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Thursday, 2 July 2026

 The Federal–British Columbia Energy and Infrastructure Accord


An Expanded Strategic, Fiscal, and Game-Theoretic Assessment

Prepared for the Council of the Federation Summit

Revised and Enriched Edition — incorporating developments through July 2, 2026




I. Introduction: A Narrative of Pragmatic Federalism, Confirmed and Tested

The Canadian federation has long wrestled with the friction between regional resource development and coastal environmental stewardship. Historically, the pursuit of interprovincial energy infrastructure has devolved into zero-sum political maneuvering, characterized by jurisdictional brinkmanship and adversarial litigation. The memorandum of understanding (MOU) unveiled on the morning of July 2, 2026, in Vancouver by Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier David Eby confirms the trajectory this report anticipated: the agreement maintains the North Coast oil tanker moratorium in full, while committing Ottawa to compensate British Columbia financially should a federal pipeline ultimately be imposed on the province against its preference.

The announcement carried a symbolically dense backdrop. Premier Eby curtailed a trade mission to China to be present for the signing, underscoring the political weight both leaders assigned to the moment. Within hours of the Vancouver announcement, Mr. Carney travelled to Calgary to appear alongside Alberta Premier Danielle Smith at a companion event on "proposed new energy infrastructure to diversify Canadian exports," while Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre delivered a competing address from Camrose, Alberta. This choreography — a coastal reassurance in the morning and a prairie energy announcement in the evening, on the same calendar day — is itself a data point: it reveals a federal government attempting to run two incompatible narratives in parallel rather than resolving the underlying tension between them.

The accord establishes what this analysis terms a model of "compensatory alignment." By decoupling the preservation of the northern tanker ban from Ottawa's broader major-projects agenda, the federal and British Columbian governments have sidestepped the structural gridlock that has historically paralyzed such negotiations. This stands in visible contrast to the parallel federal-Alberta track, where a November 2025 memorandum of understanding and a subsequent May 2026 implementation agreement have proceeded on an entirely different logic — one built around a contested pipeline proposal, a still-unidentified private proponent, and a fall referendum question on Alberta's constitutional future. Where the Alberta track has generated recurring friction, including threats of unilateral provincial action and a resurgent separatist movement, the Carney-Eby channel has so far produced a cooperative, fiscally underwritten framework. The durability of that contrast, however, depends on variables examined in the sections that follow.

II. The Architecture of the Accord: Compensatory Alignment and the Tanker Ban

The Compensatory Mechanism

The agreement introduces a formal, if not yet fully quantified, financial mechanism to address the risk that British Columbia continues to bear as the constitutionally designated corridor for federally endorsed energy infrastructure. Should Ottawa ultimately move to designate and fast-track a bitumen pipeline to the coast under the Building Canada Act — the process now under way on the Alberta track — the MOU commits the federal government to compensate the province for the associated environmental exposure, rather than requiring British Columbia to absorb that risk unilaterally or to contest it through litigation. This is a meaningful evolution from the pre-2025 pattern, in which jurisdictional disputes over pipeline approvals were resolved primarily through the courts, at considerable cost to investment certainty on both sides.

Diversification and Infrastructure Commitments

Two capital commitments anchor the near-term, tangible side of the accord. The federal government has pledged $3.5 billion toward the North Coast Transmission Line, intended to deliver electricity to communities and to energy-intensive industrial and export projects along the northern coast. Separately, Ottawa has committed $500 million toward expanding the Red Chris copper-gold mine, a project Mr. Carney has said will lift national copper production by more than fifteen percent. Together, these commitments are structured to be additive rather than merely compensatory: they accelerate the electrification of a region whose industrial future was previously constrained by grid capacity, while positioning Canada to capture a larger share of the copper demand associated with global electrification and defence supply chains.

Strategic Hedging and the "Linchpin" Framing

By characterizing British Columbia as the "linchpin" of a $150-billion investment horizon, the federal government is attempting to synchronize provincial economic development with national export ambitions — principally the effort to diversify liquefied natural gas exports toward Asian markets — while preserving the environmental commitments that underpin the province's social licence for continued industrial growth. It is worth noting, however, that Premier Eby has publicly urged Ottawa to prioritize precisely this category of shovel-ready, privately backed project — new mines and LNG facilities already under way in British Columbia — over the more speculative Alberta pipeline proposal, which as of this writing lacks both a confirmed route and a private-sector proponent. The "linchpin" language therefore does double duty: it flatters British Columbia's role in the accord while quietly signalling where Ottawa's most bankable near-term growth is actually expected to originate.

III. The Alberta Counterpoint: A Parallel and Less Settled Track

No assessment of the British Columbia accord is complete without situating it against the parallel — and considerably less settled — federal-Alberta energy track, since the credibility of Ottawa's compensatory commitment to British Columbia is, in practice, bound up with its ability to manage the Alberta file without triggering a unilateral rollback of the tanker ban.

