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Germany preparing for Russia to start World War 3, leaked war plans reveal

Europe is preparing for Russian President Vladimir Putin to expand his country’s war in Ukraine and attack NATO ally countries next year, leaked documents published in German newspaper Bild reveal.

According to the outlet — which obtained the classified military information from the German Ministry of Defense — the country’s armed forces are gearing up for a “hybrid” Russian attack in Eastern Europe.

The newspaper detailed how multiple potential alarming scenarios could unfold in the months ahead.

One such scenario, dubbed “Alliance Defense 2025,” would start this February with Russia mobilizing an additional 200,000 soldiers.

Emboldened by Western financial support for Ukraine drying up, Russia would launch a massive “spring offensive” against Ukrainian armed forces.

The potential scenario outlines how Russia could start waging war in the Baltics by July using “severe cyberattacks” while stirring up discontent among Russian nationals in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

By September, those clashes, the classified documents show, could be used by Russia as an excuse to unleash “Zapad 2024,” a large-scale military “exercise” that would amass some 50,000 Russian soldiers in the west of the country and Belarus.

Leaked documents from the Germany Ministry of Defense.
Russian President Vladimir Putin could be preparing for an attack against NATO allies next year, which leaked German Ministry of Defense documents outline. Getty Images

From there, the scenario says, Russia could move troops and mid-range missiles to Kaliningrad, an 86-square-mile Russian territory wedged between Lithuania and Poland, which are both NATO members.

According to the documents, Russia could bombard the region with propaganda warning of an imminent attack by NATO forces, with the ultimate goal of conquering an area known as the Suwalki Gap, a narrow Polish-Lithuanian corridor which lies between Belarus and Kaliningrad.

By December, according to the plot — a worst-case-scenario exercise — Russia could then take advantage of the transition period following the US presidential election and use propaganda, proclaiming fictional “border conflicts” or “riots with numerous deaths” to incite violence in the Suwalki Gap area and sow unrest, Bild reports.

A key part of the plan, according to the documents, could be to capitalize on wavering Western support of Ukraine to launch a massive “spring offensive” in the country. POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Following a meeting of the UN Security Council in January 2025, Russia could then falsely accuse Western allies of plotting to move against Putin’s regime, which he could use to rally troops to Belarus and the Baltics by March 2025.

The leaked document said that in this scenario, 30,000 German troops would be deployed for defense, while an estimated 70,000 Russian forces would have massed in Belarus.

By May 2025, that buildup could prompt NATO to enact “measures for credible deterrence” to prevent further Russian incursion, which translates to combat between Western troops and Russian forces.

Putin and Russian officials have repeatedly denied they would escalate the Ukraine conflict beyond the country’s borders.

While the plans obtained by Bild are a potential scenario prepared by generals in the German army, European allies take Russia’s threat seriously and are preparing accordingly.

In Russia’s latest war with Ukraine, which began in February 2022, an estimated half-million Ukrainian and Russian troops have been killed or injured. REUTERS

Last week, NATO invitee Sweden’s Civil Defense Minister Carl-Oskar Bohlin said at a “People and Defense” conference that war in Sweden was possible.

His sentiment was promptly echoed by the country’s military commander-in-chief, Micael Bydén, who said, “We need to prepare as far as possible, at all levels, throughout society,” CNBC wrote.

German Defense Ministry officials would not address specific scenarios laid out in the document, but told Bild: “I can tell you that considering different scenarios, even if they are extremely unlikely, are part of everyday military business, especially in training.”