Unlike strategic nuclear weapons, which are so powerful that their production is strictly controlled by various international agreements, tactical nuclear weapons have a shorter range and are far less powerful, and are designed to be used in theatre with allied forces in close proximity.
“There is no clear line between strategic and tactical nuclear weapons,” Pavel Podvig, a researcher at the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, told Novaya Europe. In general, intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine-launched ballistic missiles, and long-range bombers are considered strategic nuclear weapons, while all other nuclear weapons are termed tactical.
A weapon of intimidation
“The first and most important job of any nuclear weapon is to intimidate the enemy,” military expert David Sharp told Novaya Europe, adding that Russia has long been using intimidation as a form of warfare in Ukraine. Western fears of escalation in the war have led the West both to limit the range of weapons it is prepared to provide to Kyiv and to prohibit the Armed Forces of Ukraine from deploying certain weapons against Russia at all.