Timeline and Structure of the Alberta Track

In November 2025, Ottawa and Alberta signed a memorandum of understanding declaring a new bitumen pipeline to Asian markets a federal priority eligible for referral to the Major Projects Office. A follow-on implementation agreement, signed in mid-May 2026, sharpened the timeline: Alberta committed to submitting a formal pipeline application to the Major Projects Office on or around Canada Day, while Ottawa agreed to determine, by October 1, 2026, whether to designate the proposal a project of national interest eligible for regulatory fast-tracking. Alberta's own project materials describe September 1, 2027, as the best-case date for the start of construction. Premier Smith formally unveiled the details of that application on July 2, 2026 — the same day as the Vancouver announcement — after a one-day delay attributed to the Canada Day holiday.

Several structural features of the Alberta proposal warrant close attention. First, the project currently has no private-sector proponent; Alberta itself is acting as an early-stage sponsor, having invested roughly $14 million in technical and application work, while explicitly declining to commit the full estimated capital cost — reported in the range of $34 billion — from provincial funds alone. Second, the pipeline's advancement is formally conditioned on progress toward the Pathways carbon capture and storage project, a mechanism intended to offset the emissions associated with expanded bitumen production. Third, the implementation agreement is bundled with a broader carbon-pricing accommodation: Alberta and Ottawa have agreed to a rising industrial carbon price track — reaching roughly $115 per tonne by 2030, $130 per tonne by 2035, and $140 per tonne by 2040 — alongside a floor price for provincial technology and innovation credits beginning in 2030, and seventy-five million tonnes of jointly issued carbon contracts-for-difference intended to de-risk emissions-reduction investment for industry.

Political Fracture Around the Alberta Proposal

The Alberta track has generated a more contested political environment than its British Columbia counterpart. Premier Eby has been openly dismissive of the pipeline's near-term prospects, describing it in terms that emphasize the absence of a confirmed route, a private proponent, or committed financing. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, meanwhile, has criticized the Smith-Carney arrangement from the opposite direction — arguing it does not go far enough and that the federal government has, in his words, wasted time that could have been spent advancing the project — placing him in the unusual position of echoing, for different reasons, the same skepticism voiced by British Columbia's NDP premier and by Alberta's own separatist movement, each of which for its own reasons doubts the pipeline will be built as described.

This political crosscurrent matters directly to the durability of the British Columbia accord. Alberta is scheduled to hold a referendum question on October 19, 2026, asking voters whether the provincial government should begin the legal process required to hold a binding separation referendum. Independent polling cited by Alberta media has found that a meaningful share of federal Conservative and provincial UCP voters already regard both the pipeline's ultimate construction and the broader unity project with skepticism. Should the referendum process advance Alberta's separatist momentum rather than defuse it — a risk Premier Smith herself has acknowledged the deal cannot fully address — the political incentive for Ottawa to force a resolution on pipeline routing, and by extension to test the limits of its compensatory commitment to British Columbia, could intensify rather than recede.

IV. Fiscal Foundations: Can Ottawa and the Provinces Sustain the Bargain?

The Federal Fiscal Position

The credibility of any compensatory mechanism rests on the federal government's underlying fiscal capacity to honour it across multiple budget cycles. Ottawa's most recent fiscal update shows the deficit for the year ending March 2026 narrowing by more than fourteen percent relative to the figure presented in the November 2025 budget, aided by stronger-than-projected revenue growth. The government has reaffirmed two fiscal anchors first set out in that budget: a declining deficit-to-GDP ratio over the medium term, and a balanced operating budget by 2028-29. The Spring Economic Update 2026 also introduced a new sovereign-style investment vehicle intended to crowd in private capital alongside public commitments — a structure officials have characterized as central to financing the broader major-projects agenda, including the commitments made to British Columbia.

These figures support a cautiously constructive reading of near-term fiscal capacity. They do not, however, eliminate exposure. Economists reviewing the update have noted that while the deficit trajectory is improving, the improvement has been driven substantially by favourable revenue surprises rather than structural spending restraint, and that the government's spending plans remain large relative to historical norms. Combined federal-provincial deficits across the country, while narrowing modestly in relative terms, remain sizeable in absolute dollars, and the sensitivity of federal revenue to global energy prices — while described by independent analysts as relatively modest for real GDP — is not zero.

The British Columbia Fiscal Position

British Columbia's own Budget 2026 fiscal plan shows a declining deficit-to-GDP ratio over the three-year planning horizon, aided in the near term by a one-time tobacco-litigation settlement. At the same time, the province's taxpayer-supported debt is projected to rise substantially — with the debt-to-GDP ratio climbing from roughly thirty percent in 2026-27 to over thirty-seven percent by 2028-29 — as the province continues to finance schools, hospitals, transit, and the capital commitments associated with this accord. British Columbia's debt-servicing costs remain comparatively low relative to other provinces, which affords the province some cushion, but the trajectory of rising debt alongside rising federal capital transfers means both governments are simultaneously increasing their balance-sheet exposure to the same set of infrastructure bets.

V. Bayesian Scenario Forecast: Strategic Developments, 2027–2032

To assess the strategic trajectory of the Federal-British Columbia accord, this analysis applies a Bayesian forecasting framework in plain analytical terms, without recourse to explicit formulas. The model evaluates how the probability of a durable cooperative equilibrium should be revised as new information arrives — regulatory milestones, fiscal developments, and the rational response of provincial actors to shifting incentives.

