How Putin’s Russia could overrun The Baltic states in THREE DAYS:

nato map

US war planners say NATO has been caught napping and would be hopelessly outgunned

Russia could overrun Eastern Europe in just three days because NATO has not been bolstering its fleet since Vladimir Putin took Crimea, according to US military predictions.

Testing every possible scenario in a series of war games, a US military think tank has concluded it would take a resurgent Russia between 36 and 60 hours to push its 27 heavily-armored battalions past NATO’s lightweight 12 to occupy the Baltic States.

Most likely, the study found, Russia would start by launching a two-pronged attack across the Latvian border, sending heavily-armed battalions in from the north and the south.

These battalions would push past the light-weight Latvian and NATO battalions before uniting to take the capital of Riga.

Once secured, the remaining part of Russia’s 27 maneuver battalions would cross the Narva reservoir into Estonia to take the ethnic Russian north-east before heading to Tallinn, the capital.

NATO’s only hope would be to concentrate its forces in Tallinn and Riga while stationing some delays along the main routes. But eventually, the West ‘would have to launched a belated nuclear attack’.

‘The outcome was, bluntly, a disaster for NATO,’ the report concludes.

This This is a map of how a US military think tank believes Russia could overrun NATO to take the Baltic States in just 36-60 hours.

nato map

Even with a week’s notice, NATO’s 12-strong fleet would be no match against Putin’s 27

NATO report claimed Russia’s military drills have now reached levels ‘unseen since the height of the Cold War’

RUSSIA’S FLEET

27 maneuver battalions

Heavily-armored battle tanks in every battalion

Light-armored vehicles in 8 airborne fleets

Troops stationed in Kalingrad Oblast, surrounding the Baltic States

NATO’S FLEET

12 battalions – 7 of which are the domestic fleets of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia

No main battle tanks

Only one, a single Stryker battalion, has heavy armor

NATO has adequate airpower but this would be futile with weak ground forces

The report warns, NATO’s ground forces are no match for Russia’s. They do not have any battle tanks; all of Russia’s do. And NATO would have little room for maneuver, annexed in by Russian forces in Kalingrad Oblast.

In the scenario given by the study, NATO would have one week’s notice to defend Eastern Europe.

The study, carried out between 2014 and 2015, suggested even a combination of US and Baltic troops combined with US airstrikes would not be able to prevent Russia advancing.

Seven of NATO’s 12 battalions in Eastern Europe are domestic fleets of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. They only have one heavy armored fleet, a single Stryker battalion, and no main battle tanks, the report explains.

Though NATO’s air power could put up a strong defense, it would be futile as its lightweight ground forces would be plowed down by Russia’s.

‘The games’ findings are unambiguous: As currently postured, NATO cannot successfully defend the territory of its most exposed members,’ the report said.

‘Such a rapid defeat would leave NATO with a limited number of options, all bad.’

The study claims that ‘avoiding such a swift and catastrophic failure does not appear to require a Herculean effort’ – but it would be expensive.

Airpower and artillery backed up with around seven brigades – three of them heavily armored – in the Baltic area would be enough to ‘prevent the rapid overrun of the Baltic states’.

But this would cost around $2.7 billion a year.

‘Crafting this deterrent posture would not be inexpensive in absolute terms, with annual costs perhaps running on the order of $2.7 billion,’ the authors write.

‘That is not a small number, but seen in the context of an Alliance with an aggregate gross domestic product in excess of $35 trillion and combined yearly defense spending of more than $1 trillion, it hardly appears unaffordable.’

President Barack Obama, in his final budget request to Congress, will ask for $3.4billion — up from $789million for the current budget year — for what the Pentagon calls its European Reassurance Initiative

Russia could overrun Eastern Europe in just three days because NATO has been caught napping by Vadimir Putin and would be outgunned, according to US military predictions

The report emerged a day after the Obama administration said it will propose quadrupling what it spends on its troops and training in Europe, as part of the U.S. military’s accelerating effort to deter Russia.

President Barack Obama, in his final budget request to Congress, will ask for $3.4billion — up from $789million for the current budget year — for what the Pentagon calls its European Reassurance Initiative, which was announced in 2014 in response to Russia’s annexation of Crimea and incursion into eastern Ukraine.

Defense Secretary Ash Carter, giving an overview of the administration’s proposed 2017 defense budget of $582.7billion, described Russia as a growing challenge for the United States. He said the U.S. was taking a ‘strong and balanced approach’ to deterring its former Cold War foe.

‘We haven’t had to worry about this for 25 years, and while I wish it were otherwise, now we do,’ Carter said in a speech to the Economic Club of Washington.

Obama, warning that Russia had taken an ‘aggressive posture’ near NATO countries, called it a ‘challenging and important time’ for the alliance, whose members in Europe are increasingly concerned about Russia’s intentions after its incursions in Ukraine.

He said the U.S. had taken decisive steps to bolster NATO since the start of Russia’s actions in Ukraine, but that it hadn’t been enough.

‘It is clear that the United States and our allies must do more to advance our common defense in support of a Europe that is whole, free, and at peace,’ Obama said.

NATO’s top civilian official, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, issued a statement applauding Carter’s proposed increase in spending in Europe.

‘This is a clear sign of the enduring commitment by the United States to European security,’ he said. ‘It will be a timely and significant contribution to NATO’s deterrence, and collective defense.’

Michal Baranowski, head of the Warsaw office of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, a think tank, said the increased spending was a positive development and would be a ‘key ingredient’ for success at a NATO summit to be attended by allied heads of government in July in the Polish capital.

‘I think it’s great news for Poland, the region and NATO as a whole — the extra investment will make NATO’s flank safer by more effectively deterring Russia. It’s also an important sign of U.S. leadership that is badly needed at NATO,’ Baranowski said in an interview.

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