled measure.” Russia, the doctrine states, “takes all necessary efforts to reduce the nuclear threat and prevent aggravation of interstate relations that could trigger military conflicts, including nuclear ones.”
Nuclear deterrence, the doctrine declares, is aimed at safeguarding the “sovereignty and territorial integrity of the state,” deterring a potential aggressor, or “in case of a military conflict, preventing an escalation of hostilities and stopping them on conditions acceptable for the Russian Federation.”
Russia has decided not to invoke its nuclear doctrine at this juncture, opting instead to inject the operational use of the new Oreshnik missile as an intermediate non-nuclear deterrence measure.
The issue at this juncture is whether the United States and its allies are cognizant of the danger their precipitous actions in authorizing Ukrainian attacks on Russian soil have caused.
The answer, unfortunately, appears to be “probably not.”
Rear Admiral Thomas Buchanan
Exhibit A in this regard are comments made by Rear Admiral Thomas Buchanan, the Director of Plans and Policy at the J5 (Strategy, Plans and Policy) for US Strategic Command, the unified combatant command responsible for deterring strategic attack (i.e., nuclear war) through a safe, secure, effective, and credible global combat capability and, when directed, to be ready to prevail in conflict. On November 20, Admiral Buchanan was the keynote speaker at the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Project on Nuclear Issues conference in Washington, DC, where he drew upon his experience as the person responsible for turning presidential guidance into preparing and executing the nuclear war plans of the United States.
The host of the event drew upon Admiral Buchanan’s résumé when introducing him to the crowd, a tact which, on the surface, projected a sense of confidence in the nuclear warfighting establishment of the United States. The host also noted that it was fortuitous that Admiral Thomas would be speaking a day after Russia announced its new nuclear doctrine.
But when Admiral Buchanan began talking, such perceptions were quickly swept away by the reality that those responsible for the planning and implementation of America’s nuclear war doctrine were utterly clueless about what it is they are being called upon to do.
When speaking about America’s plans for nuclear war, Admiral Buchanan stated that “our plans are sufficient in terms of the actions they seek to hold the adversary to, and we are in a study of sufficiency,” noting that “the current program of record is sufficient today but may not be sufficient for the future.” He went on to articulate that this study “is underway now and will work well into the next administration, and we look forward to continuing that work and articulating how the future program could help provide the President additional options should he need them.”
In short, America’s nuclear war plans are nonsensical, which is apt, given the nonsensical reality of nuclear war.
Admiral Buchanan’s remarks are shaped by his world view which, in the case of Russia, is influenced by a NATO-centric interpretation of Russian actions and intent that is divorced from reality. “President Putin,” Admiral Buchanan declared, “has demonstrated a growing willingness to employ nuclear rhetoric to coerce the United States and our NATO allies to accept his attempt to change borders and rewrite history. This week, notwithstanding, was another one of those efforts.”
Putin, Buchanan continued, “has validated and updated his doctrine such that Russia has revised it to include the provision that nuclear retaliation against non-nuclear states would be considered if the state that supported it was supported by a nuclear state. This has serious implications for Ukraine and our NATO allies.”
Left unsaid was the fact that the current crisis over Ukraine is linked to a NATO strategy that sought to expand NATO’s boundaries up to the border of Russia despite assurances having been made that NATO would not expand “one inch eastward.” Likewise, Buchanan was mute on the stated objective of the administration of President Biden to use the conflict in Ukraine as a proxy war designed to inflict a “strategic defeat” on Russia.
Seen in this light, Russia’s nuclear doctrine goes from being a tool of intimidation, as articulated by Admiral Buchanan, to a tool of deterrence—mirroring the stated intent of America’s nuclear posture, but with much more clarity and purpose.
Admiral Buchanan did couch his comments by declaring from the start that, when it comes to nuclear war, “there is no winning here. Nobody wins. You know, the US is signed up to that language. Nuclear war cannot be won, must never be fought, et cetera.”
The first hydrogen bomb tested by the United States, 1952
When asked about the concept of “winning” a nuclear war, Buchanan replied that “it’s certainly complex, because we go down a lot of different avenues to talk about what is the condition of the United States in a post-nuclear exchange environment. And that is a place that’s a place we’d like to avoid, right? And so when we talk about non-nuclear and nuclear capabilities, we certainly don’t want to have an exchange, right?”
Right.
It would have been best if he had just stopped here. But Admiral Buchanan continued.
