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VisitWhich allies will support Russia's nuclear doctrine by mid-2025?
Belarus supports • 33%
China supports • 33%
Iran supports • 33%
No public support • 1%
Official statements from Russia's allies or international news coverage
Putin Updates Nuclear Doctrine to Include Conventional Attacks Backed by Nuclear States
Nov 19, 2024, 09:00 AM
Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed Decree No. 991 approving an updated nuclear doctrine titled the "Fundamentals of State Policy on Nuclear Deterrence," broadening the circumstances under which Russia may deploy nuclear weapons. The revised doctrine states that aggression against Russia or its allies, including Belarus, by a non-nuclear state supported by a nuclear power will be considered a joint attack, potentially justifying a nuclear response. The policy allows Russia to respond with nuclear weapons to conventional attacks if they are backed by a nuclear-armed country. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov warned that Ukraine's use of Western non-nuclear missiles against Russia could trigger a nuclear response under the new doctrine. The decision to use nuclear weapons remains solely with President Putin.
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United States • 25%
China • 25%
France • 25%
Other • 25%
United States • 25%
European Union • 25%
China • 25%
Other • 25%
United States • 25%
China • 25%
European Union • 25%
Other • 25%
NATO • 25%
China • 25%
India • 25%
Other • 25%
Increased global nuclear armament • 25%
New nuclear disarmament talks • 25%
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Other • 25%
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No • 50%
China • 25%
North Korea • 25%
Belarus • 25%
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United States • 25%
European Union • 25%
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India • 25%
United States • 25%
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Germany • 25%
France • 25%
Sanctions imposed • 25%
Diplomatic negotiations initiated • 25%
Military build-up in response • 25%
No significant response • 25%
Increased tensions with NATO • 25%
Improved relations with NATO • 25%
Status quo maintained • 25%
Other significant outcome • 25%
Sanctions against Russia • 25%
Increased military presence in Eastern Europe • 25%
Diplomatic negotiations • 25%
Other • 25%
US issues a formal condemnation • 25%
No major response • 25%
China expresses support • 25%
EU issues a formal condemnation • 25%