Russia’s Military Supplies: According to newly declassified American intelligence, Russia is buying millions of artillery shells and rockets from North Korea - a sign that global sanctions have severely restricted its supply chains and forced Moscow to turn to pariah states.Putin ordered a sharp increase in the size of Russia’s armed forces, he seems reluctant to declare a draft. An Expanding Military: Though President Vladimir V.Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant: After United Nations inspectors visited the Russian-controlled facility last week amid continuing shelling and fears of a looming nuclear catastrophe, the organization released a report calling for Russia and Ukraine to halt all military activity around the complex.The Express, a London tabloid, warned in a headline of “strategic readiness.” The news flash got little attention because seasoned experts realized the sub departure was a planned exercise. A Twitter account, The Lookout, posted that a satellite had spotted two Russian nuclear submarines leaving a northwestern port. “If you see a deviation, you have to ask if something’s up.”Ī false alarm rang shortly after Mr.
“You track this stuff and begin to get a sense of what normal looks like,” said Mark M. That kind of baseline understanding helps analysts ferret out true war preparations, experts said. The private fleet tracked Russia’s nuclear forces long before the war, revealing maintenance work as well as routine drills and exercises. Planet Labs alone has a constellation of more than 200 imaging satellites and has made a specialty of zeroing in on military sites.
Private American firms such as Maxar, Capella Space and Planet Labs have provided analysts with hundreds of close-up images of Russia’s atomic forces. Russia’s arsenal exceeds all other nations’ nuclear stockpiles in size, creating a challenge for analysts to thoroughly assess its state of play. Today, hundreds of public and private imaging satellites continually scan the planet to assess crops, map cities, manage forests and, increasingly, unveil the secretive doings of nuclear states. Since 1962, when one of America’s first spy satellites failed to spot a shipment of missiles and 158 nuclear warheads that Moscow had sent to Cuba, America’s surveillance powers in orbit have soared. Putin might do, after setbacks in Ukraine, to restore his reputation for edgy ruthlessness. And some military experts are concerned over what Mr. Moscow has long practiced using relatively small nuclear blasts to offset battlefield losses. “We haven’t seen anything that’s made us adjust our posture, our nuclear posture,” Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser to President Biden, told reporters on March 23.īut America’s atomic watchdogs have reason to continue looking, experts said. and NATO officials have reported no signs that Russia is preparing for nuclear war. The orbital fleet has yet to spot anything worthy of concern, image analysts said. Hundreds of imaging satellites, as well as other private and federal spacecraft, began looking for signs of heightened activity among Russia’s bombers, missiles, submarines and storage bunkers, which hold thousands of nuclear warheads. Putin of Russia declared that his country’s nuclear arms were entering “special combat readiness,” America’s surveillance gear went on high alert. In late February, when President Vladimir V.