Putin's nuke warning to West 'I have lots of weapons – this is not a bluff' | The Sun

AN unhinged Vladimir Putin has made a thinly-veiled threat to NUKE the West and declared he's "not bluffing" in a chilling address.

The deranged Russian tyrant said he had "lots of weapons" he was prepared to use against the West, which he falsely accused of "nuclear blackmail".



Putin has a massive army at his disposal and could scrambled two million troops at any given time.

In a chilling speech, he said: "When the territorial integrity of our country is threatened, we will use all the means at our disposal to defend Russia and our people, this is not a bluff. 

"Russian citizens can be sure that the territorial integrity of our homeland, our independence and our freedom will be secured by all the means at our disposal.

"Those who are trying to blackmail us with nuclear weapons should know that the winds may blow in their direction.

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He warned: "This is not a bluff."

Putin then ordered a "partial mobilisation" of 300,000 reservists to begin with.

He said: "To protect our Motherland, its sovereignty and territorial integrity.

"To ensure safety of our people, and people at the liberated territories.

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"I find it necessary to support the suggestion of the Ministry of Defence and the General Staff about declaring partial mobilisation in Russia."

The increasingly desperate leader said the move would only include "current reservists" who will be trained and sent to the frontline in Ukraine where Russian troops have continued to lose territory.

Putin also falsely accused Western countries if trying to “block” the independence of the so-called people's republics in eastern Ukraine.

“In order to force their will in brutal ways to other people. The aim of the West is still weaken and destroy, they are openly saying that," he ranted in his first televised address since the start of the war on February 24.

Last night he mysteriously cancelled a speech in which he was expected to order a full mobilisation of the country's military.

The tyrant was due to give what would have been biggest speech on the Ukraine war since he ordered the invasion of the neighbouring country in February but cancelled at the last minute.

Kremlin insider Sergei Markov then announced on the Telegram social media platform just over two hours after Putin was due to speak that his address was "postponed until tomorrow".

"The longer President Putin's already announced speech is delayed, the more serious announcements it will contain," added the political scientist, who is a former close advisor to Putin.

Pro-Kremlin propagandists then followed suit on Telegram, telling followers their wait for his speech had been in vain and it was time to call it a night.

Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of Russian state media news outlet RT, said "go to sleep"while presenter Vladimir Soloviev simply wrote: “Tomorrow!"

As the time ticked by, General Sir Richard Shirreff,the former NATO Deputy Supreme Commander, said the delay smacked of chaos behind the scenes.

"We saw it announced that it was going to be at 8 o'clock Moscow time," he told Sky News.

"We've just seen a tweet from RT to say it's not going to be on at 8 o'clock Moscow time – and anyway that has now passed.

"So this says to me there is a certain amount of chaos."

He said NATO must remain firm in the face of Putin using any speech an announce a full mobilisation.

"The bottom line though for the international community, and NATO in particular, is that we must not blink, and as the Ukrainian foreign minister said so clearly, it's an act of desperation," he said.

"If Russia sticks its head above the parapet, NATO will knock it off."

It comes as pro-Russian authorities in the Donbas revealed they will hold referendums on joining Russia this week.

These referendums would be highly unlikely to be free and fair, according to international observers.

If these territories vote to join Russia, it would give Putin the justification to launch a full invasion of the region.

He would also be able to station his fearful nuclear arsenal in Ukraine, as he would claim the territory as part of his own country, further escalating tensions of an apocalyptic strike.

Even before Putin's announcement, the United States condemned what it called "sham" referendums and said it wouldn't recognise the results.

"These referenda are an affront to the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity that underpin the international system," said White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.

"If this does transpire, the United States will never recognize Russia's claims to any purportedly annexed parts of Ukraine."

And NATO secretary-general Jens Stolrenberg said: "Sham referendums have no legitimacy and do not change the nature Russia war of aggression against.

"This is a further escalation in Putin’s war. The international community must condemn this blatant violation of international law and step up support for Ukraine."

These four states form a land corridor between Ukraine's eastern border with Russia and the annexed territory of Crimea, which Vlad's army seized in 2014.

