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Home»International News»Putin ‘scared’ of ordering Nuclear strike, leaked FSB letters reveal
International News

Putin ‘scared’ of ordering Nuclear strike, leaked FSB letters reveal

TheStoriesBy TheStoriesNovember 25, 2022No Comments2 Mins Read
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Russian President Vladimir Putin is too “scared” to use nuclear weapons in his war with Ukraine, an email featuring a letter from a whistleblower at Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) reveals.

The email, which has been shared with Newsweek, is dated March 4. It is the first such dispatch sent by the agent, dubbed the Wind of Change, to Vladimir Osechkin, a Russian human rights activist who runs the anti-corruption website Gulagu.net, and is now exiled in France.

The FSB agent writes regular dispatches to Osechkin, revealing the anger and discontent inside the service over the war that began when Putin invaded neighboring Ukraine on February 24.

Igor Sushko, the executive director of the Wind of Change Research Group, a Washington-based non-profit organization, has been translating the correspondence from Russian to English since it began. He has shared all the emails in full with Newsweek.

The letter was analyzed by Christo Grozev, an expert on the FSB, on March 6. He said he had shown it “to two actual (current or former) FSB contacts” who had “no doubt it was written by a colleague.”

The March 4 email delves into whether the whistleblower believes, based on FSB insights, that Putin would be prepared to order a nuclear strike in his war with Ukraine that would “destroy the entire world.”

It was published just days after the war began, and months before Putin threatened that Russia was prepared to use nuclear weapons to defend its “territorial integrity.” U.S. President Joe Biden said on October 6 that the risk of a nuclear “Armageddon” is at its highest level since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, when many feared a nuclear war might be imminent.

White House national security advisor Jake Sullivan said that Washington and Moscow have held talks aimed at toning down rhetoric around Russia’s potential use of nuclear weapons and talk of nuclear strikes has been less noticeable in recent weeks.

The whistleblower suggested that “there a possibility of a localized nuclear strike” but not for any military objectives.

“Such a weapon won’t help with the breach of the defenses. But with a goal of scaring everyone else (the West),” they wrote.

The March 4 letter also details three reasons why the FSB agent believes Putin will not use nuclear weapons.

By Newsweek

Nuclear strike Russian President Vladimir Putin
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