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Russia accuses Ukraine of seeking to acquire nuclear weapon with help from UK and France

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MOSCOW, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Russia accused ‌Ukraine on Tuesday of trying to obtain a nuclear weapon ​with help from Britain and France, an allegation Kyiv called an absurd lie.

A French foreign ministry spokesperson ⁠said the allegation was "blatant disinformation". A spokesperson for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said: "There's no truth to this."

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has previously criticised Kyiv's decision to give ​up its former Soviet nuclear arsenal in the 1990s without obtaining proper, binding security guarantees. But Kyiv ‌has said it does not seek to re-acquire nuclear weapons, and respects all international treaties.

NUCLEAR THREATS

In a statement published on the fourth anniversary of the war, Russia's SVR foreign intelligence ⁠service said Britain and France believed that Ukraine would be able ⁠to secure more favourable terms for ending the war if it possessed "a nuclear bomb, or at least a so-called 'dirty bomb'". It did not include documentary evidence to back its assertion.

A dirty bomb is an explosive device laced with radioactive material that could contaminate ‌a wide area. But it is completely different from an atomic weapon designed to ⁠set off a massive nuclear explosion.

The SVR said London and ‌Paris were "actively working" on the provision of nuclear weapons ​and delivery systems to Ukraine, while making it look as though Kyiv had obtained them by itself.

Heorhii Tykhyi, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, told Reuters: "For the ‌record: Ukraine has already denied such absurd Russian claims many ​times before, and we officially deny ⁠them again now."

Throughout the conflict, Moscow has repeatedly issued veiled nuclear ‌threats to deter the West from going too ⁠far in its support of Ukraine.

"We once again warn of the risks of a direct military confrontation between nuclear powers and, accordingly, of its potentially dire consequences," the Russian ​Foreign Ministry said in a ‌statement.

Russian news agencies quoted Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov as saying Moscow would brief the United ⁠States on the matter, and that it ​would have an impact on U.S.-brokered talks on ending the war in ​Ukraine.

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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