<<In his belligerent speech on September 30 announcing the annexation of
four Ukrainian regions, Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, made the
alarming assertion that the United States’ use of atomic bombs at the end
of World War II “created a precedent.” It is true of course that the United
States did use the bomb against Japan in August 1945, but Putin’s use of
the term “precedent” suggests that he was trying to use the atomic bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a justification for the possible Russian use
of nuclear weapons in the war in Ukraine.

Putin’s assertion is wrong.

The use of the bomb in August 1945 could have set a precedent for further
use, but it has not done so. The most remarkable fact of nuclear history is
that the bomb has not been used in war since 1945—a 77-year tradition of
non-use.

This tradition is not merely the result of luck but of effort. Since 1945,
numerous resolutions in the United Nations have confirmed that nuclear
weapons are instruments of terror and mass destruction, and that nuclear
war must be avoided. Even the nuclear-armed states justify their possession
as preventing war. The international community constructed a global nuclear
order of deterrence and nonproliferation (and, less successfully,
disarmament) in the effort to avert nuclear war.

The Soviet Union/Russia has been a key participant in the creation and
maintenance of this order. During the Cold War, Soviet leaders consistently
condemned the use of the atomic bomb on Japan and called it a war crime.
They also portrayed it as an anti-Soviet act, a sign of American
callousness and perfidy. Putin himself has expressed this view strongly. In
2007 he told a meeting of social studies teachers that no one should try to
make Russia feel guilty about the Great Purge of 1937: “in other countries
worse things happened,” such as the use of the atomic bomb against civilian
populations in Japan.

In 2013, Putin declared in an interview with the Kremlin-funded Russia
Today television channel  that “we know Stalin now like never before. He
was a dictator and a tyrant, but I very much doubt that in the spring of
1945, if he had been in possession of an atomic bomb, he would have used it
against Germany.” In Putin’s view, atomic bombing of civilians would be too
much even for the likes of Stalin, who had no problem carrying out
horrendous purges.

Putin’s judgment is certainly not something one must accept. Nevertheless,
his statements make clear that he viewed the atomic bombings with a unique
opprobrium.

Putin’s recent assertion that the 1945 atomic bombings constitute a
precedent thus contrasts oddly with his previous condemnations of them. The
assertion is also dangerous. As an editorial in the Russian newspaper
Nezavisimaia Gazeta stated last week—two days before Putin’s speech—“to
allow the possibility of a nuclear conflict, in thoughts and words, is a
sure step toward allowing it in reality.”>>

(Excerpted from: <
https://thebulletin.org/2022/10/the-precedent-the-world-and-russia-has-rejected/
>.)

Also look up:
I. <
https://defconwarningsystem.com/2022/10/14/russia-is-unlikely-to-use-nuclear-weapons-in-ukraine/
>.
II. <
https://theconversation.com/ukraine-war-why-the-world-cant-afford-to-let-russia-get-away-with-its-land-grab-lessons-from-history-191782
>.

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