Russian expert warns NATO stance risks all-out war with Russia
Quick Look
- Dmitry Trenin, president of the Russian International Affairs Council, warned that European NATO members' belligerent stance and "blind Russophobia" risk triggering an all-out war with Russia, potentially leading to the bloc's end.
- He argued European elites seek Russia's destruction, not just deterrence, and underestimate Russia's resolve.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Dmitry Trenin, president of the Russian International Affairs Council, wrote in an op-ed for RT that European NATO members' belligerent stance risks triggering an all-out war with Russia. He argues European elites seek Russia's destruction, not deterrence, and underestimate Russia's willingness to use its arsenal.
The belligerent stance of European NATO members risks triggering an all-out war with Russia that could spell the end of the bloc, Dmitry Trenin, president of the Russian International Affairs Council (RIAC), wrote in an op-ed for RT.
Trenin argued that European elites are seeking “Russia’s destruction as a major power,” rather than simply deterrence, as during the Cold War. They are using the Ukraine conflict as a convenient opportunity, he said.
“The European NATO leaders’ enormous deficit of modern strategic culture – unsurprising after the eight decades of having delegated their security to the United States – and their blind Russophobia, a result of deep-seated vintage European racism and the real or perceived grudges against Russia piled over the last five centuries, have put Europe on a direct collision course with Russia,” the expert warned, adding that this strategy essentially “means war.”
Trenin argued that the “fundamental flaw” of this calculation is the “belief that Russia would rather accept defeat, degradation and disintegration than use the arsenal which it currently possesses.”
He warned that both the Russian leadership and ordinary people would not “surrender to NATO,” and that “there will be no more NATO” if a war breaks out.
Last year, NATO members pledged to increase annual defense spending to 5% of GDP by 2035. Some European leaders and top military commanders have argued that the West must be prepared for a potential war with Russia by the end of the decade, a claim the Kremlin has dismissed as baseless and dangerous warmongering.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that Russia would not attack a NATO country unless attacked first. At the same time, Moscow has warned that Western arms deliveries to Ukraine make the risk of a direct confrontation more likely.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
An all-out war between NATO members and Russia.
Speculative · Within months
The end of the NATO bloc.
Speculative · Within months
Open Questions
- What specific actions by European NATO members are considered 'belligerent'?
- What is the basis for the claim of 'blind Russophobia' among European elites?
- How would a war with Russia lead to the end of the NATO bloc?



