I don't see a "unified" Europe working together whatsoever. They've been EU'd too much. Extremely poor leadership in most of the member countries. It might be a motley crew of individual nations, but nothing of consequence. However, if they keep sending bucks and military to Ukraine where it is concentrated and the warmonger Zelensky is still in charge, then Russia is going to push back VERY HARD.Sam Lowry said:Can't blame them as long as they don't expect us to back them up. But Americans had better understand that if Europe sends troops to Ukraine, it will be for one and only one purpose--to get the US directly involved.Assassin said:On the other hand, why spend their DM's on military when we send the $s and support the European defense?Sam Lowry said:It's as bad or worse in Germany.Assassin said:Wow. Didnt realize it was that bad in the UKSam Lowry said:No, it's sheer fantasy. It's not the Russians but the Europeans whose military forces are in drastic decay. The British army in Ukraine would last about a week.FLBear5630 said:My question is what will the Brits do? They have no "peace keeping" type capabilities. They have small elite forces such as SAS, Royal Marines and such. But enough troops to make a difference? Can they even field an Armored Combat Brigade?whiterock said:of course they'll "allow" it. They can't do anything about it. At minimum, a direct attack on Nato peace-keeping troops would galvanize Europe to rearm even faster. At worst, it would motivate even more Nato states to respond via Article 5 - most likely from the Baltic tier of states (which would include France). As a general rule, the closer one is to Russia, the more hawkish one tends to be on Russia .Assassin said:🚨🇬🇧 “Britain will now move into an operational phase”
— Concerned Citizen (@BGatesIsaPyscho) March 15, 2025
Today Kier Starmer spoke again about boots on the ground & planes in the air.
The UK PM Is either lying, totally insane or completely delusional if he thinks Russia will allow this. pic.twitter.com/9DWPJVolbU
it'd be one of the most important things that could happen - render moot prior Russian calculations about the effects of Article 5. Russia has heretofore determined (not entirely incorrectly) that Article 5 would basically make it impossible for a Nato state to move unilaterally to counter Russian moves without galvanizing the rest of Europe against it (thereby dividing Nato). That significantly freed the Russian hand to move as it wished, so long as it did not actually attack Nato itself. (Ironically making Article 5 a brake on Nato actions against Russia.) Deployment of British (and/or French or Nordic) troops would show that calculation to be invalid, going forward. Specifically, it would have the effect of complicating Russian calculations about its moves westward (toward the rest of Ukraine and Moldova) in all post-war scenarios.
Russia has been stopped in its tracks with negligible gains (it already had Donbas and Crimea....) by Nato soft power support for Ukraine. Adding hard Nato power to the equation is strategic deterioration in the Russian position which would take decades to to undo (if ever, in a meaningful timeframe). For that reason, Starmer's moves should be correctly viewed as pressure on Russia to make a deal for peace - to lock in its gains now rather than risk further deterioration.
Never underestimate Russian ability to miscalculate.
https://www.the-independent.com/news/uk/home-news/british-army-troops-ukraine-defence-b2701635.html
https://www.bruegel.org/analysis/fit-war-decades-sluggish-german-rearmament-versus-surging-russian-defence-production




