Andrew Korybko
France’s planned deployment of nuclear-armed Rafale
jets armed in the Arctic, Central Europe, and possibly also the Balkans poses a
qualitatively new strategic threat to Russia
The announcement in
late April that France and Poland will carry out regular nuclear drills, which
analysts reasonably believe are aimed against Russia (specifically Kaliningrad)
and Belarus, represented the first application of what French President
Emmanuel Macron has termed “forward deterrence”. It followed his
speech earlier in the year where he introduced this concept,
essentially the expansion of France’s nuclear umbrella over Europe, that in
turn came shortly after the expiry of the New
START.
The Telegraph detailed what
Macron had in mind in their article about “How
France took the nuclear option to make Putin think twice”. Rafale jets
armed with tactical nukes will deploy not only to Poland, but likely also to
the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, Sweden, Denmark, and Germany, all of which
showed interest in his “forward deterrence” initiative. The day after their
article was published, Norway announced that
it’ll participate in this initiative, thus likely holding regular nuclear
drills like Poland will.
The tactical aspect of the nukes that France envisages deploying with its Rafales all across Europe are significant, the Telegraph explains, because they form part of what its nuclear doctrine calls a “nuclear warning shot”. This refers to “a single, non-renewable, limited nuclear strike, which would most likely be aimed at a military target.” The purpose is to spook the target, understood to be Russia, into halting military operations and resorting to solely diplomatic means for resolving whatever the dispute may be.
Importantly, Romania earlier
confirmed that France invited it to join the “forward deterrence”
initiative, but its new president surprisingly
declined the offer to host nuclear components despite already
hosting French
troops. If it reverses course, then French Rafales in Norway could threaten
Russia’s Arctic bases with tactical nukes, its ones in Poland could threaten
those in Kaliningrad and Belarus, while Romanian-based Rafales could threaten
Crimea’s. This represents a qualitatively new strategic threat to Russia.
On the conventional
front, the “cordon sanitaire” that’s being assembled in the
Arctic-Baltic through
UK-led efforts, Central Europe through
Polish-led efforts, and its entire southern periphery through
Turkish-led efforts would consolidate, with Turkish influence possibly
stretching into Romania as foreseen here.
All the while, Germany and Poland are competing to
build European NATO’s largest army (Poland’s is presently
the largest), but Germany could pose a
1941-like threat to Russia if it ultimately pulls ahead.
These trends are incredibly
dangerous for Russia since they’re all unfolding right on
its doorstep. Even worse, the archetypically anti-Russian Baltic
States could become emboldened by these developments into either
initiating a crisis with Russia or opening up a second front in support of
Ukraine if the ongoing conflict resumes sometime after its inevitable
conclusion, thus risking a nuclear crisis if France reaffirms its “forward
deterrence” vis-à-vis Russia. Russia might then launch a first
nuclear strike against NATO.
The last time that France
agreed to defend a European country, it abandoned Poland to the Nazis during
the “phony war”, so precedent suggests that it might repeat this in the future.
Those countries along NATO’s
Eastern Flank that participate in France’s “forward deterrence”
initiative like Poland does, Romania might one day, and Finland could too as
well as the Baltic States, should therefore remember this in case they get any
ideas about provoking Russia under the cover of France’s nuclear umbrella.
Andrew Korybko, Substack,
June 1, 2026
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