60,000-plus Russian Reasons
Why Peace is Failing
With 60,000 fresh Russian
troops and associated military hardware stationed on the Ukrainian border
and ongoing Russian shelling of Ukrainian positions, why are world leaders and
pundits bemoaning the lack of peace, ceasefire and progress in ending what they
call the Ukrainian crisis but in reality is the Russo-Ukraine War of 2014-15?
Ukrainian and Russian sources last week confirmed this massive, intimidating buildup of
Russian firepower near Ukraine.
First Deputy Chairman of the Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada Andriy
Parubiy said on TV channel 5 on Saturday, March 28, the likelihood of a full-scale Russian attack remains high.
“The likelihood of a full-scale attack by Russian armies is
high and remains high. All our intelligence indicates it. There is a
concentration of Russian troops on the border and not only in Donetsk and
Luhansk but extending up to Kharkiv, a huge expansion of Russian troops is
taking place,” he said.
In an interview with “Novoe Vremia” on Friday, March
27, Parubiy, who a couple of weeks ago made the rounds of Capital Hill,
updating lawmakers on Russia’s war against Ukraine, predicted that the next
invasion could come before May 9 and would be designed to dramatically
“demonstrate the might of the Russian army.”
Not only did last week see an escalation of Russian violence against Ukraine, but also a new series
of threatening actions against all corners of the world that are setting off
alarms among military and civilian officials. Russia has been intensifying the
pace of military exercises in Eastern Europe and even the Arctic region.
Bloomberg News reported that Russian bomber aircraft are
being sent to Crimea while forces in the Baltics and southern regions have been
put on full alert in military
exercises ordered by President Vladimir Putin.
Reuters reported that the latest military exercises have
taken on a threatening posture. “While
the most recent installment is not the largest exercise Russia has conducted,
the areas involved and the forces included seem to have been deliberately
chosen to send a warning to NATO; the exercise itself seems to simulate a
full-scale confrontation with NATO through the forward deployment of nuclear
armed submarines, theater ballistic missiles and strategic bomber aircraft. Strategic
weapon systems, including assets that are part of Russia's nuclear
capabilities, have also been deployed to locations near NATO's borders,”
Reuters reported.
The news agency said the more notable systems involved are
the Iskander mobile ballistic missiles
and fighter aircraft that are being deployed to Kaliningrad, Tu-22M3 long-range
strategic bombers that are being deployed to Crimea, and ballistic missile
submarines that have been sent to sea with protective escorts.
The initial announcement about the exercise focused on the
role of the Northern Fleet, Reuters reported, explaining the main reason of the
drill was to test deployment times to Russian positions in Novaya Zemlya and
Franz Josef Land. The agency further said Russia has increased its military presence in the Arctic, and
the exercise highlights Russia's plans for the Arctic region.
However, the news service continued, though the obvious
focus of the exercises is in the Arctic, operations have extended to include
military activities along the Finnish border, the deployment of strategic
weapons systems to Kaliningrad and
Crimea, and positions throughout the Baltic Fleet, Black Sea Fleet, and in
the western and southern military districts.
“This combination lifts the exercise beyond a simple
deployment of ground forces and naval exercises in the Arctic and forms a
nuclear narrative,” Reuters said.
With an eye toward the war in Ukraine and the faux truce, Reuters
noted that “these exercises are an aggressive
signal, particularly since they immediately follow Putin’s mysterious
disappearance last week.” It also said “Russia has an interest in flexing
its military muscle to remind everyone of the havoc it could wreak and to
dissuade anyone from taking radical action in Ukraine.”
Reuters and others are inclined to point out that Washington
unfortunately has been careful in addressing
the war in Ukraine, even delaying the deployment of 300 US troops to
western Ukraine as part of a training exercise. For its part, the US government
maintains that this deployment is still an option and could order it as early
as April. On the positive side, the US Congress favors American military aid
for Ukraine.
One of the firmest supporters of Ukraine, Lithuania, as well as other former
captive nations in the Baltic region, has been taking visible steps to defend
its independence and sovereignty in case Russia crosses its border.
Jonas Vytautas Zukas, Lithuania’s chief of defense, said in
several American newspapers Lithuania has learned a few lessons from the war in Ukraine.
