Washington warns Moscow of a direct attack on it

Washington warns Moscow of a direct attack on it

If the United States is not the target of any direct attacks, Washington will not get directly involved in the crisis in Ukraine, according to the State Department.
President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Anthony Blinken made it plain that the US will not join this battle as long as the country’s friends were not attacked, according to US State Department spokesman Vidant Patel.

This followed Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky’s request that NATO nations conduct a “pre-emptive strike” against Russia.
Earlier, “Konstantin Vorontsov,” the director of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s Department for the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, claimed that Moscow had observed an increase in the activity of Western nations’ nuclear forces.

During the First Committee of the UN conference, he said that American representatives had warned the potential of an attack on the Russian capital through the media.
In light of this, the White House spokeswoman stated on Friday that there is “no reason to modify our strategic nuclear posture” as there are no signs that Russia is getting ready to deploy nuclear weapons in the near future.

In a statement released today, Friday, the US State Department reaffirmed that Russian statements on the use of nuclear weapons are reckless. The department also noted that President Joe Biden’s speech reaffirmed the seriousness with which the US views Russia’s nuclear threats.

This clarification from spokeswoman Karen-Jean-Pierre follows strongly worded remarks made Thursday by President Joe Biden, who said that the Russian military operation in Ukraine presented the globe with the possibility of a “end of the world” conflict for the first time since the Cold War.

During a brief press conference on the plane flying Joe Biden to northwest Washington, she answered “No” when asked if the United States’ recent intelligence acquisition was the cause of this high-pitched tone of warning.
The declarations made by Russia regarding the use of nuclear weapons, in Jean-opinion, Pierre’s were “irresponsible,” and he said, “Biden’s statements show how serious it is in dealing with Russia’s nuclear threats.”

We haven’t faced the possibility of a conflict resulting in the end of the world since (President John) Kennedy and the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, said Biden on Thursday in New York. He said, “We are trying to understand how (Russian President Vladimir) Putin will find a way out.
In a televised speech on September 21, Russian President Vladimir Putin made a nuclear bomb reference in reference to the military advances made by Ukrainian forces that have received support from Western nations.

Putin declared himself willing to combat the West using “all means at his disposal,” accusing it of wanting to “destroy Russia.”

Moscow is forewarned by Washington of an impending onslaught.

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