The Daily Telegraph

Nato warns of war with Russia in the next 20 years

Public told to prepare for a life-changing conflict as Putin triples military spending

- By Joe Barnes and Matt Oliver

CIVILIANS must prepare for all-out war with Russia in the next 20 years, a top NATO military official has warned.

While armed forces are primed for conflict, private citizens need to be ready for a war that would require wholesale change in their lives, Adml Rob Bauer said yesterday.

Large numbers of civilians would need to be mobilised and government­s should put in place systems to manage the process, Adml Bauer told reporters after a meeting of Nato defence chiefs in Brussels. “We have to realise it’s not a given that we are in peace. And that’s why we [Nato forces] are preparing for a conflict with Russia. But the discussion is much wider. It is also the industrial base and also the people that have to understand they play a role,” he said.

The Dutch naval officer, who is chairman of Nato’s Military Committee, praised Sweden for asking all of its citizens to brace for war ahead of the country formally joining the alliance.

Stockholm’s move, announced earlier this month, has led to a surge in volunteers for the country’s civil defence organisati­on and a spike in sales of torches and battery-powered radios.

“It starts there,” Adml Bauer said. “The realisatio­n that not everything is planable and not everything is going to be hunky dory in the next 20 years.”

About 90,000 Nato troops will next week begin the bloc’s largest military exercise since the Cold War.

The Steadfast Defender 2024 operation has more than doubled in size since it was announced last year, and is explicitly designed to prepare the alliance for a Russian invasion.

Britain has committed about 20,000 soldiers, as well as tanks, artillery and fighter jets to the drills taking place across Europe until May. But senior Nato officials are increasing­ly concerned that government­s and private arms manufactur­ers are falling behind in preparatio­ns on the domestic front.

Stockpiles of weapons and ammunition have been drained by the conflict in Ukraine and will take years to replenish at the current rate of production.

Meanwhile, Russia has tripled its military expenditur­e to 40 per cent of the entire national budget, while speedingup manufactur­ing lines. “We need to be readier across the whole spectrum,” Adml Bauer said. “You have to have a system in place to find more people if it comes to war, whether it does or not. Then you talk mobilisati­on, reservists or conscripti­on. You need to be able to fall back on an industrial base that is able to produce weapons and ammunition fast enough to be able to continue a conflict if you are in it.”

Western aid to Ukraine has dwindled amid growing public resistance in the United States and European Union.

The EU has been unable to deliver on its promise to send a million 155mm artillery shells to Kyiv by next month. Joe Biden has also been unable to convince Republican leaders to back further spending packages for Ukraine, as they argue the money should be spent on domestic priorities.

Yesterday, Lord Cameron warned against a 1930s-style appeasemen­t of Vladimir Putin and promised Britain would keep supporting Ukraine in the “struggle of our generation”.

The Foreign Secretary urged Britain’s allies not to push for peace talks between Kyiv and Moscow, arguing that unifying behind Ukraine was ultimately the best way to end the war.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Lord Cameron compared the calls for negotiatio­ns to the appeasemen­t of Adolf Hitler by prime minister Neville Chamberlai­n in the lead-up to the Second World War.

“If foreign ministers keep saying, ‘Yes, we will support Ukraine but, yes, we must also start a peace process’, they’ll neither get a strong Ukraine nor a peace process,” he said.

“This is like being a foreign minister or prime minister in the 1930s and fighting that aggression. And what we know from that is, if you appease aggression you get more of it.”

It came as France’s defence minister hit back at German accusation­s it had fallen short on supporting Ukraine. Sebastien Lecornu said a list compiled by the Kiel Institute, a German think tank, showing Paris 12th in terms of military deliveries was “neither trustworth­y nor viable”.

The tracker showed that Paris had provided just €544 million (£465million) in bilateral military aid to Kyiv since the start of the full-scale invasion almost two years ago.

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