In 2018, when Vladimir Putin announced a raft of new hypersonic nuclear missile systems, complete with video graphics of intercontinental ballistic missiles headed towards California, he left it to the end of his lengthy two-hour address to Russian lawmakers to deliver the killer blow.
This year he wasted no time in pulling his punches, with fresh nuclear sabre-rattling and his by-now hackneyed critique of the “so-called West” coming pretty much straight off the top.
Russian forces had the initiative in Donbas and would continue to press their advantage, he said.
Those missile systems announced in 2018 were either in use on the battlefield or about to be, with fresh weapons in the pipeline.
Understandably, he wasted no time in responding to recent Western talking points about a possible ground troop deployment to Ukraine and whether Ukraine has the right to strike military targets outside of its borders.
The summary on both – NATO should think twice.
“They are selecting targets to strike on our territory and contemplating the most efficient means of destruction,” he said.
“They must grasp that we also have weapons capable of striking targets on their territory.”
And even though it was Mr Putin who recently flew in his freshly modernised TU-160M nuclear-capable strategic bomber, even though it was Mr Putin who boasted of his new Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile being now in service and ready to be demonstrated, even though the endless nuclear rhetoric tends to come from him, it was the West he blamed for dialling up the possibility of nuclear war.
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He said: “Everything they are inventing now, spooking the world with the threat of a conflict involving nuclear weapons, which potentially means the end of civilisation – don’t they realise this?”
What Mr Putin says, he means. What he denies, he often ends up doing.
A game Putin knows how to play well
When he accuses the West of certain behaviours, it is often because he is doing just that himself.
The question is always how much is bluff and how much is not, which is in itself the essence of nuclear deterrence. That is a game Mr Putin knows how to play extremely well.
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As for the rest of the speech, that was largely for the audience back home. Having babies is a must. The same old chat on traditional values. The economy is booming. Everybody is on board. The country is united.
This is after all a ‘campaign’ speech, besides being a message to his adversaries. For an ‘election’ he cannot fail to win.