2027–2028: The Alignment and Verification Phase

This period will be dominated by two converging tests. The federal government must decide, by October 1, 2026, whether to designate Alberta's pipeline proposal a project of national interest; and both governments must begin to show visible progress on the North Coast Transmission Line and Red Chris Mine commitments made to British Columbia. If Ottawa proceeds with national-interest designation for the Alberta pipeline while simultaneously delivering visible, on-schedule capital spending in British Columbia, the probability of continued cooperative equilibrium rises, because the tangible British Columbia benefits will have arrived before any pipeline-related friction materializes. Conversely, delay or underdelivery on the British Columbia side during this window — while Alberta's file continues to advance toward its October decision point — would asymmetrically erode trust and raise the probability that the compensatory framework comes to be viewed, in Victoria, as a political instrument rather than a binding commitment.

2029–2030: The Stochastic Shock Phase

By this period, Alberta's pipeline proposal — assuming it survives the 2026 designation decision and the search for a private proponent — will be entering the phase where exogenous shocks matter most: global energy price volatility, delays in the Pathways carbon capture project on which the pipeline's advancement is formally conditioned, or renewed Indigenous and provincial legal challenges. The Bayesian model anticipates that the resilience of the British Columbia accord through this phase will depend less on the pipeline's ultimate fate than on whether the compensatory fiscal architecture has, by this point, become institutionally embedded — for example, through multi-year statutory funding commitments — rather than remaining subject to annual appropriations discretion. A federal government facing fiscal pressure at this stage would find it considerably easier to defer or trim a line item subject to annual budget review than to unwind a statutory, multi-year commitment; the form the compensatory mechanism ultimately takes is therefore a first-order determinant of its durability.

2031–2032: Consolidation or Divergence

By this final window, the accord reaches its critical juncture. If the North Coast transmission and mining investments have been substantially completed and Alberta's pipeline — if still advancing — has secured a credible private proponent and passed its major regulatory tests, the "linchpin" strategy will have been validated, reinforcing a self-sustaining cycle of investment and predictability. Should the Alberta pipeline instead have stalled for want of private capital, or should Alberta's political trajectory have moved further toward the separatist pole tested by the October 2026 referendum question, the risk of provincial defection from the cooperative framework rises. Even in that adverse scenario, however, the game-theoretic cost of unilateral federal exit from its British Columbia commitments — including the loss of credibility for any future major-projects negotiation with any province — is likely to remain prohibitively high, producing a "sticky" policy environment in which political posturing continues even as the underlying fiscal architecture holds.

VI. Analytical Summary and Response to the Council's Question

The overarching strategic dynamic remains one of a shift from zero-sum competition toward incentivized cooperation, and the events of July 2, 2026, substantiate rather than undermine that reading. By distributing the costs of environmental mitigation across the national fiscal ledger and pairing that commitment with tangible, near-term capital investment, Ottawa has lowered the localized political cost to British Columbia of accepting continued federal primacy over pipeline jurisdiction. This structure meaningfully reduces the near-term likelihood of the kind of adversarial litigation that characterized earlier federal-provincial energy disputes.

The Council of the Federation posed a specific follow-up question: given that the sustainability of the "linchpin" strategy depends on the federal government's capacity to act as a long-term risk-absorber, how should compensatory fiscal transfers be evaluated if Ottawa faces a significant mid-cycle budgetary contraction before 2030?

Three observations follow from the fiscal evidence assembled above. First, Ottawa's current trajectory is one of gradual improvement, not deterioration — the 2025-26 deficit came in well below initial projections, and the government has reaffirmed a path to a balanced operating budget by 2028-29 — which provides some near-term insulation against the scenario the Council raises. Second, that improvement has been driven substantially by favourable revenue conditions rather than structural spending discipline, which means the underlying fiscal position is more sensitive to a downside shock than the headline trend alone would suggest. Third, and most consequential for provincial governments assessing counterparty risk, Ottawa is simultaneously carrying comparable multi-year obligations on the Alberta side of the ledger — the carbon contracts-for-difference program alone represents a seventy-five-million-tonne commitment — meaning any mid-cycle contraction would force Ottawa to allocate scarce fiscal room across at least two large, politically sensitive provincial commitments at once, not one.

The most prudent course for the Council of the Federation is therefore to press for the compensatory mechanism to be codified in a form that is structurally insulated from ordinary in-year budget review — a multi-year statutory commitment or a dedicated capital vehicle analogous to the sovereign-style fund introduced in the Spring Economic Update — rather than an annually appropriated program vulnerable to discretionary restraint. A commitment of this character would substantially reduce the probability that a federal fiscal contraction, should one materialize before 2030, translates directly into a weakening of the guarantees British Columbia has been offered in exchange for maintaining the tanker ban and absorbing the residual risk of federally directed pipeline infrastructure.


Sources Consulted

  • The Canadian Press, "B.C.'s multibillion-dollar MOU with feds retains northern tanker ban," republished via paNOW, July 2, 2026.

  • Andrew Kurjata, CBC News, "Carney, Eby to announce 'multi-billion-dollar' agreement ahead of Alberta's pipeline update," July 2, 2026.