According to Zukas, the situation in Ukraine has
demonstrated that unconventional threats
should be tackled instantly, using suitable military measures, even if
martial law has not yet been imposed. The Seimas, Lithuania’s parliament, wisely
adopted the Statute on the Use of the Armed Force on December 16, 2014, which
proactively states that use of the military is now possible in peacetime when
responding to unconventional threats that differ from armed aggression: for
example in cases of provocation, attacks by armed groups, armed people crossing
the state border etc.
Further, considering Russia’s widespread disinformation campaign, Zukas said
another lesson is a better understanding of the importance of the informational
war. He asserted that success in the information space plays an important role
in an armed conflict. The armed forces and the media must ensure that society
has access to objective information, he said. Capabilities are needed to ensure
information and cyber-security, strategic communication and anti-propaganda
activities.
The Russian war in Ukraine also taught that society – the
nation – has to be prepared to act if there is a war, Zukas said. In early 2015
the Ministry of National Defense introduced a publication titled “What We Must
Know to Prepare for Extreme Situations and War.” Zukas said a joint mobilization
and civic resistance system is being developed. All-important concepts of public-spiritedness and patriotism are
currently being promoted, and information about the Lithuanian armed forces and
opportunities to undergo military training is also being advertised. Under
President Poroshenko, Ukraine has also finally seen the merit of similar public-spiritedness
and patriotism.
President of neighboring Estonia Toomas Ilves Hendrick recently
said Europe has to have a backup plan that will provide new sanctions against
Russia that could make it think twice about launching another war against its
neighbors.
Speaking in Brussels, the headquarters of NATO, Ilves said anything
could be expected from Russia. If new sanctions against Russian aggression do
not stop Putin, EU countries should have
a backup plan, he said.
“As for the Ukrainian crisis, it’s about security of the
entire Europe rather than of a separate nation. In this connection, Europe
must take a clear point of view, show its determination and strength. We are
now discussing whether to arm Ukraine or step up sanctions against Russia. If
it is decided not to do any of these things, does Europe have Plan B?"
said Ilves.
Beyond boots and rifles, a senior Polish general has warned fellow
NATO members that Russia will wage “hybrid war” through propaganda and
“information aggression” to achieve its geopolitical goals in the region.
Gen. StanisÅ‚aw Koziej, head of the president’s National Security
Bureau, said last week that while many members of NATO are cutting defense
budgets, Russia is increasing its
defense spending — and aggression — in ways that “must be stopped.”
Latvia fears that a war of words between Russia and
the West could degenerate into something worse, with “devastating”
consequences, according to its foreign minister.
“I do hope that we all understand that any provocations, any
deterioration of the situation, may lead to consequences that would be
devastating to everyone, including, of course, to Russia,” Latvian Foreign
Minister Edgars Rinkevics told Reuters.
He said a peace plan reached in Minsk in February is
floundering, and warned that a “worst case scenario” – the full resumption of
hostilities, could not be ruled out.
“But in that case, we should understand that ... there will
be grave economic consequences for those who instigate that,” he said,
referring to European Union sanctions already imposed on Russia.
“I hope that the Russian leadership in Moscow fully
understands that, and is not going to get into irresponsible adventures.”
Beyond Russia’s threats against traditional European
targets, there were reports last week that Moscow is eyeing increased
subversion in Mexico and South America.
While the White House is not committed to supporting Ukraine
with anything more than political and moral support – indeed Ukraine did receive
10 out of 200 camouflage-colored Humvees to ward of Russian invaders – US
legislators favor a concrete show of military support for Kyiv.
American lawmakers voted overwhelmingly last Monday to urge
President Obama to provide Ukraine with
lethal weapons to defend itself against Russian aggression.
The House of Representatives approved the resolution in a
broadly bipartisan 348-48 vote, heaping further pressure on the Obama
administration to end its delays in providing weapons and other heavy military
equipment to Kyiv forces.
The measure urges Obama to provide Ukraine with “lethal
defensive weapon systems” that would enhance Ukraine’s ability to “defend their
sovereign territory from the unprovoked and continuing aggression of the
Russian Federation.”
House Speaker John
Boehner described the vote as a call to action, and said Congress broadly
supports more military aid. “Without action from this administration, Russia’s
aggression will continue to be left unchecked,” he said after the vote.
