“HAVE I MADE MYSELF CLEAR?”
... Excerpt
by Jim Quinn
December 09, 2015.
Possible reactions to Vlad’s…er…suggestion/warning/head’s-up/Yo!/innuendo about using nukes?: shock-induced sound of crickets; abated breath; WTF?; switch to Defcon 3? 2?…. Is it possible that he knows the West is considering using use them (and keeping it from the populace), so in concert with his being forthcoming about what the West has/hasn’t done as of late, he’s letting the world and the West in particular, know that his position is, “Hey, bring it”? Or, has he had enough of this xy#$% and drawing his line in the sand by playing the ‘Nuke” card?
It’s one thing when xy#$%-crazy Kim Jong-un or “Maybe-we-have-nukes-maybe-we-don’t” Iran chatter about using ’em. But Putin?……sheeee-it. First of all, Putin doesn’t chatter. Secondly, because he doesn’t chatter, when he hints at the possibility of using nukes ya’ have to go, “I’m sorry, what did you say?”
In my mind this man does not say anything without a valid reason.
Putin Hopes “There Will Be No Need To Nuke” The Islamic State
Earlier today, in a clear advance notice to the French and US navies which are both set to arrive just off the coast of Syria in the coming weeks, Russia for the first time targeted Islamic State targets in Syria with Kalibr land-attack cruise missiles launched from a submarine in the Mediterranean Sea off the Syrian coastline, according to Russia’s Defense Minister.
According to RT, the 3M-54 Kalibr missiles were launched from the Kilo-class diesel-electric submarine “Rostov-on-Don”, Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu told President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.
While as reported here before, Russian warships based in the Caspian and Mediterranean seas had launched similar missiles targeting ISIS positions in late November, this was the first time that Russia has targeted IS in Syria from a submarine.
According to a Kremlin transcript of the conversation, Shoigu told Putin that the missiles successfully targeted two major terrorist positions in the territory of Raqqa, adding that “we can say with absolute confidence that significant damage has been inflicted upon ammunition warehouses and a mine production plant, as well as the oil infrastructure.”
In addition to the submarine, a Russian Ministry of Defense source revealed that the Rostov-on-Don, equipped with modern Russian Kalibr cruise missiles, had appeared near the Syrian coast. Additionally, just before the USS Harry S. Truman carrier arrives, the Russian cruiser Varyag, which is currently off India’s coast for Exercise Indra till Dec. 12, will set sail for the Mediterranean to replace the cruiser Moskva.
However, what was most notable in today’s update by the Russian defense ministry was neither the news about the sub, or the second ship deployment, but what Putin told Shoigu during their conversation according to the Kremlin’s transcript. Which is as follows:
Regarding the submarine strikes we must, of course, analyze everything that happens on the battlefield, how the weapons acts. Both the “Kalibrs” and the X-101 rockets as a whole proved to be very good. This new, modern, highly efficient, and highly precise weapon can be equipped with both a conventional warhead as well as a special, nuclear warhead. Naturally, in the fight against terrorism that is unnecessary, and I hope there will be no need [to use nukes against the Islamic State].
But, if it is…. which of course was the unsaid message: Russia not only can deploy tactical nuclear warheads to Syria overnight, but it may, “not now”, but eventually be forced to use them against “the Islamic State.”
And just like that Putin hinted that the Syrian proxy war, as it escalates ever wider and drags in increasingly more countries in true “world war” fashion, may just have one or more mushroom clouds in its near future; clouds which will will target none other than the CIA’s pet project designed to take down Assad – the Islamic State. We are not sure if this particular cloud will have a silver lining, but we are confident that not even Turkey will want to buy ISIS oil if it happens to have the same radioactivity profile as Fukushima.
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