Europe's Russian Threat
"Russia is already a direct threat to the European Union.""[Moscow is spending more on defence than the EU's 27 member states combined, and this year will invest more on defence than [on] its own health care, education and social policy combined.""This is a long-term plan for a long-term aggression. You don't spend that much on [the] military, if you do not plan to use it.""Europe is under attack and our continent sits in a world becoming more dangerous.""Today, against NATO and the EU, Russia doesn’t stand a chance. But we must stick together.""When NATO leaders meet next week, keeping unity in the alliance is as much a priority as spending more on defence."EU Foreign Policy chief Kaja Kallas
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| Vladimir Putin during a visit to the Urakvagizavid factory, Russia's largest producer of tanks: Photo: Sputnik/Kremlin Pool/EPA |
Acts
of sabotage and cyberattacks by Russia toward members of the European
Union have not endeared them to Moscow in their studied opinion of the
Kremlin's plans post-Ukraine war. That Russian President Vladimir Putin
has overseen a massive military spending spree leads to the conclusion
that relations with Russia stand the potential of degrading even further
than merely criticizing it for invading and annexing parts of
territorial Ukraine. That, if in the final analysis, Moscow achieves at
least a part of its territorial aggression in Ukraine, it will continue
to cast its malevolent eye on its squirming 'near abroad' seems
inevitable.
There
is a fairly general consensus among most EU members that Mr. Putin has
plans for future use of his armed forces. Its ongoing airspace
violations, provocative military exercises and energy grid attacks, on
pipelines and undersea cables, represent in their opinion a testing of
the waters, so to speak, as well as a deliberate move to deliver a
message for the future. No one in Europe, they feel, can feel securely
immune from Putin's roving eye and his territorial ambitions to make
Greater Russia even greater at their expense.
According
to NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, Russia is producing weapons and
ammunition in three months in a quantity and of technical efficiency
rivalling the entire output of the 32 allies combined can produce in a
year. Russia, he believes, could be in a position to launch attacks on
NATO allies come the end of the decade. Europe is becoming increasingly
alarmed over the potential of Russia's capacity for mischief.
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| Vladimir Putin sits in a T-90AM tank at the Russian Expo Arms in the Urals city of Nizhniy Tagil in 2011. Photograph: Alexei Druzhinin/AP |
Even
to the extent that Russia might wish to test the organization's Article
5 security guarantee, the assurance to its members that should any one
of their members come under attack, NATO would act as one in response;
the entire 32-member alliance would be committed to militarily defend
any one of their members coming under a military attack by an outside
source. This is a pact that is taken seriously, presumably acting as a
clear deterrent to any member-state of the alliance coming under attack
from malign forces.
NATO
allies officially recognized that significant and cumulative
cyberattacks could be viewed as representing a situation analogous to an
armed attack, and as such could lead to an invocation of Article 5.
Although that recognition of a prevailing situation was formally
accepted in 2021, those same attacks have continued, with the alliance
making no move to counteract them collectively. A malign actor
perceiving sound and fury but no reaction could very well make their own
conclusions based on probing the intent and analyzing the lack of
response.
Europe
finds itself somewhat rudderless of late, with new realities brought to
the fore under the Trump administration in the United States, their
foremost sponsor for decades. Reliance on the steady commitment of the
United States to guide and direct the alliance has come under the sharp
new lens of an altered political environment, leaving Europe adrift in
indecision, a quandary propelling it to commit to greater responsibility
for the outcomes of its relations with outlier nations.
Europe
feels more vulnerable without the assured military canopy of the United
States under the Trump administration that blows hot and cold with
conflicting positions and alarming statements issuing from the American
president. It is learning to fend for itself. Its support for Ukraine in
its battle against predatory Russia remains firm, albeit weary; a
general feeling of reduced assurance in the precarious position it now
finds itself in, makes the alliance both nervous and defiant.
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| Military hardware in Red Square during Russia’s annual Victory Day military parade in May 2022. Photograph: Yuri Kochetkov/EPA |
"We are very certain, and we have intelligence evidence for this, that Ukraine is just a step on the path to the West.""[Russia's goal is to expand its sphere of influence westward]. They want to catapult NATO back to the state it was in at the end of the 1990s.""They want to kick America out of Europe, and they'll use any means to achieve that."Bruno Kahl, German's Foreign Intelligence Service chief
Labels: European Union, NATO, Russia's Endgame, Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Russian Military Buildup, Russian President Vladimir Putin




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