X

Vous n'êtes pas connecté

Maroc Maroc - EURASIAREVIEW.COM - A la une - 11/Jul 22:25

West Preparing For Arms Race With Russia And Its Backers – Analysis

By Jeff Seldin While much of the focus at the NATO summit in Washington has been on providing additional support for Ukraine, some Western officials are equally intent on confronting another challenge unleashed by Russia’s invasion: a nascent arms race with global implications. The officials argue it is no longer enough to try to ensure Ukraine has the weapons and systems it needs to keep pace with Russia’s unrelenting attacks. They say NATO must simultaneously prepare to outspend, outpace and outproduce the fledgling alliance that has kept the Russian military on the move. “There is no time to lose,” a NATO official told VOA, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the growing defense cooperation among Russia, China, North Korea and Iran. “This must be a key priority for all our allies, because it is not just about spending more,” the official said. “It is also on getting those capabilities.” Officials have repeatedly accused China of playing a critical role in sustaining Russia’s military by sending Moscow raw materials and so-called dual-use components needed to produce advanced weapons and weapons systems. In April and May, the United States and Britain levied new sanctions against Iranian companies and officials involved in the production of drones for the Russian military. And declassified U.S. intelligence has noted Russia’s use of North Korean ballistic missiles, while South Korean officials said earlier this year that Pyongyang has so far sent Russia at least 6,700 containers which could contain more than 3 million artillery shells. The NATO official who spoke to VOA said the support from China, Iran and North Korea has significantly altered Russia’s posture on the battlefield, rendering intelligence assessments that Russia’s military “will require years of rebuilding” obsolete.  “When you look at the assessments of the pace of reconstitution of the Russian armed forces and the Russian defense industrial and technological base, those assessments were made without taking into account how much China would be stepping in,” the official said. And there are concerns this is just the beginning. The prospect for increased cooperation between Russia, China, North Korea and Iran, “essentially underlines the urgency of the task at hand,” the official said. Some U.S. officials have taken to calling the growing alliance a new “axis of evil.” “We ought to act accordingly,” former commander of U.S. forces in the Indo-Pacific Admiral John Aquilino told lawmakers in March. Some analysts are also alarmed, seeing signs that the defense relationship between Russia and the other countries is moving beyond a series of bilateral efforts to support Moscow’s war in Ukraine. “What we are seeing now is … an intensification, a deepening of these strategic partnerships,” said Richard Goldberg, a senior adviser at the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “Whether or not they're 100% aligned all the time, every day, what's important is that on the strategic capabilities that they're building in partnership, they are aligned,” Goldberg, a U.S. National Security Council official under former President Donald Trump, told VOA. “Our response has to view them as an axis, not individual parts.” But how quickly that axis evolves into a true rival to NATO is less certain. “There are still significant tension points between the four countries that prevent the formation of a more cohesive alliance,” said Michelle Grisé, a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation. “Within the Russia-Iran relationship, for example, friction points include competition for energy markets and for influence in the Caucasus, as well as — at least historically —divergent approaches to Israel,” Grisé told VOA. “The Russia-China-North Korea-Iran axis poses a serious threat to U.S. and NATO interests, but I don’t think this axis is an unsurmountable rival,” she said. “To form a more cohesive alliance, they’ll have to translate their shared opposition to the Western-led international order into a coherent, shared vision for the future, which I expect they’ll struggle to do.” NATO allies, however, are not ready to take such struggles by the evolving Russian-Chinese-North Korean-Iranian axis for granted. In a speech July 9 at the NATO Summit Defense Industry Forum in Washington, U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks noted the “rapid defense industrial expansion of our strategic competitors,” while urging NATO allies to expand cooperation on weapons procurement and development. As an example, Hicks cited an effort by the U.S., Germany, Spain and others to produce interceptors for Patriot air defense batteries in Europe while praising a U.S.-Turkish effort to produce 155-millimeter artillery shells in the southern U.S. state of Texas. “None of us should think it’s enough,” she said. “Expanding transatlantic defense industrial capacity is not a nice-to-do. It is a need-to-do, a must-do for the NATO alliance.” Even if the NATO efforts to boost weapons production are not enough, some officials see them as a reason to believe the West can retain an upper hand. “I think that the steps and the progress we're making is really delivering results,” the NATO official told VOA, adding, they “wouldn't be overly pessimistic.” “On issues like ammunitions, you're starting to see the ramping up actually materializing,” the official said. “And I think if we look at the year to come, we're going to have much better, much better numbers.”

Articles similaires

Why a strong NATO is more important than ever

washingtontimes.com - 26/Jul 01:24

At the NATO summit last month, for the first time the alliance had publicly and explicitly confronted the new "axis of tyranny" -- the deepening...

Pentagon Announces Additional $1.7 Billion Security Assistance For Ukraine

eurasiareview.com - 29/Jul 22:57

By Joseph Clark The Defense Department on Monday announced a security assistance package for Ukraine as it continues its fight to counter Russia's...

North Korea’s GDP grows at record pace on Kremlin resources – review

eng.uatv.ua - 28/Jul 11:46

Russia has become a donor for the DPRK economy. Bloomberg writes that North Korea's gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 3% in 2023: production of...

As Venezuela Votes, Russia Will Be Watching – Analysis

eurasiareview.com - 26/Jul 23:55

By Todd Prince (RFE/RL) -- It's half a world away from Moscow, but Venezuela's presidential election could be a nail-biter for the...

Prabowo Visits Russia To ‘Emphasize’ Wish For Deeper Bilateral Ties As Indonesian President

eurasiareview.com - 31/Jul 22:38

Indonesia’s President-elect Prabowo Subianto said in Russia on Wednesday that his visit to Jakarta’s “great friend” Moscow was intended to...

Has The West’s Strategy Toward India Failed? – Analysis

eurasiareview.com - 20:32

By Zhou Chao According to a report by the Russian TASS news agency, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, recently re-elected, made an official visit...

Modi’s Moscow Mission: A Message To China And The West – OpEd

eurasiareview.com - 27/Jul 23:23

Modi’s trip to Moscow was to allay Russian apprehensions over a perceptible shift in India’s foreign policy favoring the West over Russia....

The Double Crisis Of US Foreign Policy – OpEd

eurasiareview.com - 25/Jul 01:23

Approaching the consequential elections of 2024, the United States faces a stark debate over the role of the country in international affairs. The...

Austin’s 11th Visit To Indo-Pacific Builds Upon Sustained Momentum With Key Partners

eurasiareview.com - 26/Jul 16:06

By Joseph Clark Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III is embarking on his 11th trip to the Indo-Pacific Friday amid what officials said is a...

Defending Europe With Less America – Analysis

eurasiareview.com - 29/Jul 00:32

By Camille Grand European defence policies are facing their most important stress test since the early days of the cold war. Russia’s full-scale...