• Re: Jake Sullivan: US will act 'decisively' if Russia uses nuclear weap

    From Michele Fennelly White Chief Inform@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Mon Sep 26 01:47:02 2022
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.war.nuclear, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    In article <t1v4t7$39jlr$6@news.freedyn.de>
    <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

    Yeah, we'll send Kamala to fuck everyone to death.


    America and its allies will act “decisively” if Russia uses a
    tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine, US national security adviser
    Jake Sullivan said on Sunday, reaffirming the Joe Biden White
    House’s previous response to mounting concerns that Vladimir
    Putin’s threats are in increased danger of being realized.

    “We have communicated directly, privately and at very high
    levels to the Kremlin that any use of nuclear weapons will be
    met with catastrophic consequences for Russia, that the US and
    our allies will respond decisively, and we have been clear and
    specific about what that will entail,” Sullivan told CBS’s Face
    The Nation.

    Sullivan said that the Russian leader Putin had been “waving
    around the nuclear card at various points through this
    conflict”, and it was a matter that Biden’s administration has
    “to take deadly seriously because it is a matter of paramount
    seriousness – the possible use of nuclear weapons for the first
    time since the second world war”.

    In a separate interview with CBS, Ukraine president Volodymyr
    Zelenskiy said he was not certain that Putin was bluffing with
    nuclear threats. “Maybe yesterday it was bluff. Now, it could be
    a reality,” he said. “He wants to scare the whole world.”

    The administration’s security chief said that Russia’s nuclear
    threat against Ukraine, including extending its nuclear umbrella
    over eastern parts of the country that are still being contested
    seven months after its invasion, would not deflect the US and
    its allies.

    “We will continue to support Ukraine in its efforts to defend
    its country and defend its democracy,” Sullivan said, pointing
    to more than $15bn in weapons, including air defense systems,
    hundreds of artillery pieces and rounds of artillery, that the
    US has supplied to Ukraine.

    He said that Moscow’s mobilization of troops was a “sham
    referenda in the occupied regions” that would not deter the US.
    “What Putin has done is not exactly a sign of strength or
    confidence – frankly, it’s a sign that they’re struggling badly
    on the Russian side,” Sullivan said.

    But, Sullivan added, it is “too soon to make comprehensive
    predictions” about a collapse of Russian forces.

    “I think what we are seeing are signs of unbelievable struggle
    among the Russians – you’ve got low morale, where the soldiers
    don’t want to fight. And who can blame them because they want no
    part of Putin’s war of conquest in their neighboring country?”

    Sullivan continued: “Russia is struggling, but Russia still
    remains a dangerous foe, and capable of great brutality.” He
    alluded to mass burial sites containing hundreds of graves that
    Ukrainian forces found after recapturing Izium from Russia and
    said, “We continue to take that threat seriously.”

    He added that the US, the International Atomic Agency and
    Ukraine nuclear regulators are working together to ensure there
    is no “melt-down” at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in eastern
    Ukraine.

    The Russians, he said, had been “consistently implying that
    there may be some kind of accident at this plant”.

    Reactors at the plant, Sullivan said, had been put into “cold
    storage” to “try to make sure there is no threat posed by a melt-
    down or something else at the plant. But it’s something we all
    have to keep a close eye on.”

    Separately, Sullivan said US criticism of a crackdown on
    mounting protests in Iran after the death in police custody of
    22-year-old Mahsa Amini would not affect the administration’s
    offer to lift sanctions on Iran as part of the effort to reach a
    deal on nuclear enrichment.

    “The fact that we are in negotiations with Iran on its nuclear
    program is in no way impacting our willingness and our vehemence
    in speaking out about what has been happening on the streets of
    Iran,” he said.

    Last week, Biden told the General Assembly of the United Nations
    in New York that “we stand with the brave citizens and the brave
    women of Iran who right now are demonstrating to secure their
    basic rights”. The US president’s remarks came shortly after a
    defiant speech by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.

    In his remarks on Sunday, Sullivan said the US had taken
    “tangible steps” to sanction the morality police who caused the
    death of Mahsa Amini.

    “We’ve taken steps to make it easier for Iranians to be able to
    get access to the internet and communications technologies to
    talk to one another and talk to the world and we will do all
    that we can to support the brave people, the brave women, of
    Iran,” Sullivan said.

    But Sullivan refused to be drawn out on whether the US would
    change its policy on lifting sanctions in exchange for a nuclear
    deal in light of the protests.

    “We’re talking about diplomacy to prevent Iran from ever getting
    a nuclear weapon,” he said. “If we … succeed …, the world,
    America and its allies will be safer.”

    But the pursuit of a nuclear deal, Sullivan said, “would not
    stop us in any way from pushing back and speaking out on Iran’s
    brutal repression of its citizens and its women. We can and will
    do both.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/25/us-russia- ukraine-war-nuclear-weapons-jake-sullivan

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