Experts warn of the key WW3 signs Putin is invading two NATO allies | World | News

Vladimir Putin’s Russia has been repeatedly marked by experts as a potential threat to NATO countries. (Picture: Gavriil Grigorov/AP/Rex/Shutterstock)
Vladimir Putin’s Russia was repeatedly marked by experts as a potential threat to NATO countries, and the two European countries are currently defined as vulnerable.
Various warning signs were indicated by pointing to possible places that could shoot the Third World War for a future Russian military attack. These warnings come from various sources, including NATO and defense officials, military analysts and others.
NATO Chief Mark Rutte warned that Russia may be ready to use force against the alliance in the next five years in June. So, where can Putin hit and what are the indicators? Putin 805-Drone Dam shows real colors because a baby is dead.
Potential Attack Plan by Putin
The Baltic states are mentioned as a possible jumpboard for Russia’s invasion of NATO territory. During the Ukrainian War, a future peace agreement, which can allow Russia to keep the control of Eastern Ukraine in the hands of the occupied Eastern Ukraine, will strengthen Putin’s powers and ask for a progress to the former Soviet Union members. mirror.
Analysts believe that the Baltic states are at the most risk, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia increase sea access to Russia, thus pose a threat to Scandinavian countries, Poland and Germany.
According to former intelligence officer Philip Ingram, an area may ripen for an attack. Ingram, ‘NATO’nun Achille Heel’ referred to the so -called Suwalki GAP.
Approximately 60 miles between Lithuania and Poland, the corridor would provide the most direct way for Russian troops to reach the Russian Kaliningrad region from the Kremlin ally Belarus.
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Capturing the control of this corridor can potentially isolate Baltic countries from Western partners.
“We see the increasing Russian military presence in Kaliningrad and Belarus, Snap military exercises and unusual unity movements.”
In addition, GPS intervention “Small green men … Russian -speaking minorities fermented unrest” as much as “hybrid war” indicators, he said.
According to PolıTICO, reports show that defense experts in the region examine this tension in the Baltic States and methods to protect other vulnerable areas.
This is called “swamp -based defense”, in which Europe’s irrigated peat areas can serve as obstacles against advancing forces.
However, so far, only the Lithuanian Ministry of Environment has confirmed that the restoration of wetlands for defense purposes was “discussing”.
However, all experts agree on the strategic weakness of SUWALKI GAP.
In 2022, the University of Waterloo International Relations Assistant Professor Alexander Lanoszka told Chatham House that “the real strategic value is limited”.

If NATO confronted the invasion, Russia would probably deploy the tactics of ‘hybrid war’ as the pioneer of any attack. (Picture: Google)
How did the Ukrainian invasion occur?
Before Putin’s comprehensive attack on Ukraine in February 2022, there was a significant concentration of power along the border of Ukraine.
A comparable military accumulation will indicate the intention of Moscow to initiate an attack. Months before Russia launched the occupation, there were already worries.
Intelligence played a very important role. In the early February of that year, US President Joe Biden warned the Russian invasion to a clear possibility and advised Americans to leave Ukraine.
In the occupation of Ukraine, a series of false claims as part of the Kremlin propaganda campaign. Such a claim was that people in the Donbas region of Ukraine should save Putin as “genocide”.
However, there is no evidence to support any genocide committed by Ukraine in Donbas.
Moscow also claimed that Ukraine should be “unnatural”. Nevertheless, when the invasion was initiated, he kept only one percent of the seats in the distant right Ukrainian Parliament.

Rescue personnel working to extinguish the fire in the Ukrainian government building in Kiev (Picture: Official Telegraph Channel of UKR)
A repeated complaint, which was expressed by Russia, which can serve as a potentially excuse for attacking NATO, is expanding to the boundaries of the alliance. Except for Finland and Sweden, every member state has been participating in the Warsaw Pact, a former Soviet Baltic State or a part of former Yugoslavia.
Russian claims that this would not be realized in 1990 are at best controversial. NATO calls it “legend”.
“This NATO was not trying to grow, they were the countries that allowed us to enter through this door.” He said.
Key sign invasion soon
If NATO confronted the invasion, Russia would probably deploy the tactics of ‘hybrid war’ as the pioneer of any attack.
This strategy may cover concentrated strikes against vital infrastructure, including underwater sea cables.
In June, the MP of Armed Forces Luke Pollard, who witnessed the Joint Committee of the National Security Strategy, determined the UK’s approximately 60 submarine cable as a “target”.
“This hasn’t been talked about a few decades ago, now it’s a regular conversation about the general threat.”

Soldiers, Russian Baltic and northern fleets organized by maritime units, join an amphibious landing exercise (Picture: Vitaly Nevar/TASS)
England’s soft belly
Former Conservative Defense Secretary Grant Shapps said to Politico in May that the underwater infrastructure, which includes cables as well as cables as well as electric lines, represented the “soft wife of British security”.
On June 25, Mr. Pollard also warned that Russian sea ships were “increasingly sailing through the British channel”.
“Like the British people, I have every confidence that our royal navy will continue to defend our waters and keep our submarine cables safe.”
In June, EU Foreign Policy Chief Kaja Kallas warned that Russia offers a direct threat to the European Union through sabotage operations and cyber attacks.
Russian airspace violations, provocative military exercises and energy networks, pipelines and underwater cables summarized the catalog of strikes. Earlier this year, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte expressed his concerns about the concerns suspected of deliberate damage to cables in the Baltic Sea.
It has been damaged at least 11 since 2023. Although the damage to the cables is common, the increasing frequency of events has been concerned.
Mr. Rutte did not point to the fingers in Russia, but emphasized the risks of “hybrid war”. This refers to actions to destabilize countries such as assassinations or infrastructure attacks.