  • Castanet.net, "B.C.'s multibillion-dollar MOU with feds retains northern tanker ban," July 2, 2026.

  • EnergyNow, "Alberta Set to Reveal Next Move on Proposed West Coast Oil Pipeline," July 2, 2026.

  • The Canadian Press via BNN Bloomberg, "Danielle Smith set to announce details of West Coast oil pipeline," July 2, 2026.

  • Emma Zhao, CBC News, "Alberta government to announce details for West Coast pipeline proposal," July 2, 2026.

  • Natasha Bulowski, Canada's National Observer, "A timeline of Danielle Smith's pipeline push," July 2, 2026.

  • Canada's National Observer, "Alberta Premier Smith to announce details of West Coast oil pipeline," July 2, 2026.

  • The Hub, "Pierre Poilievre and Danielle Smith are going to have a fight about pipeline politics, sooner or later," June 2, 2026.

  • Benjamin Lopez Steven, CBC News, "Poilievre expected to call on Albertans to band with provinces, demand federal policy changes," June 7, 2026.

  • Benjamin Lopez Steven, CBC News, "Poilievre argues Carney has 'wasted an entire year' on possible Alberta pipeline," May 3, 2026.

  • RBC Economics, Cynthia Leach, "Growth focused, deficit fuelled: Same federal strategy in update 2026," April 30, 2026.

  • Government of Canada, Spring Economic Update 2026, "Our plan: Canada strong for all," budget.canada.ca.

  • Reuters via Investing.com, "Carney's fiscal update shows smaller Canadian deficit, new spending," April 28, 2026.

  • Government of British Columbia, Budget 2026 Fiscal Plan, bcbudget.gov.bc.ca.

  • The Globe and Mail, "Smith says she and Eby share 'common ground' on Trans Mountain pipeline expansion," January 29, 2026.

  • CBC News, "Here's what you need to know about the B.C. oil tanker moratorium," December 21, 2025.

This report reflects information current as of July 2, 2026. Several elements of the Alberta pipeline track — including the identity of any private-sector proponent and the outcome of the October 1, 2026 national-interest designation decision — remain unresolved and should be monitored closely as they will materially affect the risk profile assessed above.

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

CALIBRATING THE NUCLEAR THRESHOLD

A Bayesian Net Assessment of Russian Escalation Risk on the Eve of the Thirty-Sixth NATO Summit

Ankara, 7–8 July 2026


Strategic Analysis Prepared for NATO Principals — 30 June 2026



Executive Summary

The Alliance approaches the Ankara Summit amid the most concentrated period of Russian nuclear signaling since the onset of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Between 12 and 24 May 2026, Moscow conducted a successful Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile test, an unannounced and unusually large strategic nuclear exercise involving sixty-four thousand personnel, and a coordinated non-strategic nuclear drill with Belarus that, by Russia’s own General Staff account, proceeded as far as the physical mating of warheads with Iskander launch systems. These measures were accompanied by a wave of drone incursions into Baltic and Black Sea airspace and by an unrelated but symbolically charged drone strike on the turbine building of the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, developments that the leaders of NATO’s Eastern Flank states formally condemned at their Gdańsk meeting of 25 June 2026.

This report applies a structured, descriptive form of Bayesian reasoning — updating an initial judgment about Russian intent as new evidence accumulates — to determine whether these signals constitute genuine preparation for nuclear use or a calculated instrument of coercive diplomacy. The analysis concludes that the weight of operational evidence continues to favor the coercive-signaling interpretation. No publicly observable indicators of force dispersal, mass withdrawal of conventional units from the line of contact, or severance of diplomatic channels — the operational markers that would accompany authentic preparation for use — have materialized alongside the rhetorical and exercise-based signaling of May and June. The Alliance’s own posture has simultaneously hardened: Operation Eastern Sentry has matured into a standing multi-domain vigilance architecture, the Gdańsk declaration has reaffirmed the 5 percent defense-investment trajectory agreed at The Hague, and a long-term Canadian liquefied natural gas agreement with Germany’s SEFE, concluded on 27 May 2026, has further reduced the West’s vulnerability to the energy-coercion lever Moscow has historically relied upon.

The report nonetheless cautions against complacency. The probability of deliberate, unprovoked nuclear first use remains low, but the probability of an accidental or miscalculated escalation — arising from the proliferation of drone incursions, electronic warfare, and gray-zone sabotage across an increasingly crowded and contested operational space — is assessed as moderate and rising. The report closes with a revised scenario architecture and a set of recommendations for the North Atlantic Council, organized around the devaluation of nuclear signaling, the reinforcement of conventional deterrence on the Eastern Flank, and the unambiguous communication of retaliatory costs.


