From: john hallam [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, March 19, 2015 1:52 AM

Subject: A-bomb survivor groups condemn Putin remark on nuclear
readiness/Putin’s Nuke Talk Worries European Leader

A-bomb survivor groups condemn Putin remark on nuclear readiness

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/03/19/national/a-bomb-survivor-groups-condemn-putin-remark-on-nuclear-readiness/#.VQpir44pqRk

Kyodo

Mar 19, 2015

NAGASAKI/HIROSHIMA – Atomic-bomb survivor groups in Nagasaki and
Hiroshima have condemned a recent remark by Russian President Vladimir
Putin that he was ready to put his country’s nuclear weapons on alert
amid the crisis in Ukraine last year.

Five Nagasaki-based groups said Wednesday they will send a letter of
protest to Russia demanding a retraction of the remark by Putin, which
he made in a documentary that aired on Sunday.

The groups state in the letter, to be sent ahead of a review
conference next month for the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, that
Russia should play a leading role in working with other nuclear-armed
nations to abolish such weapons.

They will also send a letter to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe requesting
that he lodge a protest against Putin’s remark.

Two groups in Hiroshima said they sent a protest letter to the Russian
Embassy in Tokyo, criticizing Putin’s comment as “an unforgivable act
that attempts to lead the country to an advantageous position by
threat.”

http://www.thetrumpet.com/article/12495.18.0.0/world/military/putins-nuke-talk-worries-european-leader

Putin’s Nuke Talk Worries European Leader

March 19, 2015 • From theTrumpet.com
By Jeremiah Jacques

Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a documentary broadcast
across Russia on March 15 that he was prepared to use nuclear weapons
if Western powers had tried to prevent Moscow from seizing Ukraine’s
Crimean Peninsula last year.

In one segment of the film, an interviewer asked Mr. Putin if he would
have considered placing Russia’s vast nuclear arsenal in a state of
combat readiness, and he answered: “We were ready to do this .…
[Crimea] is our historical territory. Russian people live there. They
were in danger. We cannot abandon them. … That’s why I think no one
wanted to start a world conflict.”

Putin went on to explain why Russia never took any nuclear actions:
“Despite all of the difficulties and the drama surrounding the
situation, the Cold War is over, and we do not need international
crises like the [Bay of Pigs],” he said. “Moreover, the circumstances
did not call for such actions.” Putin also said in the documentary,
titled “Crimea: The Path to the Motherland,” that he was surprised the
annexation went so smoothly for Russia.

The comments represent only the latest of many recent instances of
nuclear threats from Russia.

Several of the nation’s latest military drills have included
simulations of nuclear strikes; Russian state-run media recently ran a
program called “Putin Can Destroy nato With a Single Phone Call,”
during which it said Moscow could bomb the United States to
“radioactive ash”; and, in recent months, Russian bombers—often
equipped with nuclear weapons—have flown forays on the borders of nato
airspace.

The broadcast of the documentary comes during a time of worries that
Russia may soon attack the eastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol.
Conquering Mariupol could help Russia establish a “land bridge”
connecting mainland Russia to Crimea.

Reports from the European Union say that if Putin wages such an
attack, the EU might impose a new round of economic sanctions on
Russia. European Council President Donald Tusk says he is anxious for
Europe to begin taking on a greater role in checking Russia’s
expansionist ambitions. “We have to start to live without illusions,”
he said over the weekend, adding that Europeans should work toward “a
new and more ambitious defense and security policy” and “not only as
part of nato.”

Tusk continued: “We have to use this Ukrainian crisis also as
something like an education” for all of Europe about “how serious the
situation can be.” Tusk said taking action against Russia would be
difficult for Europe, however, given the lack of unity among EU
nations. “We have 28 different foreign policies,” he said.

At present, deep fractures remain in the EU’s political unity. But
Europeans, concerned by Russia’s ongoing nuclear saber-rattling and
the seismic geopolitical shifts underway to their east, are
responding. To understand more, read “Europe Rethinks Its Military
After Ukraine Confrontation.” ▪


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Peace Is Doable

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