Peskov cautioned that Moscow would treat any Tomahawk launch as a potential nuclear threat. “Just imagine: a long-range missile is launched, and we know that it could be nuclear. What should Russia think? How should it react?” he said.
Tomahawks can strike targets up to 2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles) away — enough to reach Moscow — and older versions of the missile are capable of carrying nuclear warheads, according to US data.
Putin warns of ‘new stage’ if missiles delivered
President Vladimir Putin earlier this month said the missiles cannot be used without direct US military involvement, warning that any supply to Ukraine would mark a “qualitatively new stage of escalation.”
Washington has not yet announced a final decision. US President Donald Trump said Monday that he would “want to know what Ukraine plans to do with them” before agreeing to provide the missiles, though he added he had “sort of made a decision.
The Financial Times reported on Sunday that the US has quietly helped Ukraine carry out long-range drone strikes on Russian energy facilities for months, providing intelligence to guide route planning, altitude, timing, and mission coordination to evade Russian air defences.