(ANSA) - UDINE, 16 APR - "The Russian-Ukrainian conflict has
brought NATO back to its main mission, which is deterrence and
defense, while since the end of the Cold War NATO had focused on
other missions, conflict management, and cooperative security,
today its priority is territorial security; while it has less
importance what does not directly threaten its existence and
that of its allies." That is part of the speech given by Andrea
Gilli, visiting fellow of the Istituto Affari Internazionali,
researcher, and consultant in the field of defense, speaking
today at the conference "NATO: deterrence and defense after
Ukraine," organized by IAI and the University of Trieste and
moderated by Federico Donelli, professor of International
Relations at the University of Trieste.
"The relevance of NATO after the Russian attack on Ukraine is
there for all to see," Donelli said, introducing the talk in
front of about 100 students, "and this has triggered an
international debate about what NATO should be, but there are
also questions about whether the European countries will be able
to develop a collateral defense apparatus or whether it will
make more sense to strengthen the European position within the
Atlantic alliance."
Speaking about how the Russian-Ukrainian conflict has altered
world balances, Gilli pointed out that the war "has forced all
the countries of the world to take a position: in Western
countries, there has been a convergence of the pro-Ukrainian and
anti-Russian front, but in the South in the world it is much
more ambivalent. Indeed, many South American and Middle Eastern
countries have more pro-Russian than pro-Ukrainian stances."
"This is relevant," Gilli added, "because Russia continues
cooperating with China, which needs raw materials that some of
these countries produce. So we could be going in the direction
of a fragmentation of the international order, also from the
trade point of view." The expert went on to point out that "this
high-intensity war, which we have not seen for a long time, has
resulted at the industrial level in the need to have an industry
that can produce at a high rate."
Other consequences have occurred at the military level. "The
spread of both drones and anti-aircraft defenses has made ground
and air forces more vulnerable," Gilli explained. "Also, there
has been an initial integration from AI at the combat management
level - he added - to assign targets to fire capabilities. Then,
using long-range artillery changed the traditional way of
fighting because it made the battlefield more and more lethal."
(ANSA).
Expert, Russia-Ukraine war brings NATO back to defensive mission
Gilli (IAI) at a conference in Trieste