The US Department of Defense (DoD) shares the Strategic Command (STRATCOM) chief’s concerns about a possible nuclear war with Russia or China, but does not want an escalation “on that scale”, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby told reporters on Wednesday.
He added that Defense Secretary Austin perceives the modernization of America’s nuclear capabilities as a “key priority” aimed “at protecting and defending the American people”.
The remarks came after STRATCOM head, Admiral Charles Richard, pointed out a possible worst-case scenario in an article published on the US Naval Institute website earlier this month.
“There is a real possibility that a regional crisis with Russia or China could escalate quickly to a conflict involving nuclear weapons, if they perceived a conventional loss would threaten the regime or state”, Richard asserted.
He urged the US military to shift its “principal assumption from ‘nuclear employment is not possible’ to ‘nuclear employment is a very real possibility’, and act to meet and deter that reality”.
The admiral went even further by touting the DoD’s efforts to counter terrorism and accusing Russia and China of “aggressively” challenging “international norms and global peace using instruments of power and threats of force in ways not seen since the height of the Cold War”.
The allegations were preceded by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arguing last month that America is going to “engage the world not as it was, but as it is”, referring to “a world of rising nationalism” and “receding democracy”.
Blinken claimed it is also a world of “growing rivalry with China, Russia, and other authoritarian states, mounting threats to a stable and open international system, and a technological revolution that is reshaping every aspect of our lives, especially in cyberspace”.
The claims came after reports emerged in December that the Biden team might consider a spate of options “to punish” Moscow over its alleged role in a recent massive hacking of US government agencies and companies after the president-elect took office in January.
At the time, Moscow rejected the hacking accusations, pointing to the lack of evidence, something that was also underscored by Russian President Vladimir Putin during his annual press conference on 17 December.
Source: Sputnik