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GR66 said:I wouldn't underestimate the importance of symbolic and political military deployments. The whole concept of NATO's collective defence is the understanding by Russia that an attack on ONE member is an attack on all. Having even an handful of Canadian fighters (or ships, or troops) in the line of fire and potentially suffering casualties along with the targeted ally lets the Russians know that the consequences of an attack are potentially far greater than the local effects.
As for the article you posted, the commentary about the Russian policy document reads much more into it than what is actually stated. The commentary talks about exercises where missiles were targeted in various places around the globe (including the continental United States) but nowhere in the posted document does it talk about nuclear attacks against the US as a "de-escalation" policy. It simply states that Russia reserves the right to use all weapons...up to and including nuclear weapons...in response to a conventional attack "in situations critical to the national security of the Russian Federation".
I don't see Russia initiating a nuclear war with NATO over limited political objectives like Ukraine or the Baltic States. They may have political and economic objectives in those areas but I seriously doubt they would INITIATE nuclear war and all that it risks to their very existence over those objectives.
The stated policy sounds much more defensive in nature to me, so unless you foresee NATO launching an offensive against Russia I don't expect to see Russian nuclear cruise missiles heading over the pole.
Slightly ff topic: but you're quite right.
Putin, who is not, in my estimation, the sharpest knife in the drawer, has learned from history: the American led West hammered the old USSR into submission because, in part, we always reserved the right to use maximum (nuclear) force, first, whenever we felt our vital interests were threatened. We were, thus, able to shift resources, (massively) in the 1950s, away from conventional military forces and devote the savings to civilian industries that made us rich and happy while the USSR, which had made an ill conceived "no first use" promise, languished in "second world" status (despite some great arts and science achievements): poor, dejected and always on the outside, looking in.
Only stupid people want wars.
Smart people, like Sun Tzu and Eisenhower, want to win without fighting, but they are, always, prepared to fight if they have to ... that's something Justin Trudeau doesn't quite grasp ~ one of many, many things.
Putin is not, in my opinion, all that smart or, in any meaningful way, a really good leader ~ he's crafty and, as I have said elsewhere, an "opportunistic adventurer" or "adventurous opportunist" as e.g. Crimea showed ... but, so was Hitler (sorry, but the comparison does need to be made because Hitler had one run of good luck despite having dreadful strategic judgment).
The one big thing Putin has going for him, I think, is that Donald Trump appears to be a bloody fool ... which is bad enough, but Xi Jinping is neither foolish nor adventurous and he is, I believe, waiting, patiently, to pick up the pieces.