Right-Sizing the Russian Threat to Europe
  by The Quincy Institute
  Western  leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden, have frequently framed the  invasion of Ukraine as the first step in a Russian plan of broader  European conquest. However, a close examination of Russian intent and  military capabilities shows this view is dangerously mistaken. Russia  likely has neither the capability nor the intent to launch a war of  aggression against NATO members — but the ongoing brinkmanship between  Russia and the West still poses serious risks of military escalation  that can only be defused by supplementing military deterrence with a  diplomatic effort to address tensions.
  An analysis of Russian  security thinking demonstrates that Putin’s stated views align with  long-standing Russian fears about Western encroachment, given Russia’s  lack of natural barriers to invasion. As Putin has come to view NATO as  increasingly hostile to Russia, aggressive Russian action in defense of  its claimed “sphere of influence” has become a factor in European  security. However, contrary to many Western analyses, this does not mean  that Russia views future wars of aggression against NATO member states  as in its security interest. 
  This does not imply naivete about  the danger of Russian aggression, as reflected most recently in its  illegal invasion of Ukraine. But it highlights the fundamental  differences between Russia’s perceptions of Ukraine, which it has long  regarded as both critical to its national security and integral to its  history and culture, and its views of NATO countries, where the  cost-benefit balance of aggression for Russia would be very different.
  Understanding  Russian incentives also requires assessing Russia’s actual military  capabilities compared to NATO. As frequently reiterated by NATO  leadership, such an assessment shows that Russia is at a decisive  conventional military disadvantage against the NATO alliance.  
  While  Russia would do damage in a conventional war with NATO, it would almost  certainly suffer a devastating defeat in such a conflict absent nuclear  escalation. NATO has a greater than three-to-one advantage over Russia  in active-duty ground forces. NATO also has even greater advantages in  the air and at sea. The alliance has a ten-to-one lead in military  aircraft and a large qualitative edge as well, raising the probability  of total air superiority. At sea, NATO would likely have the capacity to  impose a naval blockade on Russian shipping, whose costs would dwarf  current economic sanctions. While Russia has clear military superiority  over individual NATO states, especially in the Baltics, it is extremely  unlikely it could exercise this advantage without triggering a broader  war with the entire NATO alliance.
  However, NATO’s powerful  military deterrent alone cannot create stability in Europe.  Paradoxically, an excessive reliance on military deterrence is likely to  increase instability by inducing Russia to rely increasingly on its  nuclear force as its primary basis for deterrence. Unlike conventional  forces, Russia and NATO possess roughly the same amount of nuclear  weapons. Washington must work to defuse this increasingly unstable  dynamic by restoring diplomatic lines of communication between Russia  and the West.
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  quincyinst.org
  Tom |