I. Strategic Setting: NATO at the Ankara Threshold


The Thirty-Sixth NATO Summit convenes in Ankara on 7–8 July 2026 at a moment when the Alliance’s internal cohesion, its relationship with Washington, and its posture toward Moscow are simultaneously under strain and under reconstruction. Secretary General Mark Rutte has described the transformation underway across the Alliance as “NATO 3.0,” characterized by a markedly expanded European share of conventional deterrence and by European and Canadian allies having added some 1.2 trillion United States dollars in cumulative defense spending over the decade ending in 2026, with a single-year increase of roughly 139 billion dollars in 2025 alone. A full day of the summit, 7 July, is reserved for the NATO Summit Defence Industry Forum, reflecting the Alliance’s judgment that the conversion of spending pledges into fielded capability — air defense, munitions, counter-drone systems — has become the central test of credibility, rather than the headline communiqué language that dominated earlier summits.

Three concurrent crises frame the Ankara agenda and bear directly on the nuclear escalation question addressed in this report. The first is the continuing war of attrition in Ukraine, now in its fifth year, in which Russian forces have struggled to convert localized tactical gains into operational breakthroughs while sustaining historically elevated rates of materiel loss. The second is the residual instability surrounding the Strait of Hormuz following the United States-Israel campaign against Iran that began on 28 February 2026, which has periodically disrupted freedom of navigation and has generated friction within the Alliance over burden-sharing in the Middle East. The third, and the focus of this report, is the marked intensification of Russian nuclear signaling since mid-May 2026, occurring against the backdrop of formal reaffirmation by NATO’s Nuclear Planning Group, meeting on 18 June 2026, that Allied nuclear forces remain the supreme guarantee of collective security and that modernization and planning adaptations will continue.

Secretary General Rutte has been explicit in linking these threads. In his 18 June remarks, he noted that nearly 48 percent of the Russian state budget is now allocated to defense, even as he stressed that Russia’s overall economy remains smaller than the combined economies of Belgium and the Netherlands — a juxtaposition intended to convey both the seriousness of Russian militarization and the underlying structural weakness that constrains Moscow’s long-term strategic options. This tension between heightened signaling and constrained material capacity is the analytical fulcrum of the assessment that follows.


II. An Analytical Framework: Reasoning Under Uncertainty

Rather than presenting this assessment as a fixed prediction, the report adopts an adaptive, evidence-driven method of reasoning that mirrors how experienced intelligence analysts revise their judgments as new information arrives. The method proceeds in three stages, described here in narrative rather than technical terms so that the logic remains transparent to a non-specialist readership.

The first stage establishes a baseline assessment — a working judgment about Russian intent formed from its declared doctrine, its historical behavior, and the structural incentives facing the Kremlin, before the most recent signals are taken into account. The second stage involves the disciplined evaluation of new evidence as it emerges: exercises, deployments, rhetoric, and gray-zone activity are each assessed not in isolation but according to how much more likely they are to occur under a genuine “preparing to strike” hypothesis than under a “coercive signaling” hypothesis. The third stage produces a revised assessment that integrates the baseline judgment with the accumulated evidence, while remaining explicitly provisional and subject to further revision as the situation develops. This approach deliberately avoids treating any single signal — however dramatic — as decisive, and instead asks whether the pattern of signals, taken together, is more consistent with deterrent theater or with operational preparation.


III. The Baseline Assessment: Russia’s Declaratory and Operational Nuclear Doctrine

Russian nuclear doctrine, as it has been consistently articulated and as it continues to inform Kremlin behavior, follows what Western analysts term an “escalate to de-escalate” logic: nuclear use is reserved for circumstances in which the existence of the Russian state itself is judged to be under direct threat, whether from nuclear attack or from a conventional assault of such scale and success that it would otherwise be impossible to repel. Given NATO’s consistent policy of supporting Ukraine without the direct deployment of Allied ground combat forces against Russian territory, the structural precondition for doctrinally sanctioned nuclear use — an existential threat to the Russian state — has not been present at any point during the war, and is not present as the Alliance approaches Ankara.

Russia’s nuclear arsenal nonetheless provides it with extensive latent capability. Independent open-source estimates place the current Russian stockpile at approximately 4,400 warheads assigned to strategic and non-strategic forces, with roughly 1,796 strategic warheads deployed across land-based missiles, submarine-launched systems, and bomber forces, alongside some 1,794 non-strategic warheads held in reserve for theater use. For the first time in more than three decades, the United States government has itself published an official estimate of the Russian arsenal, a disclosure that itself forms part of the broader signaling environment this report assesses. The scale of this arsenal is sufficient to make any genuine move toward use catastrophic; it is precisely because the stakes are so extreme that the discipline of distinguishing signaling from preparation becomes essential to sound policy.


IV. The Evidentiary Record: Signals Observed Between May and June 2026

A. The Strategic and Non-Strategic Nuclear Exercises of 19–21 May

On 19 May 2026, two days after a Ukrainian drone strike on Moscow, the Russian Ministry of Defense announced, without prior public notice, a three-day exercise explicitly framed as preparation for “the preparation and use of nuclear forces in the event of a threat of aggression”. The exercise that followed, running through 21 May, was among the largest of its kind in recent years, involving approximately sixty-four thousand troops, more than two hundred missile launchers, one hundred forty aircraft, seventy-three surface vessels, and thirteen submarines, eight of which were strategic nuclear-missile carriers. The operational component included a Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launch from the Plesetsk test site, a Tsirkon missile launch from a surface vessel and a Sineva submarine-launched ballistic missile launch in the Barents Sea, and air-launched cruise missile activity from Tu-95MS bombers, together with a MiG-31 sortie carrying a Kinzhal hypersonic system. This exercise followed, by just one week, a separate and successful test launch of the Sarmat heavy intercontinental ballistic missile on 12 May, itself notable for following a series of earlier test failures, including a destructive silo misfire in September 2024.

