Brussels Sprouts

Can Europe (Ever) Defend Itself?

49 snips
Feb 10, 2026
Mike Kofman, a Russian military analyst, and Franz-Stefan Gady, a defense analyst and wargame participant, discuss whether Europe could defend itself with far less U.S. presence. They walk through a 2026 wargame where Russian forces moved rapidly, examine operational gaps like enablers and logistics, and debate political will, timelines, and what Europe would need to shoulder greater defense responsibilities.
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ANECDOTE

War Game Role: Rapid Fait Accompli

  • Franz Stefan Gady described his role as the Russian commander in a 2026 war game that aimed to create a humanitarian corridor through Lithuania.
  • He rapidly established facts on the ground to discredit NATO and test German decision-making within 48–72 hours.
INSIGHT

Political Hesitation Trumps Purely Military Risk

  • The war game highlighted German political reluctance to commit militarily without clear U.S. backing.
  • Franz said this political hesitation, not purely military factors, was the clearest vulnerability exposed in the exercise.
INSIGHT

Russia's Reconstitution Timeline Is Shorter Than Assumed

  • Mike Kofman argued Russia could reconstitute and field large ground forces far faster than many expect after a pause in Ukraine.
  • He warned that Russia's production of missiles and drones makes significant capability recovery possible within a few years, not decades.
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