Under their proposals, people will be asked if they want to become part of Russia.

Full mobilisation of Russia would mean the potential of pulling up to two million reservists for Vlad's military operation in Ukraine.

Putin has so far not used the term 'war' for Russia's actions in Ukraine prefer

Ahead of the speech, the country's parliament passed a new law bringing in stricter punishment for soldiers who refuse to fight.

Unconfirmed reports claim that all fighting-age men between the ages of 18 and 65 will be banned from leaving Russia and the occupied territories in Ukraine from midnight Wednesday morning.

It comes as Simonyan claimed that the country is on the brink of a nuclear war.

"Judging by what is happening and still about to happen, this week marks either the eve of our imminent victory or the eve of nuclear war," she wrote on Twitter.

This week marks either the eve of our imminent victory or the eve of nuclear war

The last time Putin made such an address to the nation was on February 24 on the eve of war, when he announced Russia's "special military operation" in Ukraine.

News of the unexpected address comes just hours after pro-Russian separatists in the Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics announced they will hold referendums on joining Russia this month.

Both regions in eastern Ukraine are expected to hold votes between September 23 and 27.

Previous votes were postponed as Ukraine launched lightning advances and covert sabotage behind Russian lines.

A similar scheme in 2014 saw the Kremlin lay claim to occupied Crimea.

Putin ally Dmitry Medvedev, who served as Russia's president between 2008 and 2012, bragged that the votes would alter the geopolitical landscape in Moscow's favour forever.

He said: "Encroachment into Russian territory is a crime and if it is committed, that allows you to use all possible force in self-defence.

"That is why these referendums are so feared in Kyiv and in the West. That is why they need to be carried out," he added.

Experts warned the votes raised the risk of nuclear war – because Russian nuclear doctrine allows the use of its nukes to defend the motherland.

It comes as Putin's army faces a battlefield reversal in much of northeastern Ukraine, which may have forced him to make one final throw of the dice and consolidate his gains in the southeast of the country.

If he loses control of Crimea, his position would be even more vulnerable.

Ukrainian intelligence has warned this week that Putin's propaganda may be preparing the people for full mobilisation in Ukraine.

Major General Vadym Skibitskyi from Ukraine's Ministry of Defence told the Kyiv Post: "Today we have started collecting information; this mobilisation-related information rhetoric in the Russian Federation has greatly increased."

He added that Russian politicians were claiming that "the Russian army cannot cope, it is necessary to declare war and mobilise".

Skibitskyi said that "there may be support for general mobilisation in Russia".

In recent days, Putin's close allies have urged him to mobilise the nation, which could add an additional two million soldiers to Vlad's army.

Putin has been unable to mobilise Russia’s reserves because he refused to declare war on Ukraine, insisting his invasion was special military operation.

He could also row back on a promise – which has already been broken – not to send conscripts to the front.

At least 25,000 Russian soldiers have been killed in action in Ukraine with another 55,000 injured, captured or lost to desertion, Defence Minister Ben Wallace said.

The struggle to generate cannon fodder was exposed by a Russian mercenary leader Yevgeniy Prigozhin telling convicts in a prison yard: "If you serve six months (in Wagner), you are free."

But he added: "If you arrive in Ukraine and decide it's not for you, we will execute you."

Warlord Ramzan Kadyrov, leader of Chechnya, called last Thursday for every Russian provincial leader to pull together 1,000 volunteers to join the fight.

However, it's been assumed in the West that Putin would only turn to general mobilisation as a last resort, as this would make the war unavoidable for ordinary Russians, and could galvanise opposition.

Dr Mike Martin, a Visiting Fellow at the Department of War Studies at King's College London wrote on Twitter: "Mobilisation in Russia doesn't solve anything. It takes months and months to turn civilians into soldiers.

"Russia needs soldiers yesterday, not in six months. It also doesn't solve their equipment problems nor their logistic problems."

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Jake Sullivan said that Putin's "mobilisation measures" were an indication of Ukraine's recent battlefield successes.

"Russia is scraping for personnel," he said. "These are not the actions of a confident country. These are not acts of strength."

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