“I think everybody would agree if we have to have an exchange, then we want to do it in terms that are most acceptable to the United States. So it’s terms that are most acceptable to the United States that puts us in a position to continue to lead the world, right? So we’re largely viewed as the world leader. And do we lead the world in an area where we’ve considered loss? The answer is no, right? And so it would be to a point where we would maintain sufficient – we’d have to have sufficient capability. We’d have to have reserve capacity. You wouldn’t expend all of your resources to gain winning, right? Because then you have nothing to deter from at that point.”
Two things emerge from this statement. First is the notion that the United States believes it can fight and win a nuclear “exchange” with Russia.
Second is the idea that the United States can win a nuclear war with Russia while retaining enough strategic nuclear capacity to deter the rest of the world from engaging in a nuclear war after the nuclear war with Russia is done.
To “win” a nuclear war with Russia implies the United States has a war-winning plan.
Admiral Buchanan is the person in charge of preparing these plans. He has stated that these plans “are sufficient in terms of the actions they seek to hold the adversary to,” but this clearly is not the case—the United States has failed to deter Russia from issuing a new nuclear war doctrine and from employing in combat for the first time in history a strategic nuclear capable ballistic missile.
His plans have failed.
And he admits that “the current program of record is sufficient today but may not be sufficient for the future.”
Meaning we have no adequate plan for the future.
But we do have a plan.
One that is intended to produce a “victory” in a nuclear war Buchanan admits cannot be won and should never be fought.
One that will allow the United States to retain sufficient nuclear weapons in its arsenal to continue to “be a world leader” by sustaining its doctrine of nuclear deterrence.
A doctrine which, if the United States ever does engage in a “nuclear exchange” with Russia, would have failed.
There is only one scenario in which the United States could imagine a nuclear “exchange” with Russia which allows it to retain a meaningful nuclear weapons arsenal capable of continued deterrence.
And that scenario involves a pre-emptive nuclear strike against Russia’s strategic nuclear forces designed to eliminate most of Russia’s nuclear weapons.
Such an attack can only be carried out by the Trident missiles carried aboard the Ohio-class submarines of the United States Navy.
Hold that thought.
Russia is on record as saying that the use of ATACMS and Storm Shadow missiles by Ukraine on targets inside Russia is enough to trigger the use of nuclear weapons in retaliation under its new nuclear doctrine.
At the time of this writing, the United States and Great Britain are in discussions with Ukraine about the possibility of authorizing new attacks on Russia using the ATACMS and Storm Shadow.
France just authorized Ukraine to use the French-made SCALP missile (a cousin to the Storm Shadow) against targets inside Russia.
And there are reports that the United States Navy has just announced that it is increasing the operational readiness status of its deployed Ohio-class submarines.
Trident D5 missile launch from an Ohio-class submarine
It is high time for everyone, from every walk of life, to understand the path we are currently on. Left unchecked, events are propelling us down a highway to hell that leads to only one destination—a nuclear Armageddon that everyone agrees can’t be won, and yet the United States is, at this very moment, preparing to “win.”
A nuclear “exchange” with Russia, even if the United States were able to execute a surprise preemptive nuclear strike, would result in the destruction of dozens of American cities and the deaths of more than a hundred million Americans.
And this is if we “win.”
And we know that we can’t “win” a nuclear war.
And yet we are actively preparing to fight one.
This insanity must stop.
Now.
The United States just held an election where the winning candidate, President-elect Donald Trump, campaigned on a platform which sought to end the war in Ukraine and avoid a nuclear war with Russia.
And yet the administration of President Joe Biden has embarked on a policy direction which seeks to expand the conflict in Ukraine and is bringing the United States to the very brink of a nuclear war with Russia.
This is a direct affront to the notion of American democracy.
By ignoring the stated will of the people of the United States as manifested through their votes in an election where the very issue of war and peace were front and center in the campaign, is an affront to democracy.
We the people of the United States must not allow this insane rush to war to continue.
We must put the Biden administration on notice that we are opposed to any expansion of the conflict in Ukraine which brings with it the possibility of escalation that leads to a nuclear war with Russia.
And we must implore the incoming Trump administration to speak out in opposition to this mad rush toward nuclear annihilation by restating publicly its position of the war in Ukraine and nuclear war with Russia—that the war must end now, and that there can be no nuclear war with Russia triggered by the war in Ukraine.
We need to say “no” to nuclear war.
I am working with other like-minded people to hold a rally in Washington, DC on the weekend of December 7-8 to say no to nuclear war.
I am encouraging Americans from all walks of life, all political persuasions, all social classes, to join and lend their voices to this cause.
Watch this space for more information about this rally.
All our lives depend on it.
#Nonuclearwar
oooooo