
“If you look at Russia’s current capabilities and combat power, Russia could kick off a small-scale attack against NATO territory as early as tomorrow,” Lieutenant General Alexander Sollfrank told Reuters in an interview.
“Small, quick, regionally limited, nothing big – Russia is too tied down in Ukraine for that.”
Sollfrank, who heads Germany’s joint operations command and oversees defence planning, also echoed NATO warnings that Russia could potentially mount a large-scale assault on the 32-member alliance as early as 2029 if its armament efforts persist.
President Vladimir Putin denies aggressive intentions, saying Moscow’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine was defence against NATO’s own expansionist ambitions against Russia.
Speaking at his headquarters, a sprawling barracks in the north of Berlin, Sollfrank said that despite setbacks in Ukraine, Russia’s air force retains substantial combat strength, and its nuclear and missile forces remain unaffected.
And while the Black Sea Fleet has suffered significant losses, other Russian fleets have not been reduced, he said.
“The ground forces are suffering losses, but Russia says it aims to boost its total troop numbers to 1.5 million soldiers.
“And Russia has enough main battle tanks to make a limited attack conceivable as early as tomorrow,” Sollfrank added, without saying such an attack was currently being planned.
Recent drone incursions into Polish airspace have stoked Western fears of Russian escalation.
Sollfrank said whether Moscow might choose to attack NATO would be determined by three factors: Russia’s military strength, military track record and leadership.
“These three factors lead me to the conclusion that a Russian attack is in the realm of the possible. Whether it will happen or not depends to a large extent on our own behaviour,” he added, alluding to NATO’s deterrence efforts.
The general noted that Moscow’s hybrid warfare tactics, including drone incursions, should be viewed as interconnected elements of a strategy that also included the war on Ukraine.
“The Russians call this non-linear warfare. In their doctrine, this is warfare before resorting to conventional weapons. And they threaten to use nuclear weapons – which is warfare by intimidation,” Sollfrank said.
Russia’s aim, he added, was to both provoke NATO and to gauge its response, in order to “foster insecurity, spread fear, to do damage, to spy and to test” the alliance’s resilience.