NATO Unveils Eastern Flank Defence Plan

Date:

Wiesbaden: The US Army and its NATO allies are embarking on the execution of a new “Eastern Flank Deterrence Line” plan that aims to enhance ground-based capabilities and drive military-industrial interoperability across the alliance, the US Army Europe and Africa commander said at the Association of the US Army’s inaugural LandEuro conference in Wiesbaden, Germany.

As part of the plan to counter Russian threats and enable scalable, global deterrence, the US Army and its NATO allies are urgently developing standardised, data-driven systems, common launchers and cloud-based coordination, according to General public Christopher Donahue.

ads

Regional plans have been coming together for some time, but the Army, along with NATO, is first focusing on the Baltic states “to try to get to how do you actually make it so that industry and the nations know exactly what the requirements are — ultimately that is now known as the Eastern Flank Deterrence Line,” Donahue said.

“We know what we have to develop and the use case that we’re using is you have to [deter] from the ground,” he said. “The land domain is not becoming less important, it’s becoming more important. You can now take down [anti-access, aerial-denial] A2AD bubbles from the ground. You can now take over sea from the ground. All of those things we are watching happen in Ukraine.”

For example, Donahue noted, Kaliningrad, Russia, is roughly 47 miles wide and surrounded by NATO on all sides and the Army and its allies now have the capability to “take that down from the ground in a timeframe that is unheard of and faster than we’ve ever been able to do.”

“We’ve already planned that and we’ve already developed it. The mass and momentum problem that Russia poses to us … we’ve developed the capability to make sure that we can stop that mass and momentum problem,” Donahue said.

big bang

The plan includes a system to share data. NATO has already procured that system, Donahue said, referencing its choice of Palantir’s Maven Smart System, an artificial intelligence platform from Palantir that takes a vast amount of data and rapidly analyses information to help military commanders make decisions.

“We already know exactly what we have to do with cloud and we know exactly the type of actual unmanned systems, brigades, everything else that we need for that,” Donahue said.

huges

Specifically, the Army wants these capabilities to be interoperable with NATO partners.

The Army also wants a common launcher that serves in both an offensive and defensive capacity, along with a fire control system that any nation can use.

And, Donahue said, “We want everything to be optionally manned,” whether that is an air defence or a long-range fires system.

“We want it to be one system, optionally manned, where we’ll be able to take munitions from any country and shoot through them,” he said.

And the Army wants to lower the cost of systems.

“As a general rule, whatever you’re shooting at, whatever your weapon system or munition you shoot at, another adversary’s capability, it should be cheaper than what you’re shooting,” Donahue stressed.

Donahue acknowledged the obvious existence of bureaucracy but said that on the US side, reform in things like foreign military sales is coming and the Army will be able to move at a much faster rate.

Directly addressing industry, Donahue said, “We have sent a clear demand signal to you of exactly what we need. … If you sell us something, it has to be interoperable. You have to share the [Application Programming Interface]. The cost has to go down.”

More like this

From a Reluctant Giant to Global Game-Changer: India’s Path to Strategic Leadership

in the rapidly evolving 21st-century global order, the question...

Burgeoning India-Europe Defence Ties

The bilateral and particularly the defence ties between India...

Dragon – Elephant Tango Seems Distant

With geopolitical rivalry between India and China being fought...

AK-203 ‘Sher’ Assault Rifle: Fires 700 Round Per Minute, Engages Targets Up to 800 Metres

New Delhi: The AK-203 'Sher' assault rifle, produced in...

Massive Boost to Firepower: India Successfully Test Fires Prithvi-II, Agni-I and Agni Prime

New Delhi: In a major boost to the country’s...

Big Antenna, Bigger Dreams: The Story of NISAR

What is NISAR? NISAR is a special satellite that...

US Air Force’s NGAP Programme Facing Two-Year Delay

Washington:  The US Air Force’s next-gen engine prototype effort...
Indian Navy Special EditionLatest Issue