This action also has the support of top US generals. Air Force General Philip Breedlove, a
thought leader in this category, said last Sunday in Brussels the US should
consider sending defensive weapons to Ukraine.
“I do not think that any tool of the US or any other
nation’s power should necessarily be off the table,” said Breedlove, NATO’s top
military commander. “Could it be destabilizing? The answer is yes. Inaction
could also be destabilizing.”
Political and military observers have admitted that Vladimir Putin is behaving like Hitler
did 75 years ago and that Putin must be stopped before he launches another
campaign against an unsuspecting neighbor. Some have correctly elaborated that
while a Hitler may have periodically surfaced in individual countries, but in
Russia, all of its leaders – tsarist, communist and federal presidents – are
imperialists by nature. So why is there inaction?
“If a Russian invasion of the Baltic States could not be
deterred or defeated, the North Atlantic Council and the US president would be
faced with a very unpleasant choice: conduct a costly counteroffensive and risk
nuclear escalation, or abandon the Baltics to renewed subservience to Moscow.
Such a catastrophic failure to uphold the mutual defense responsibilities of
NATO could cripple or even destroy the North Atlantic alliance, one of Russian
President Vladimir Putin’s primary goals. It is therefore of paramount
importance to deter Russian aggression
before it happens,” urged Terrence Kelly in US News & World Report.
Former foreign ministers of Sweden and Poland, Carl Bildt
and RadosÅ‚aw Sikorski, warned the EU about the Putin’s warlike intentions concerning
Ukraine, but Brussels was asleep,
Bildt said in an interview with Radio Liberty last week, according to Ukrainian
newspaper Yevropeiska Pravda.
“And then [we should] make certain that we truly help them
with all the reforms necessary, because Ukraine is going to go through a tough
time and they need our solidarity, sympathy, and support. These things, I
think, are the priorities,” Bildt said.
Sensing a threat to its island nation, British officials are
also advocating that London urgently
rebuild defense capabilities abandoned after the Cold War to face growing
global threats, including from Russia, a committee of lawmakers warned on last
week. The Commons Defense Committee, which examines the spending and policy of
the defense ministry, said nuclear capacity, tanks, warships and aircraft were
needed to deter Putin.
“The world is more dangerous
and unstable than at any time since the end of the Cold War,” the report
said, referring to Russia’s annexation of Crimea and seizure of territory by
Islamic State and Boko Haram militants. “But the UK’s current defense
assumptions are not sufficient for this changed environment... The UK must
rebuild its conventional capacities eroded since the Cold War.”
Russia’s war against Ukraine is not a local issue. It has
ramifications for the entire world. Russia has destabilized peace around the
world with its belligerence and it must be held responsible for its hostility.
Peace and security of the entire planet is at stake.
Ukraine’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Yuriy Sergeyev, speaking last
Friday in Allentown, PA, urged the global community to watch the war in Ukraine
because it isn’t a national or regional issue.
“The entire globe has
been challenged,” he correctly observed, referring to the Russia's takeover
of Crimea. “The whole system of international order has been destroyed.”
With an armed Russia salivating at the prospect of invasion
and subjugation, global peace and countries near and far are at risk.
Short of implementing USAF Gen. Curtis LeMay’s Vietnam War era formula for victory by bombing
the enemy into the Stone Age, free world leaders today should think relentlessly
about how to contain Russian expansionism. First of all, they must emphatically
and in unison declare to Russia the detrimental consequences of pursuing its
current belligerent policies. The free world should maintain economic and trade
sanctions against Russia, Russian businesses and oligarchs. They should
initiate a campaign to expel Russia from
the UN Security Council, which its representative Vitaly Churkin abuses
with lies, fabrications and disinformation. Moscow should also be banished from
all global events and shunted to the sidelines of any conference, mission,
project or plan. Take away the World Cup 2018 from Moscow. Russia must be universally condemned as an outlaw, aggressive and terrorist state.
If there is any hope of transforming Russia into
law-abiding, civilized member of the international community of nations and
bringing peace and stability to all countries, then the free world must persuade
rich and common, famous, infamous and nameless Russians that their only course
to redemption is not via far-right rallies but rather without Vladimir Putin.