Special hotline between Moscow and DC stays silent as military moves raise stakes
Long-standing communication channel between US and Russia remains unused while military actions heat up. Both countries make bold moves with long-range weapons and policy changes
The direct-communication line between US and Russia (set up during cold-war times) isnt being used now‚ as both sides make high-stakes moves. Dmitry Peskov says the special video-enabled hotline – which helped prevent mis-steps in past crises – stays quiet
In a game-changing development‚ Ukraine got green light to use American-made weapons inside Russia. The permission came around war day 1‚000; and Ukraine didnt waste time – hitting targets deep in Russian territory with ATACMS long-range missiles
Vladimir Putin responded by changing Russiaʼs nuclear-strike rules which now include more scenarios for possible use. Moscow sees these weapon supplies as direct US involvement: theyre saying its impossible to use such complex systems without American help
The diplomatic situation looks similar to 60s tensions – when nuclear powers almost clashed. Russian officials point out these parallels:
- Current crisis matches Cuban missile standoff level
- West shouldnt expect Russia to step back
- Moscow views nukes as deterrent-only tools
- New doctrine makes retaliation rules clear
Volodymyr Zelenskiy got what he asked for after months of requests to western partners (saying these weapons would help destroy key military targets). The conflict that started in early-2022 changed many Ukrainian cities beyond recognition and made millions leave their homes