WASHINGTON -- Gen. Valery Gerasimov, the architect of President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, called President Joe Biden's top military adviser last week and talked about how to manage escalation concerns between the two countries, according to defense and military officials.
The rare phone call took place last Wednesday, the day before Thanksgiving and just six days after Russia launched a new, nuclear-capable, intermediate-range ballistic missile at Ukraine that Putin said was in response to Ukraine's use of American and British weapons to strike deeper into Russia.
During the call, Gerasimov told Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that the Oreshnik ballistic missile launch had been planned long before the Biden administration agreed to allow Ukraine to use American ATACMS to strike deeper into Russia, officials said.
Though the Oreshnik missile carried only conventional warheads, using it signaled that Russia could strike with nuclear weapons if it chose. The missile struck a Ukraine weapons facility in Dnipro.
Capt. Jereal Dorsey, a spokesperson for Brown, said in a statement after he was approached by a reporter about the call that "at the request of General Gerasimov, General Brown agreed to not proactively announce the call."
The two men "discussed a number of global and regional security issues, to include the ongoing conflict in Ukraine," Dorsey said.
The call came at a tense time. Putin had escalated an already tense showdown with the West, asserting that Russia had the right to strike the military facilities of countries "that allow their weapons to be used against our facilities."
"The regional conflict in Ukraine, previously provoked by the West, has acquired elements of a global character," Putin said in a rare address to the nation at the time. "We are developing intermediate- and shorter-range missiles as a response to U.S. plans to produce and deploy intermediate- and shorter-range missiles in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region."
Putin's comments came as Biden loosened restrictions that he had kept in place for much of the war. He authorized the use of those missiles, known as ATACMS, for Army Tactical Missile Systems, deeper into Russia, and Ukraine has used them, including in a strike last month on an ammunition depot in southwestern Russia, according to Ukrainian officials.
The Biden administration also last month approved supplying Ukraine with American antipersonnel mines to bolster defenses against Russian attacks as front lines in Ukraine's east buckled.
It was unclear why Gerasimov wanted the phone call with Brown kept quiet. Gerasimov last spoke with his American counterpart in October 2022, when he and Gen. Mark A. Milley, Brown's predecessor as chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke on the phone. That call also came amid fears that Russia was looking to escalate its war in Ukraine.