As RadarOnline.com beforehand reported, Putin’s determination to maneuver nukes into Belarus got here weeks after the Russian chief already positioned ten nuclear plane carriers within the nation that shares an almost 700-mile border with Ukraine.
“We agreed with [Belarusian President Alexander] Lukashenko that we’d place tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus with out violating the non-proliferation regime,” Putin stated in March.
Though Lukashenko agreed to permit Russian nuclear plane carriers to be positioned in Belarus, and has now allowed Putin to place nukes in his nation, the Belarusian chief stopped in need of committing his personal troops to the frontlines of the continued Russian battle effort in Ukraine.