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Zelensky’s “secret request” appears to have triggered a dramatic recalibration of NATO’s deterrence posture — with allied defense planners openly discussing enhanced nuclear readiness closer to Ukraine’s borders. According to officials briefed on allied consultations, Kyiv has repeatedly urged NATO leaders for more robust deterrence assurances as frontlines stabilize and Russia shifts to deeper battlefield operations. While there is no confirmed deployment of nuclear weapons into Ukraine itself, intelligence and diplomatic sources indicate that discussions have accelerated among NATO members about forward‑based nuclear readiness in eastern members such as Poland and Romania, alongside dual‑capable aircraft rotations and enhanced alert postures. This shift comes amid growing concern in Brussels and Washington that strategic ambiguity is no longer sufficient — and that positioning deterrent assets closer to the Ukrainian theater could reduce risk of miscalculation and enhance allied cohesion. NATO officials stress this is about deterrence signaling and readiness, not an imminent shift to nuclear conflict. In this video, we break down the origins of Zelensky’s request to NATO, what allied planners are actually discussing in terms of nuclear posture and conventional reinforcement, and why Russia’s leadership reaction suggests it takes these shifts seriously. Key Developments: • What Zelensky actually asked NATO — and why deterrence assurances matter now. • How NATO’s nuclear deterrence principles work in eastern Europe. • The difference between “moving nukes” and enhanced alliance readiness. • Russia’s response to NATO’s evolving posture and strategic signaling. The nuclear question isn’t about war — it’s about preventing one.