Press Review

Press review: EU barking at Russia louder than real bite and Zaluzhny sacking rumors swirl

Top stories from the Russian press on Wednesday, January 31stCommander-in-Chief of Ukraine’s Armed Forces Valeriy Zaluzhny

MOSCOW, January 31. /TASS/. The European Union is seen as reluctant to engage in a direct military conflict with Russia given the pitifully depleted state of its defense potential; rumors that Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky sacked top military commander Valery Zaluzhny are bringing the long-simmering Kiev power struggle into the public spotlight; and NATO is seeking a "way to peace" that is paved with yet more weapons for Ukraine. These stories topped Wednesday’s newspaper headlines across Russia.

 

Izvestia: EU reluctant to test enfeebled defense sector by waging war directly on Russia

On January 31, an informal two-day meeting of EU defense ministers will wrap up in Brussels. The defense chiefs were expected to discuss whether the European Union is adequately prepared to confront potential challenges, including an armed conflict with Russia, although such a scenario would clearly be undesirable for Brussels. "Nobody in the EU wants to wage war directly against Russia, despite an extremely low level of trust in the Russians," an EU official told Izvestia.

An EU-Russia conflict would see NATO getting involved in the war. While European politicians often talk about preparations for an all-out conflict with Russia, in reality Europe is afraid of such a scenario, Jan Nolte, a member of the Bundestag (German parliament) Defense Committee from the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, told Izvestia. "The EU’s own defense capabilities are relatively limited," as the bloc relies largely on the fact that its member countries are also NATO allies, he said, adding that resources also pose a critical challenge.

According to Vadim Koroshchupov, a junior research fellow at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO RAS), the military-industrial base in European countries has shrunk dramatically, with defense budgets and force numbers among national armies having contracted sharply. The EU could potentially pose a military threat to Russia if it could somehow unify the defense potential of all 27 member countries, which is currently unlikely, the expert said.

"Every country has its own political culture and a different attitude to certain conflicts," Koroshchupov underlined. "They cannot present a united front, and they sense this vulnerability. While the situation may change in the longer term, this inability to reach agreement quickly will always have an impact," he added.

It’s no secret that the NATO allies would expect to receive mutual military assistance under the much-discussed Article 5 of the NATO treaty in the hypothetical event of any conflict with a third country. In that regard, however, on January 27 once-and-potential-future US commander-in-chief Donald Trump expressed doubts that the other NATO countries would be able to ride to the rescue of the Americans should the United States come under attack. And, as several experts underscored, the US is not seeking to engage in a direct conflict with Russia.

"The United States realizes only too well that Russia is a nuclear power, and it is set to continue containing Russia by means of the proxy war it is currently waging in Ukraine," Vladimir Batyuk, head of the Center for Military and Political Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute for US and Canadian Studies, told Izvestia. "The Americans have shown a certain restraint in all regional conflicts where the interests of Washington and Moscow could collide, and that goes for the situation in Syria, as well," he concluded.

 

Izvestia: Rumors of sacking bring Kiev’s Zelensky-Zaluzhny power struggle into public view

Swirling rumors about the alleged dismissal of Ukrainian Armed Forces Commander-in-Chief Valery Zaluzhny could be a test of the public’s response to a decision that may have already been made, say experts interviewed by Izvestia. However, a negative response from politicians and voters alike would hardly be enough to keep Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky from sacking Zaluzhny, who Zelensky sees as the main threat to his hold on power in Kiev.

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