WASHINGTON (Independence Avenue Media) — In an interview with Independence Avenue Media, Nico Lange, a former senior official in Germany’s Ministry of Defense and current Senior Fellow with the Munich Security Conference, offered a sober assessment of current Western policies toward Ukraine, warning that half-measures and delayed decisions may prolong the war and embolden the Kremlin.
Responding to President Donald Trump’s recent statement that Ukraine could receive unlimited U.S. weapons if NATO allies foot the bill, Lange described the development as “second-best”—useful but lacking the necessary U.S. pressure on Russia that could bring Moscow to the negotiating table. While he welcomed Germany’s growing leadership in defense procurement, Lange stressed that Western support must not only be sustained, but sharpened, especially in areas like air defense and deep-strike capabilities.
Discussing the much-publicized “50-day” window reportedly floated by Trump for resolving the war, Lange was skeptical, noting that Russian President Vladimir Putin will only respond to concrete pressure, particularly in the energy sector. He questioned whether countries like India and China—key Russian energy partners—would take such deadlines seriously.
On the battlefield, Lange warned that Russia continues to grind forward at immense human cost, relying on monetary incentives to recruit soldiers rather than general mobilization. He emphasized the strategic importance of protecting Ukrainian cities with air defense systems, both to prevent civilian deaths and to sustain morale on the front lines.
Lange criticized the administration of former U.S. President Joe Biden for its early reluctance to involve NATO explicitly, arguing that it sent the wrong signals while failing to deter Russia. He is now urging Europe, and especially Germany, to emerge from a “mental prison” that sees Ukrainian defeat as inevitable, and instead embrace a posture of strategic ownership. “It’s puzzling,” he said, “that Europeans still expect someone else to solve their own security crisis.”
He advocates greater NATO integration, including shared air defense, deeper procurement coordination, and political clarity—warning that, without it, Putin will simply wait for Western resolve to crack.
The following interview was recorded on July 20, 2025, and has been edited for length and clarity.