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Moscow Rebuts Reported Tomahawk Plan as Debate Over Potential Ukraine Transfer Continues

No transfer has been approved, with the Kremlin casting the option as escalatory.

Overview

  • The U.S. administration has discussed providing Tomahawk missiles to European allies for possible onward delivery to Ukraine, and Vice President J.D. Vance said any decision rests with President Donald Trump.
  • At the Valdai forum, Vladimir Putin said Tomahawks would not alter the battlefield and warned their use without direct U.S. involvement would mark a qualitatively higher stage of escalation and harm RussiaU.S. relations.
  • Russian analyst Yuri Knutov said S-300, S-350 Vityaz, S-400 and, in some cases, Pantsir air-defense systems can intercept Tomahawks, adding that sea or overland delivery via Odesa or Poland would be vulnerable.
  • Expert Vladimir Eranosyan said any missiles supplied would likely be early Block I variants with shorter ranges and noted they could be adapted to Mk 41 launchers in Poland and Romania, with platforms potentially deliverable from the United Kingdom.
  • Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern argued the United States will not send Tomahawks and claimed Ukraine lacks personnel to operate them, characterizing recent talk as speculation.