Medvedev
© Sputnik/Ekaterina Shtukina
Moscow will consider any threat of nuclear arms being supplied to Ukraine by the US as preparation for a direct war with Russia, former president Dmitry Medvedev has warned. The actual transfer of nuclear weapons would be tantamount to an attack on the country under Russia's new nuclear doctrine, he added.

In a Telegram post on Tuesday, Medvedev referenced a recent report in the New York Times. In a piece bylined by four of its journalists, the NYT claimed that US and EU officials are "discussing deterrence as a security guarantee" for Ukraine, claiming a conversation is underway to consider giving Ukraine nuclear weapons.

US politicians and journalists are seriously discussing the consequences of providing Kiev with nuclear weapons, said Medvedev, who serves as the deputy chair of the Russian Security Council.

"Looks like my sad joke about crazy senile Biden, who's eager to go out with a bang and take a substantial part of humanity with him, is becoming dangerously real," he said.

Medvedev argued that the idea of "giving nukes to a country that's at war with the greatest nuclear power" is so absurd that Biden and anyone else considering such a step must have "massive paranoid psychosis."

The former president said the threat of transferring nuclear weapons to Kiev would be viewed as preparation for a nuclear conflict with Russia.

"The fact of transferring such weapons may be considered as the launch of an attack against our country in accordance with Paragraph 19 of the 'Basic Principles of State Policy on Nuclear Deterrence'," he wrote.

Medvedev was referring to Russia's recently revised nuclear doctrine in which President Vladimir Putin lowered the threshold for Moscow's use of its nuclear weapons.

Putin ordered a change in the nation's nuclear doctrine in late September and approved the document on November 19. The move came as the US and several Western nations allowed Ukraine to use foreign-made long-range weapons for strikes deep inside Russia, despite Moscow's warning that this would escalate the conflict and result in NATO's direct participation in the hostilities.

The document allows Moscow to treat an attack by a non-nuclear state, backed by a nuclear power, as equivalent to direct nuclear aggression.

Last week, Russia carried out a strike on Ukraine using the latest Oreshnik medium-range hypersonic missile, saying it was a response to Kiev's cross-border attacks using US-made ATACMS and HIMARS systems, as well as British-made Storm Shadow missiles.