an liathroid beag
Full Member
Putin is too weak to help any of them. Ukraine is draining the Russians dry.
Putin is too weak to help any of them. Ukraine is draining the Russians dry.
Maybe we’re looking at this the wrong way and it’s his mate Trump that will be next to go!!View attachment 48280
Another mate bites the dust!
The key bit I took from that is that if you're a male, particularly living in Moscow and St Petersburg, you should be getting your affairs in order. If Dugin gets his way there will be automatic conscription in these cities, to send to the front, because time isn't on Russia's side
The "chief thinker" calls for reforms hahahaha
NATO remains structurally unprepared for the kind of drone-saturated warfare now defining Russia’s war against Ukraine, according to reporting by The Wall Street Journal (WSJ).
Drones have increasingly become central to combat operations throughout Russia’s war in Ukraine. Persistent aerial surveillance and low-cost strike systems allow forces to detect and hit targets within minutes, leaving little room for concealment or slow decision-making.
A large-scale alliance exercise in 2025 revealed that even well-trained Western units struggle to operate under constant aerial surveillance and rapid strike coordination.
Estonian war game pitted 10 Ukrainians against NATO battalions
The war game, known as Hedgehog 2025, was held in Estonia and involved more than 16,000 troops from 12 NATO countries. Ukrainian drone specialists, including personnel rotated from the front, participated in the drill and helped simulate battlefield conditions similar to those in Ukraine.
According to the WSJ, the results were stark. In one scenario, NATO formations attempting an offensive maneuver were quickly identified and neutralized in the simulation by small adversary teams operating reconnaissance and strike drones.
Using Ukraine’s Delta battlefield-management system, a group of around 10 Ukrainians mock-destroyed 17 armored vehicles and conducted dozens of simulated strikes within hours.
Ukraine's Delta system fuses drone feeds, satellite data, and frontline intelligence into a single real-time interface, compressing the kill chain from detection to strike into minutes. NATO praised the system during interoperability testing in 2024; by late 2025 it could detect enemy equipment in 2.2 seconds.
"We are f—": nowhere to hide from constant drone coverage
Participants described the overall outcome as devastating for alliance forces. In exercise terms, two battalions were rendered combat-ineffective in a single day. One commander observing the drill reportedly reacted with the words: “We are f—.” The exercise underscored how dramatically the battlefield has shifted. Constant drone coverage makes concealment difficult, while rapid digital coordination shortens the time between detection and strike to minutes. Ukrainian units, hardened by two years of full-scale war, rely on real-time data-sharing across command levels to accelerate that process.
NATO hasn't rewritten its playbook for the drone age
By contrast, NATO procedures often restrict information flows and depend on slower coordination mechanisms. Retired US Gen. David Petraeus told the WSJ that lessons are not truly learned until doctrine, force structure, procurement, and training are rewritten to reflect new realities.
Estonian officers said the purpose of the drill was to force partners to confront vulnerabilities before a real conflict does. The findings suggest that while NATO has studied Ukraine’s battlefield experience, many of its armies have yet to fully internalize the operational consequences of drone-driven war.
Germany’s AfD sparks fears it is helping Russia with inquiry on NATO weaknesses
The far-right party is pressing the government for information on a drill in Estonia last year that exposed the vulnerabilities of NATO forces.
BERLIN — The far-right opposition Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has triggered security fears in Berlin after officially requesting information on vulnerabilities in NATO defenses — insight that would prove useful to the Kremlin.
The AfD, which frequently takes positions favorable to Russia, has developed an interest in last year's "Hedgehog 2025" exercise, a major NATO operation in Estonia, in which Ukrainian drone specialists used tactics learned on the battlefield to "destroy" NATO units in a war game.
In a letter obtained by POLITICO, Rüdiger Lucassen, the AfD's defense spokesperson, asked the government on Feb. 19 to brief the defense committee in the country's parliament on the lessons learned from the drill.
“What capability gaps were identified — particularly in the areas of counter-drone defense, electronic warfare, command capability and the protection of mobile forces?” Lucassen asked in the letter. He also sought clarification on “which capability gaps still exist and by when they are to be closed.”
It's hardly the first time the AfD has raised concerns with inquiries that would elicit information of interest to Russia, and the country's ruling coalition has sounded the alarm.
“With some of the AfD’s motions and questions, the question increasingly arises as to what purpose they actually serve, and whose interests are being pursued,” Florian Dorn, a defense committee lawmaker for the country’s ruling Christian Democratic bloc, told POLITICO, when asked about the Hedgehog 2025 inquiry. “If such information falls into the wrong hands, it endangers our security and defense capability.”
Under Germany’s political system, opposition parties have significant powers to demand answers from the government. Ministries can withhold classified material, but must generally respond to formal inquiries.
Assessments of military exercises do more than describe what went wrong. They can reveal how exposed certain units were, how quickly they were neutralized, and how long it may take to fix any problems identified.
European security officials assume that Russia and other adversaries mine publicly available material to piece together operational patterns. In drone warfare especially — where tactics evolve rapidly and adaptation cycles are short — knowing how long weaknesses may persist can offer strategic advantages.
Fuck that's some bit of kit!
