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International News Title: Russia delivers nuclear warning to Denmark Russias ambassador to Denmark wrote in a newspaper opinion piece that the Nordic country had not fully understood the consequences of signing up to the Nato missile defence programme. If it happens, then Danish warships will be targets for Russias nuclear weapons. Denmark will be part of the threat to Russia, Mikhail Vanin wrote in Jyllands-Posten. The dramatic threat cranks up further Russian pressure on countries in the Baltic region. Russian aircraft have violated the airspace of Estonia, Finland and Sweden and were involved in two near misses last year with passenger aircraft taking off from Copenhagen. Russia is also reportedly moving Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad, its enclave that is bordered by Lithuania and Poland and which has seen a number of large military exercises in recent years. Denmark attempted to keep calm after the ambassadors warning. Martin Lidegaard, foreign minister, called the comments unacceptable, adding: Russia knows full well that Natos missile defence is not aimed at them. We are in disagreement with Russia on a number of important things but it is important that the tone between us does not escalate. Mr Lidegaard indicated in August that Denmark would fit one or possibly more frigates with a type of radar that would allow the ships to be used in the Nato missile shield. The defence shield has been mooted for more than a decade to protect Europe from a missile attack. Although Iranian missiles were mentioned when the shield proposals became more concrete in 2010-11, Russia has long suspected it would be used to neuter its nuclear deterrent. The chief of Russias general staff in 2012 threatened any country hosting the shield on its soil with a pre-emptive nuclear strike. Nicolai Wammen, Denmarks defence minister, said in August: That Denmark will join the missile defence system with radar capacity on one or more of our frigates is not an action that is targeted against Russia, but rather to protect us against rogues states, terrorist organisations and others that have the capacity to fire missiles at Europe and the US. Denmark has tried to take a more restrained tone than some of its neighbours such as Sweden, which is not a Nato member, whose foreign minister warned that Swedes felt truly afraid of Russia. Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Denmarks prime minister, told the Financial Times in November: In terms of our territory we are not worried. We keep our heads calm and the cockpit warm. The warning to Denmark came in the same week that Swedish intelligence claimed that one in three Russian diplomats in the country were spies. Wilhelm Unge, chief counter-espionage analyst at Swedens Sapo intelligence agency, said: We see Russian intelligence operations in Sweden we can't interpret this in any other way as preparation for military operations against Sweden. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#4. To: buckeroo (#0)
If someone threatens to aim a .338 Lapua magnum at me, and that threat came from someone I knew to both have the weapon and was well qualified to use it out to 1500 or so yards, I would take that threat, very, very seriously.
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