
By Alexander Perepechko
Published on January 18, 2026
Russia’s potential signaling of the Oreshnik missile from Belarus illustrates a strategic ambiguity; misreading it could allow perception to become a tool of escalation without a single missile being deployed.
Introduction
Russia’s emergence of the Oreshnik missile concept—accompanied by visible but incomplete military infrastructure activity in Belarus—has triggered speculative concern across Western political, media, and analytical communities. Rail spurs, loading ramps, support vehicles, and command-and-control elements are often interpreted as evidence of a possible forward missile deployment threatening NATO’s eastern flank.
This article argues that misinterpretations of Oreshnik and Belarusian infrastructure can produce unintended consequences for NATO. It explores possible ways NATO might respond, the risks of validating Russian signaling, and how perception itself can amplify strategic effects. The analysis focuses on possible scenarios, rather than confirmed deployments or operational realities (Adamsky 2019; Colby 2021; Acton 2018; Сообщество железнодорожников Беларуси 2025).
Keywords: Oreshnik, Russia, NATO, Belarus, escalation management, coercive signaling, intermediate-range missile, latent capability
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