PRESSURE

Putin ally: Nuclear weapons in Baltic if Finland and Sweden join NATO

File photo showing Dimitry Medvedev (R), a close ally to Russian President Vladimir Putin who served as president between 2008 and 2012, with President of Turkmenistan Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov. Photo: Archive of the President of Russia.

He specifically mentioned the possibility of stationing Iskander missiles, hypersonic weapons and nuclear-armed naval vessels in the region effectively within range of the homes of Finns and Swedes

Russia will consider stationing nuclear weapons in the Baltic region if Finland and Sweden join NATO, Dimitry Medvedev, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin, said in Moscow on Thursday.

"If that happens, we can no longer speak about nuclear-free status for the Baltic," Medvedev, who served as Russian president between 2008 and 2012 and is currently the deputy head of Russia's security council, said on his Telegram channel.

He specifically mentioned the possibility of stationing Iskander missiles, hypersonic weapons and nuclear-armed naval vessels in the region effectively within range of the homes of Finns and Swedes.

"We are hoping that the common sense of our northern partners will prevail," otherwise Russia would act, Medvedev said amid increased debate in the two countries about applying for NATO membership in the changed security environment following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

NATO has indicated that it would welcome an application from the two countries.

"That means that Russia will have more officially registered opponents," Medevedev said, noting that Finland's accession to the alliance would more than double Russia's borders with NATO territory.

Border security

This border would then have to be secured by an increase in anti-aircraft and naval forces, he said.

Sweden and Finland had had nothing to fear from Russia so far, he said. "We do not have territorial disputes with these countries as we do with Ukraine. Therefore, the price of membership is different for us," Medvedev said.

Russia is strongly opposed to Ukraine becoming a NATO member, citing moves in this direction as one of the reasons for seizing the Crimean Peninsula in 2014.

Putin has repeatedly warned of war between Russia and NATO.

CIA warnings

CIA chief Bill Burns warned that given Russia's military setbacks in Ukraine, the possible threat of a Russian use of tactical nuclear bombs should not be taken lightly.

"We've seen some rhetorical posturing on the part of the Kremlin," Burns noted. But "so far we haven't seen a lot of practical evidence of the kind of deployments or, you know, military dispositions that would, you know, reinforce that concern," he said at Georgia Tech university in the southern US state of Georgia on Thursday.

Lithuania's President Gitanas Nauseda described Russia's threat to station nuclear weapons in the Baltic region as "an empty shot in the air."

"I don't know if it is possible to restation something that is basically already stationed," said Nauseda, adding that Russia already had nuclear weapons in its Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad.

Lithuanian Defence Minister Arvydas Anusauskas said the threat seemed "rather strange."

"Nuclear weapons have always been kept in the Kaliningrad region," Anusauskas told the BNS agency.