June 24, 2025Clash Report
A full-scale Russian war against NATO could slash global output by $1.5 trillion in the first year alone, Bloomberg Economics warns, as Western intelligence agencies grow increasingly alarmed by Kremlin military buildup and Vladimir Putin’s emboldened rhetoric.
European defense officials and intelligence services have raised the alarm: Russia is producing ammunition, drones, and missiles at a pace that soon may exceed the needs of its Ukraine front. President Vladimir Putin recently declared at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum that “all of Ukraine is ours,” echoing the imperial language used by some of his top generals, who suggest the campaign won’t stop at Ukraine’s borders.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz warned that Russia could be capable of threatening NATO territory within five years, with Denmark predicting a smaller-scale confrontation even sooner. In response, NATO allies are accelerating defense spending, with Baltic nations already exceeding the 3.5% GDP target.
Analysts see the Baltic states—Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania—as the most vulnerable to potential Russian aggression. Bloomberg outlines a scenario where Russia fabricates a crisis involving the Moscow-Kaliningrad train corridor, halts the train inside Lithuania, and deploys troops under the pretense of protecting stranded citizens.
Such a move could lead to rapid escalation: Baltic states invoking Article 5, European countries launching counterattacks, and Russia retaliating with missile strikes on major cities and infrastructure. Hybrid tactics, including underwater cable sabotage and cyberattacks, would further complicate defense.
Bloomberg Economics models predict catastrophic fallout. The Baltics alone could lose 43% of GDP—equivalent to losses seen in Russian-occupied Donbas. Poland, Germany, Finland, and Sweden would take major hits from missile strikes and trade disruptions. The EU would see a 1.2% GDP drop, while U.S. GDP could fall by 0.7% due to market turmoil and higher energy prices. China would lose 0.8%.
Despite economic resilience under sanctions, Russia’s own GDP would shrink by 1% in year one, even as defense spending fuels illusions of growth.
Amid heightened risk, NATO’s unity remains uncertain. Former President Donald Trump, now leading U.S. foreign policy again, has questioned NATO's relevance and suggested peace overtures to Moscow. At the recent G7 summit, he even asked why Russia wasn’t present. Bloomberg notes that in the event of war, Trump might call for “PEACE NOT WAR” on Truth Social rather than deliver a decisive military response.
This ambiguity leaves European leaders nervous. As Putin expands bases in Kaliningrad and the Arctic, many feel compelled to act independently—bolstering troops, modernizing arsenals, and reversing decades-old treaties, such as landmine bans.
Despite the dark scenarios, a negotiated end to the Ukraine war remains a theoretical possibility—one that could lift global GDP by 0.3% if coupled with reintegration of Russia into global markets. But with Putin showing no signs of compromise and China backing Russia to keep the West distracted, most Western analysts believe the war will grind on—potentially exploding into a wider, costlier confrontation.
Europe
June 2025
Europe
June 2025
Europe
June 2025
Ukraine - Russia War
June 2025
Europe
July 2025
Ukraine - Russia War
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