Russia claims UK and France is preparing to give Ukraine a nuclear bomb

Russia claims UK and France is preparing to give Ukraine a nuclear bomb EPA/AFP
Vladimir Putin’s spokesman said the supply of nuclear weapons to Ukraine would be considered a ‘joint attack’ on Russia (Picture: Andriy Andriyenko)

Russia has marked the fourth anniversary of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine by claiming the UK and France are plotting a nuclear escalation in the conflict.

A notice released publicly by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service – known as the SVR – says it has received information indicating the two countries want to send Ukraine a ‘wunderwaffe’ weapon.

The spy agency said: ‘Kyiv will be able to secure more favorable terms for ending the fighting if it possesses a nuclear bomb or at least a so-called “dirty bomb.”

Berlin wisely declined to participate in this dangerous adventure.’

This plan was responding to a recognition that ‘the current situation in Ukraine leaves no chance of achieving their much-desired victory over Russia’, according to the SVR.

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Defence declined to comment on ‘Russian disinformation’, but it is understood there are no plans within the UK to supply Ukraine with a nuclear weapon.

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Bizarrely, the SVR suggested the West would try to cover up the acquisition by making it ‘appear to be the result of Ukrainian development’.

Dmitry Peskov, the top spokesman for President Vladimir Putin, said such a move would be considered a ‘joint attack’ on Russia and called for national and international investigations into the claims.

Putin ally and former president Dmitry Medvedev argued it would force Russia to use nuclear weapons on Ukraine and, ‘if necessary, against the supplier countries that become complicit’.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky gives a statement after receiving the 2026 Ewald von Kleist award of the Munich Security Conference (MSC) in the name of the Ukrainian people on February 14, 2026 at the Munich Residence palace in Munich, southern Germany. Ewald von Kleist, founder and long-time guiding figure of the Munich Security Conference, shaped the event for more than 30 years by strengthening the transatlantic security dialogue and helping integrate post-war Germany into NATO and the broader Cold War security framework. Since 2009, the conference has honored outstanding contributions to international understanding and conflict resolution through the Ewald von Kleist Award. (Photo by Michaela STACHE / AFP via Getty Images)
Volodymyr Zelensky has suggested Ukraine should either be given nuclear weapons or Nato membershire in the future (Picture: Michaela Stache/AFP via Getty Images)

Ukraine possessed nuclear weapons in the years after the break-up of the Soviet Union, but gave them up in December 1994 in return for security guarantees from countries including the UK, US and Russia.

In October 2024, the country’s President Volodymyr Zelensky suggested this looked like a mistake in hindsight, following the Russian invasion.

But he also said that, given the choice between the security provided by a nuclear arsenal or the security provided by Nato membership, he would always choose Nato.

This photo cannot be distributed in the Russian Federation. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ukrinform/Shutterstock (16692045m) Smoke rises from a house ruined by a Russian attack, Sofiivska Borshchahivka village, Kyiv region, Ukraine, February 22, 2026. In the early hours of February 22, Russian forces launched a massive strike on Ukraine using drones and missiles, with Kyiv and the Kyiv region among the targets. Emergency workers rescued a man while responding to the aftermath of the strike in Sofiivska Borshchahivka. Consequences of Russian attack in Kyiv region, Ukraine - 22 Feb 2026
Smoke from a Russian attack on a house in a village near Kyiv (Picture: Ukrinform/Shutterstock)

Instead, it is Vladimir Putin and other high-profile Russian figures who have made veiled threats to deploy nuclear weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine over the past four years.

In September 2022, Medvedev argued Russia had a right to defend itself with nuclear weapons if pushed beyond certain limits, adding it was ‘certainly not a bluff’.

And two years later, Putin himself told senior officials Russia would consider a nuclear retaliation if it was attacked directly – even with conventional weapons.

The posturing has been dismissed by Zelensky’s government as blackmail and intimidation.

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