The Potential to Even the Odds for Ukraine
"As you understand, without software and launchers, the missiles themselves are just blanks.""Accordingly, as has also been stated at a high level by the Russian side, the hypothetical use of such systems is only possible with the direct involvement of American personnel.""Naturally, we urge the U.S. leadership and the U.S. military to take a sober, reasonable, responsible approach to this situation."Sadly, I have to say that the powerful impetus of the Anchorage meeting in favour of agreements has turned out to be exhausted to a significant extent by adversaries' efforts [European leaders] destructive actions."Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
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"Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical," a senior Russian official said.
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"I think I want to find out what they're doing with them [ATACM missiles sent to Ukraine, to determine what might be done with Tomahawks].""Where are they sending them? I guess I'd have to ask that question."U.S. President Donald Trump
President
Trump's administration has been forewarned. DO NOT give Ukraine access
to long-range Tomahawk missiles with the potential to strike targets
deep within Russia. Should Ukraine receive such armaments and use them
as payback to Moscow for its strikes everywhere within Ukraine in
defiance to international rules of conflict aiming directly at civilian
infrastructure, including hospitals, apartment blocks, energy providers
and shopping centers, claiming that the Russian military targets only
military installations, this would be an act of terrorism on Ukraine's
part. Quite unlike Russia's examples.
Moves
the Trump administration has taken repeatedly toward resolving the
Ukraine conflict -- occasioned by Vladimir Putin's overarching plan to
annex Ukrainian territory for absorption into Greater Russia, when
Russia's full-scale military invasion saw the Ukrainian military
fighting back measure for measure in reacting to save its geography from
Mr. Putin's fixation on territorial expansion and subjugation of
Ukraine -- when Russian President Vladimir Putin met in August with U.S.
President Trump, have been "largely exhausted" stated Mr. Ryabkov in exasperation.
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| U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hand with Russian President Vladimir Putin, as they meet to negotiate for an end to the war in Ukraine, at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, U.S., August 15, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo |
The
fact that President Trump has been considering sale of new weapons over
the past few weeks, to Ukraine while criticizing Russia as a "paper tiger",
has not sat well with the Moscow contingent. A concerted Russian effort
at deterring the Trump administration's musing about providing the more
powerful missiles to Ukraine has been rather unnerving in Moscow for
its potential. Obviously providing advanced military technology to
Ukraine would see a direct conflict ensue between Russia and its
NATO-linked neighbours.
It
is European leaders who are the war-mongers, certainly not Russia is
the prevailing message out of the Kremlin. It seems that Mr. Trump's
evident weak spot for his Russian counterpart has groomed Russian
authorities to consider him collegial in nature, whereas the open
hostility evinced by Russia's East European neighbours mark them as
preparing for conflict with unassuming Russia which harbours no
intention whatever of launching new invasions as soon as Ukraine
falls.
"[Ryabkov has] drawn a firm line [with his comment that the momentum for resolving the Ukraine conflict had dissipated after the Alaska summit].""[With Trump considering the Tomahawk question], Moscow sees the situation as critical.""Moscow warns Trump about a more acute confrontation and expects him to make what it considers the 'right' choice."Tatiana Stanovaya, senior fellow, Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center
President Trump's casual remark that he had "sort of" made
a decision, but had yet to discern how Kyiv would use the weapons
beforehand, reflected the reality that the administration had not
decided to sell the Tomahawks to Ukraine. The Tomahawk technology with
its range of close to 2,500 kilometres depending on the variant
involved, in comparison to around 300 kilometres for ATACM missiles
previously provided to Kyiv, is serious business, placing Russia on
alert.
Despite that Putin had asserted that the missiles "won't change the balance of power on the battlefield",
while at a Russian foreign policy conference, the potential of the
Ukraine military using them definitely has the Kremlin on edge. The
weapons, warned Mr. Putin on another occasion, would represent a "qualitatively new stage of escalation" since they could not be fired without involvement of U.S. personnel. Supplying Tomahawks to Ukraine would create an aura with "severity of the consequences", he warned.
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A
former Russian deputy defence minister, Andrei Karetapolov, now head of
the parliament's defence committee warned darkly that Russia knew how
to shoot down these missiles and would in turn target any launchers
detected on Ukrainian soil.
"Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical.""We will find ways to hurt those who cause us trouble.""The only problems will be for those who supply them and those who use them."Andrei Karaetapolov
Not to be outdone, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned as well against the "new escalation" represented
by allowing Kyiv access to Tomahawks. To round out the concerns
expressed by the Russians, Keith Kellogg, the US. envoy to Ukraine,
informed Fox News that President Trump had authorized Ukraine to carry out long-range strikes with U.S.-made weapons, with the warning that "there are no such things as sanctuaries".
"After the summit in Alaska, there was hope that Trump was ready to continue dialogue with Russia and take our interests into account.""Donald has now thoroughly disappointed us with his trademark inconsistency."Andrei Baranov, pro-Kremlin newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda
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Spencer Platt/Getty Images |
Labels: Conflict in Ukraine, Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Tomahawk Missiles, U.S. President Donald Trump





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