B. The Belarusian Dimension and Forward-Deployed Systems

A distinct and arguably more significant development was the parallel exercise announced by the Belarusian Ministry of Defense on 18 May, explicitly described as testing the “delivery of nuclear weapons and their preparation for use” in coordination with Russian forces. Open-source video evidence subsequently reviewed by independent nuclear forces analysts indicated that Russian 12th Main Directorate personnel — the unit responsible for custody of nuclear warheads — transported warhead-bearing vehicles to Belarusian territory at night, and that Belarusian crews operating Iskander ballistic missile systems carried out procedures consistent with the physical mating of warheads to missiles. Statements by Russia’s Chief of the General Staff on 21 May indicated that the exercise had indeed proceeded to the actual transfer of nuclear munitions to Russian and Belarusian units, rather than relying solely on training simulants. This activity builds on the permanent stationing of the Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile system in Belarus since 2025, a dual-capable system able to deliver either conventional or nuclear payloads.

Independent German analysis published in early June assessed that the probability of this exercise cycle serving as genuine pretense for nuclear escalation against Ukraine was relatively low from the outset, noting in particular that Russia did not withdraw or disperse its combat forces along the line of contact — a precondition that would be operationally necessary before any frontline use of a tactical weapon, given the risk of self-contamination through fallout. The same analysis observed a recurring correlation between Russian battlefield setbacks and subsequent nuclear messaging, including the sequencing of the Sarmat test, the large exercise, and a subsequent large-scale conventional missile strike on Kyiv on 24 May that employed nuclear-capable delivery systems armed with conventional warheads — itself a further demonstration of capability rather than an indicator of intent to employ nuclear payloads.

C. Gray-Zone Pressure: Airspace Incursions and Nuclear-Site Harassment

The nuclear exercises did not occur in isolation. They formed part of a broader and sustained pattern of hybrid pressure that has included drone overflights of military installations, undersea infrastructure sabotage, and recurring violations of NATO members’ airspace across the Baltic, Black Sea, and Arctic theaters. Analysts at the International Institute for Strategic Studies have separately documented a wave of drone incursions near sensitive nuclear-related sites across Europe, including locations near submarine bases and storage facilities in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, attributing much of this activity to deniable proxies operating on Moscow’s behalf and assessing its purpose as reconnaissance and psychological pressure rather than direct attack preparation.

A separate but symbolically resonant incident occurred on 30 May 2026, when a drone strike damaged the exterior wall of a turbine building at the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, prompting International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi to warn that any strike near a nuclear facility risks catastrophic and uncontrollable consequences. While this incident occurred within the conventional war in Ukraine rather than as a deliberate signal between Moscow and the Alliance, it illustrates a broader and genuinely concerning trend: as drone warfare proliferates and as both belligerents and third parties operate increasingly sophisticated unmanned systems near nuclear infrastructure, the operational space for inadvertent escalation widens independent of either side’s deliberate intent.

D. Allied Counter-Signals: Eastern Sentry, the Gdańsk Declaration, and Energy Diversification

The Alliance’s response has been to deepen, rather than relax, its deterrence posture. Operation Eastern Sentry, launched in response to a major Russian drone incursion into Polish airspace, has matured into a standing multi-domain vigilance architecture extending from the High North to the Black Sea, integrating additional fighter aircraft, air-defense systems, surveillance platforms, and frigates under unified NATO command. The Military Balance 2026 assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies documents that this incursion led Poland to invoke Article 4 consultations for the first time since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine and only the ninth time in Alliance history, and that frontline states have since accelerated layered fortification programs, including Poland’s East Shield initiative and the Baltic Defence Line, designed to slow any major offensive and to buy time for national and Allied forces to respond.

On 25 June 2026, the leaders of NATO’s Eastern Flank states convened in Gdańsk and issued a joint declaration explicitly condemning Russia’s persistent, coordinated campaigns of sabotage, critical-infrastructure disruption, cyberattack, airspace violation, and information manipulation, while reaffirming their commitment to the 5 percent of gross domestic product defense-investment target agreed at the 2025 Hague Summit and calling for deepened cooperation on drone and counter-drone technology, drawing explicitly on lessons learned from Ukraine’s battlefield experience. The declaration’s timing, less than two weeks before Ankara, signals that the Eastern Flank states intend to shape the summit’s agenda around resilience and deterrence rather than allow it to be dominated by Middle Eastern contingencies.

