Just wait when you hear what 3 guys with an MLRS can do! Or a single pilot in a F-35.
(and the article 17 vehicles destroyed by the 10 guys, not two entire battalions)
I'm sorry man, but it's evident that you don't fundamentally understand the problem. You may have glanced over the article and thrown some smartass commentary, but this stuff is deadly serious to me.
When you're dealing with an adversary, you have your own technology stack pitted against theirs. NATO has artillery, Russia has artillery. NATO has fighters and bombers, Russia has fighters and bombers. NATO has soldiers, Russia has soldiers. Great. But NATO forces don't have an answer to current battlefield realities with regard to drones. They
know about drones and have
some idea about them, but they haven't really grasped the severity of the situation. Drones are a force multiplier that go beyond merely augmenting a military unit. This is why there is so much emphasis on those ten Ukrainians.
From the same article:
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.
Estonia gets it. As do a handful of other European countries, primarily the ones in proximity to Russia. But my previous post is with regard to the EU as a whole.
By the way, I didn't say they destroyed two entire battalions either. War is not about killing your enemy, it is about defeating them. The distinction is important, because wiping out entire battalions when there isn't a clear military objective in mind is a waste of resources. The objective for the drone operators was to make those two battalions functionally irrelevant, and they accomplished that in mere hours. Actually, let me quote it again since you're downplaying it:
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.
This is a massive problem. You don't see the seriousness of ten Ukrainians rendering two entire battalions as combat ineffective in mere hours? This kind of vulnerability needs to be addressed, with immense haste. Russia may go bankrupt by this summer if current trends continue, but who knows what the future may hold? Downplaying the seriousness of this situation is part of why the EU is collectively still twiddling their thumbs.
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Rutte was talking about lack of nuclear arsenal in many countries and I agree - Europe should arm itself with nukes to have the ultimate deterrent against Russia.
And all armies are weak vs. drones compared to Russia and Ukraine, drone warfare is a new thing that started and developed since 2022. That's why changes to NATO armies are happening:
notesfrompoland.com
No, he was talking about the lack of capabilities in general, including nukes. Here's the exact quote:
Without the U.S., defending Europe would cost a fortune, he added. "For Europe, if you really want to go it alone … forget that you can ever get there with 5 percent," Rutte said, referencing a pledge by NATO allies to ramp up their defense spending to 5 percent of GDP by 2035. "It will be 10 percent," he argued, and cost "billions and billions of euros" to replace America's nuclear deterrent.
The billions and billions of euros would be the expense for the nuclear deterrent angle i.e. more nukes and ballistic missile defense, separate from the 10% annually on defense spending just for the ability to have a fully capable standing Army on par with what the US brings.
Also, just want to note that I recognize that Poland takes the situation a lot more seriously. Just like Finland does as well, and a few others. Being in proximity to danger definitely helps with the political climate internal to those nations. But I see countries like Italy and Spain just taking their geographic locations for granted, at the detriment of their fellow EU members. They had to be dragged, kicking and screaming the entire time, just to reach the 2% baseline expected of them as NATO members.
Hell, contributions to Ukraine's defense are a separate allocation and the disparity is stark. Denmark is spending almost 3% of their GDP supporting Ukraine's defense against Russia. Meanwhile Italy and Spain combined has allocated less of their GDP towards the effort than Japan. JAPAN. We're dealing with the largest major conflict in Europe since WW2 and Japan is contributing more to Europe's survival than numerous European nations.
Denmark and Estonia had the highest ratio of bilateral support to Ukraine to donor GDP as of February 2025. Poland ranked eighth by GDP share of aid to Ukraine.
www.statista.com