Saturday, 29 November 2025

Putin may laugh but Europe is taking Russian aggression seriously.

Extract from ABC News

Analysis

By Laura Tingle

Vladimir Putin

When asked about his stance on the Donbas region, Vladimir Putin said Russia would stop fighting only when Ukraine withdrew its troops. (Reuters: Vladimir Pirogov)

A European war

Putin has long argued that this has posed a threat to Russia. And it was talk of Ukraine joining NATO that was at least partly used as his rationale for invasion.

On the equal and opposite side, both NATO and Europe more broadly, now see Ukraine as its frontline against Russian aggression.

It's not just a question of supporting Ukraine but of Ukraine's massive military machine being the frontline for a wildly disorganised and fractured community of countries who are dealing with basic issues of disorganised and rundown national military organisations and infrastructure unable to move military hardware along roads or rail lines that are too narrow.

The ratcheting up of the Ukraine conflict into what is perceived as a European war is already well underway.

Putin was dismissive of the warnings by European leaders that Russia could attack Europe.

"That sounds laughable to us, really," he said.

But it is no laughing matter to a host of European political and military leaders. 

Consider Germany. Three years ago, the Germans were reluctant to supply weapons directly to Ukraine lest it provoke Russia.

This was despite an historic declaration of a shift — a Zeitenwende or turning point — in its approach to defence issues after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Germany's history had made it cautious to be seen to be talking or acting aggressively. The Zeitenwende saw a commitment to a big increase in defence spending, trying to revive the moribund Bundeswehr — or German armed forces — which suffer particularly high personnel shortages; reducing its energy reliance on Russia; and becoming more supportive of the idea of European security strategy.

All that has changed.

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