A parallel and underappreciated development concerns energy security. On 27 May 2026, Canada concluded a twenty-year liquefied natural gas supply agreement between the Ksi Lisims LNG project in British Columbia and Germany’s SEFE (Securing Energy for Europe), under which SEFE will purchase one million tonnes of liquefied natural gas annually, with deliveries expected to begin in the early 2030s. Announced by Canadian Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Tim Hodgson alongside British Columbia’s provincial government and Nisga’a Nation leadership, the agreement marks the first long-term partnership between a Canadian liquefied natural gas supplier and a European buyer and is explicitly framed by Ottawa as part of a broader strategy to position Canada as a reliable, diversified energy supplier to European markets. While the practical supply impact will not materialize for several years, the agreement carries present strategic signaling value: it demonstrates a credible, institutionalized trajectory away from European dependence on Russian-linked energy flows, incrementally narrowing one of the principal non-kinetic levers historically available to Moscow.

E. The Ankara Summit Itself as a Signal Environment

The summit’s structure offers a further data point. Rather than producing a single dramatic strategic reset, Ankara has been deliberately designed around implementation: a full day devoted to the Defence Industry Forum, continued emphasis on converting the Hague spending commitments into fielded capability, and an agenda explicitly organized around defense investment, Ukraine’s future security architecture, Middle East and maritime security, and the broader balance of United States-European responsibility-sharing. Secretary General Rutte has himself suggested that Ankara may prove “even more important” than the 2025 Hague Summit, precisely because it will test whether European and Canadian allies can convert two years of historic spending increases into genuine capability at the speed and scale the security environment now demands. This emphasis on implementation, rather than rhetorical escalation, is itself consistent with an Alliance that is treating Russian nuclear signaling as a long-term structural condition to be managed through sustained capability-building, rather than as an immediate crisis demanding reactive measures.


V. The Revised Assessment: Why the Probability of Deliberate Nuclear Use Remains Constrained

Integrating the baseline doctrinal assessment with the evidentiary record compiled above yields a revised judgment that diverges sharply from the raw frequency of Russian nuclear-related activity observed since mid-May. Four considerations are decisive.

First, the absence of operational indicators that would necessarily accompany genuine preparation for use is itself highly informative. A state genuinely preparing to employ nuclear weapons against an adversary would be expected to disperse strategic assets to survivable locations, withdraw or reposition conventional forces away from any prospective area of nuclear employment to avoid self-contamination, and curtail rather than expand diplomatic and military-to-military contacts. None of these indicators has been observed. Russian conventional forces remained engaged along the existing line of contact throughout the May exercise cycle, and diplomatic channels, while strained, have not been severed.

Second, the timing and sequencing of the May exercises correlates more closely with battlefield and reputational setbacks — most notably the Ukrainian drone strike on Moscow that preceded the strategic exercise announcement by two days — than with any indication of a considered decision to cross the nuclear threshold. This pattern is consistent with a long-established Russian practice of using nuclear signaling as a tool of psychological compensation and coercive bargaining at moments of perceived weakness, rather than as the leading edge of an operational decision already taken.

Third, the credibility of Russian nuclear threats has been measurably eroded by their repetition. Four years of recurrent warnings, exercises, and doctrinal statements without any accompanying use have produced a degree of signal degradation among Western policymakers and publics, reducing the marginal psychological return Moscow can extract from any single new round of signaling and, by extension, reducing the incentive to escalate the rhetoric further rather than to escalate the underlying behavior.

Fourth, the structural weakness underlying Russian nuclear assertiveness — an economy smaller than the combined economies of Belgium and the Netherlands, now allocating nearly half of state expenditure to defense, as Secretary General Rutte has publicly emphasized — constrains the sustainability of any genuinely confrontational trajectory. A Kremlin leadership whose paramount objective remains regime survival has strong structural incentives to extract maximum coercive value from nuclear signaling precisely because the costs of actual employment, in terms of certain and overwhelming Allied conventional retaliation, would be catastrophic and irreversible for the regime itself.

This revised assessment should not, however, be read as a judgment that escalation risk is negligible. The relevant risk has shifted in character rather than disappeared: it now resides less in deliberate strategic decision-making in Moscow and more in the expanding zone of operational friction created by drone proliferation, electronic warfare, and gray-zone sabotage operating in close proximity to nuclear-relevant infrastructure and forces on both sides of the line of contact.


VI. Scenario Architecture for the Post-Ankara Period

Scenario Alpha — Status Quo Coercion (Highest Probability)

Under this scenario, Russia sustains its current strategy of aggressive but fundamentally non-kinetic signaling: continued hybrid operations against critical infrastructure and information ecosystems, recurring airspace harassment of the kind condemned at Gdańsk, and periodic exercises of strategic and non-strategic nuclear forces timed to coincide with battlefield setbacks or significant Allied policy decisions. The strategic cost to NATO under this scenario remains concentrated in the information domain and in critical-infrastructure defense, requiring sustained investment in counter-hybrid resilience of the kind outlined in the Gdańsk declaration and operationalized through Eastern Sentry, but posing a low probability of actual nuclear confrontation. This scenario is assessed as the most likely trajectory through and beyond the Ankara Summit.

