Tomahawks are a big deal for Russia.
            Russia’s response to Tomahawk strikes would be ‘staggering’ – Putin  Supplying Kiev with the long-range missiles would be an “escalation attempt,” the Russian president has said             
 
  
  Russian President Vladimir Putin.  © Sputnik /                 Kristina Kormilitsyna
  Russia would deliver a “very serious, if not downright staggering”  response to any Ukrainian strike using US-made Tomahawk missiles,  President Vladimir Putin warned on Thursday, calling pressure on  Washington to supply such weapons “an attempt at escalation.”
  Speaking  to journalists after a meeting in Moscow, Putin cautioned that any use  of Tomahawk missiles against Russian territory would provoke a powerful  reaction. “This is an attempt at escalation,” he said. “But  if such weapons are used to strike Russian territory, the response will  be very serious, if not downright staggering. Let them think about  that.”
  Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky reportedly raised  the issue of obtaining Tomahawk missiles during his meeting with US  President Donald Trump at the White House last week. According to Axios,  the request was turned down, although US officials have said the option  remains under review, with Trump expected to make the final decision.
  The  Tomahawk, a long-range cruise missile with a maximum range of around  2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles), requires lengthy and complex training to  operate, Trump told reporters on Wednesday during talks with NATO  Secretary-General Mark Rutte at the White House.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     READ MORE: US won’t fire Tomahawks for Ukraine – Trump        “This would be an escalation. It is an escalation attempt,” Putin said, commenting on a potential delivery. “If Russian territory is hit… with such a weapon, the response will be very serious if not outright overwhelming,” the president added, encouraging Western leaders “to think about it.”
  Moscow  has previously warned that although Tomahawk deliveries would not  affect the state of the battlefield of the Ukraine conflict, they would  diminish peace prospects and strike a blow to US-Russian relations.
  Putin discussed the issue with Trump during a phone call last week. Delivering the missiles would “severely undermine the prospects of a peaceful settlement,” he said at the time. Following the call, Trump said it would be “not easy” for the US to provide Kiev with Tomahawks and maintained that Washington should not deplete its own arsenal for Ukraine. |