KipPotapych
Well-Known Member
I mentioned in the RU-UA war thread a while back that the costs of replacing the donated equipment and supplies is going to be astronomical. Here is the first comments on the subject that I have seen from NATO officials.
Basic idea:
"Prices for equipment and ammunition are shooting up. Right now, we are paying more and more for exactly the same," Dutch Admiral Rob Bauer, the chair of NATO's military committee, said on Saturday after a meeting of the alliance's chiefs of defence in Oslo.
"That means that we cannot make sure that the increased defence spending actually leads to more security."
In my opinion, this is somewhat an optimistic disclosure. This I thought was also interesting:
Bauer pushed for more private investment in the defence sector to ramp up production capacity, urging pension funds and banks to stop labelling defence investments as unethical.
This is likely targeted at the general public because… Well, sound like targeted at dummies and not the actual “private sector”:
"Long term stability needs to prevail over short term profits. As we have seen in Ukraine, war is a whole of society event," he said, adding such investment was in the private sector's strategic interest as well.
"Forty percent of the (Ukrainian) economy evaporated in the first days of the war, that was private money to a large extent, that money is gone," he noted.
Rising ammunition prices set back NATO efforts to boost security, official says
NATO has been pressing for a production boost to satisfy soaring demand for weapons and equipment since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. A major concern has been a shortage of 155mm artillery rounds, with Kyiv firing up to 10,000 per day.
www.reuters.com
Basic idea:
"Prices for equipment and ammunition are shooting up. Right now, we are paying more and more for exactly the same," Dutch Admiral Rob Bauer, the chair of NATO's military committee, said on Saturday after a meeting of the alliance's chiefs of defence in Oslo.
"That means that we cannot make sure that the increased defence spending actually leads to more security."
In my opinion, this is somewhat an optimistic disclosure. This I thought was also interesting:
Bauer pushed for more private investment in the defence sector to ramp up production capacity, urging pension funds and banks to stop labelling defence investments as unethical.
This is likely targeted at the general public because… Well, sound like targeted at dummies and not the actual “private sector”:
"Long term stability needs to prevail over short term profits. As we have seen in Ukraine, war is a whole of society event," he said, adding such investment was in the private sector's strategic interest as well.
"Forty percent of the (Ukrainian) economy evaporated in the first days of the war, that was private money to a large extent, that money is gone," he noted.