Scenario Beta — Accidental Escalation (Moderate and Rising Probability)

This scenario does not require any deliberate Russian decision to escalate. Rather, it arises from the cumulative effect of an increasingly dense and contested operational environment: a growing frequency of drone incursions, the expanding use of electronic warfare across the Baltic and Black Sea theaters, and recurring incidents of the kind observed at the Zaporizhzhia plant in late May, in which unmanned systems operate near nuclear-relevant infrastructure without either side’s deliberate intent to provoke a nuclear crisis. A single miscalculation — a drone or missile inadvertently striking a populated area or critical Allied asset within Poland, Romania, or the Baltic states — could trigger a localized conventional Allied response. While the probability of this scenario escalating directly to nuclear exchange remains low, the resulting sequence of rapid retaliatory measures would compress decision timelines and increase the risk that legitimate Russian or Allied defensive signaling is misread as preparation for further escalation. The structural drivers of this scenario — drone proliferation and the compression of decision-making time — are assessed to be intensifying rather than abating, which is why the Gdańsk leaders placed such explicit emphasis on counter-drone cooperation ahead of Ankara.

Scenario Gamma — Regime-Survival Rupture (Low Probability, Catastrophic Consequence)

This scenario remains the most severe but least probable trajectory. It would require a sudden and catastrophic collapse of Russian frontline positions combined with acute domestic political instability that the leadership perceives as threatening the survival of the regime itself — the precise precondition specified in Russia’s own escalate-to-de-escalate doctrine. The analytical value of this scenario lies precisely in its observability: as established above, authentic movement toward this trajectory would be preceded by unmistakable operational indicators — the sudden and sustained withdrawal of forward conventional units, the dispersal of strategic assets to survivable basing, and the breakdown rather than mere straining of diplomatic channels. The absence of these indicators as of 30 June 2026 is the principal basis for this report’s judgment that Scenario Gamma remains a remote, rather than proximate, contingency, while underscoring the importance of continuous monitoring for any future appearance of these specific markers.


VII. Strategic Recommendations for the North Atlantic Council

First, the Alliance should continue to devalue the nuclear signal as a tool of political leverage by consistently and visibly decoupling Russian nuclear rhetoric from NATO’s conventional support decisions regarding Ukraine and Eastern Flank reinforcement. Demonstrating, repeatedly and through action rather than statement alone, that nuclear posturing does not alter the Alliance’s strategic timeline is the most direct way to accelerate the signal degradation already evident in the diminished psychological impact of recent Russian exercises.

Second, the Alliance should prioritize the reinforcement of conventional and counter-drone deterrence along the Eastern Flank as the primary safeguard against Scenario Beta. The fortification and force-generation programs already underway — East Shield, the Baltic Defence Line, and the expansion of Eastern Sentry — should be resourced and accelerated in line with the commitments reaffirmed at Gdańsk, with particular urgency attached to integrated counter-drone capability given its direct bearing on the accidental-escalation pathway identified in this report.

Third, the Council should ensure that the retaliatory costs of any Russian nuclear use, of any yield and against any target, are communicated with complete clarity and without ambiguity, so that the catastrophic consequences for the Russian military and state apparatus remain permanently understood within the Kremlin’s strategic calculus to outweigh any conceivable tactical benefit of escalation.

Fourth, the Alliance should continue and expand the structural reduction of Moscow’s non-kinetic leverage by accelerating energy diversification initiatives of the kind exemplified by the Canada-Germany liquefied natural gas agreement, recognizing that the closure of the energy-coercion pathway has historically correlated with an increased Russian reliance on nuclear and hybrid signaling as substitute instruments — a substitution effect that the Alliance should anticipate and prepare for rather than treat as an unexpected consequence of its own success.

Fifth, given the documented vulnerability of nuclear-relevant infrastructure to drone reconnaissance and incidental strike, the Council should direct enhanced and harmonized protective protocols for nuclear-associated military and civilian sites across the Alliance, drawing on the International Atomic Energy Agency’s warnings regarding the Zaporizhzhia incidents as a baseline case study in the consequences of inadequate protection.


VIII. Concluding Assessment

The evidentiary record compiled through 30 June 2026 supports a calibrated rather than alarmist reading of Russian nuclear behavior. The raw volume of nuclear-related signaling has unambiguously increased, and the Belarusian dimension of the May exercises, including the apparent physical mating of warheads to delivery systems, represents a genuine escalation in the visibility and tangibility of that signaling. Yet the absence of the operational indicators that would necessarily accompany authentic preparation for use, combined with the structural and economic constraints on the Russian state and the doctrinal logic that continues to tie nuclear use to an existential threat that has not materialized, sustains the judgment that the current period is best understood as an intensified but fundamentally coercive phase of long-running Russian strategic signaling.

The Alliance enters Ankara with both the analytical tools and the institutional architecture — Eastern Sentry, the Gdańsk consensus, and a deepening industrial and energy resilience agenda — to manage this period without overreaction. The principal task before the North Atlantic Council is not to prevent an imminent deliberate nuclear strike, which this assessment judges unlikely, but to close the narrower and more probable gap through which miscalculation could occur: the crowded, contested, and rapidly evolving space of drone warfare, electronic interference, and gray-zone operations along NATO’s eastern periphery. Sustained vigilance in that domain, rather than reactive alarm at each new exercise announcement from Moscow, remains the most prudent course for the Alliance as it moves from Ankara into the second half of 2026.