Russia is the only country in the world with the nuclear capability to
destroy the U.S., according to Army Chief of Staff General Mark Milley.
The General called Russia an existential threat to the U.S., speaking in
front of the audience at the Defense One summit in Washington, DC on
Monday.
Russia General Mark Milley
Image Source: Wikimedia Commons
Milley
also considers Russia “aggressive” and “adversarial to the interests of
the United States,” which is why Moscow’s nuclear weapons are capable
of destroying the U.S.
The General warned that Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s recent behavior suggest the country would be willing to
use nuclear weapons. Milley also noted that Russia has been violating
“the Westphalian order” ever since it started invading “sovereign
nations” in 2008.
Milley has already called Russia an existential
threat during his confirmation hearing before the U.S. Senate back in
July. Two weeks prior to his confirmation hearing, U.S. General James
Dunford used the same phrasing during his own Senate confirmation
hearing to become the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
“I
would say that Russia’s recent behavior is adversarial to the interests
of the United States,” Milley said, referring to Russia’s aggressive
drills and patrols with its troops, aircraft and submarines for the past
“four-five-six-seven” years. “Russia bears close watching,” he added.
The
audience then asked whether Russia should be considered an enemy rather
than a partner, but Milley responded with an urge to a “strength and
balance sort of approach, which is our current policy.”
While
diplomacy is very “nuanced,” Russia must be fought with sanctions and
NATO’s confident stance, he noted. However, the General added that the
U.S. must cooperate with Russia on matters that require involvement of
both Washington and Moscow.
Russia’s military far more advanced than that of U.S. – American analyst
Russia
is far more advanced and superior in terms of military technologies
than the U.S., while the recent American missile tests were nothing but a
“bluff” to trick people into thinking the U.S. military could easily
counter even such a nuclear-powerful adversary as Russia, according to
an American counter-terrorism analyst.
Scott Bennett, a former
U.S. Army psychological warfare officer, said in an interview with Press
TV on Monday that this is something Washington typically does: it tells
its military brass to show off in front of its Russian counterparts,
claiming that American missile technology is “the absolute end-all
technology that can determine any war.”
The analyst’s comments
come just a day after the U.S. military carried out a $230 million test
involving Lockheed Martin’s Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD)
systems and the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) equipped onto the
USS John Paul Jones destroyer.
The results of the test showed
that the missile systems were capable of successfully hitting their
targets in all but one of the tests. The tests with the missile systems
involved a medium-range ballistic missile fired from C-17 aircraft.
During
one of the tests, a SM-3 missile fired from the warship failed mid-air
in its flight and missed the target. But the THAAD system was capable of
taking the failed shot out.
“From a psychological warfare
perspective, I see this as a massive bluff, as just a lot of feather
puffing, and [it] really doesn’t have a lot of substance because the
technology is not there and the Russian technology as we know is far
superior,” Bennett said.
Bennett sees this elaborate $230 million
missile test as a standard military test, while Washington wants to
make it look as if it is more lethal than it really is.
U.S. will be responsible for deaths in Syria, not Russia – Analyst
The
analyst also believes that the test is an attempt of the U.S. to assure
its allies in the Middle East, who turn away from Washington one by one
because of its incompetence in Syria, that the U.S. still has what it
takes to maintain influence in the region. The tests seem to fall in
line with U.S. President Barack Obama’s decision to send Special
Operation forces to Syria.
Bennett expects Russia to call the
bluff and warn the U.S. that if it sends American troops to Syria, “the
Russian coalition will not be held responsible for any deaths that may
result.”
Bennett also called Obama’s decision “a potential trap.”
“It is an attempt to try and goad Russia, I think, into maneuvers and
bombings that can kill a lot of American troops for the purposes of
triggering a larger US action.”
The analyst also suspects that
there might be a connection between the U.S. missile tests and the
recent Russian plane crash over Egypt’s Sinai desert which killed 224
passengers on board, including 25 children and 7 crew members.
Russian navy presents threat to U.S.
Meanwhile,
the U.S. is discussing the possibility to station more of its ships and
naval objects in Europe as a response to Russia’s most threatening
naval operations in two decades, according to the new U.S. Navy chief of
naval operations.
The U.S. Navy is now reassessing its global
stance to counter the aggressive activity of Russian warships and
submarines, Admiral John Richardson, chief of naval operations said in
an interview with the Financial Times.
“Their submarine force and
their navy are as active as they have been in a long time, 20 years or
so,” Admiral Richardson noted. “How are we going to posture our forces
to make sure that we maintain the appropriate balance and are suitably
engaged?”
The Admiral also said that the U.S. Navy is considering
to step up its presence in Europe and the Pacific. “That’s the
conversation we’re having right now.”
Russian Admiral Viktor
Chirkov, the chief of the Russian navy, recently said that Russian
submarine patrols have increased by 50 percent from 2013.
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