The Pak Banker

Only force will move Putin

- James M. Dubik

TUkraine war is in a decisive period, just as NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenbur­g said. What makes the next 10 months decisive is possible "Ukraine fatigue," the topic that Time magazine reported as the "phrase of the day" in Davos. Right now, such fatigue is less a reality than a product of Russian informatio­n warfare. That could change, however, if the Zelensky government cannot achieve major progress between now and fall 2023. To do that, Volodymyr Zelensky needs not only more but faster U.S. and allied concerted support.

Vladimir Putin has never wavered from his primary goal in Ukraine: subjugatio­n. He continues to deny the existence of Ukrainian sovereignt­y; for him Ukraine is part of Russia. He also maintains the fiction of a Nazi regime that Russia must oust, and he is taking steps to improve his military's performanc­e for an upcoming offensive. In short, he remains the unrepentan­t and deter- mined war-criminal aggressor that he has been from the start.

Putin's idea of negotiatio­ns is Ukraine capitulati­on, Zelensky's removal, and Russian dominance of what's left. Putin has lost, in the sense that his aggression has only strengthen­ed NATO and the U.S./European transatlan­tic ties and weakened Russia economical­ly. But he has not lost in Ukraine itself. He still controls much of the Donbas important because Russian occupation there robs Ukraine of industrial capacity, thereby increasing, in Putin's view, reliance on Russia. Putin also controls Crimea and the coastline between Crimea and Donbas important because control of this area also diminishes Ukraine's economic capacity and increases Russian influence. With what he has, Putin can choke off Ukraine economical­ly and influence, if not dominate, Ukraine.

Further, Putin has not in the least diminished his intent to use military might to achieve his ends. Right now, that force entails the criminal bombardmen­t of Ukraine's civilian population and infrastruc­ture. He's doing this in the attempt to break Ukraine's will and to cover reorganiza­tion and improvemen­t within his military. He is unlikely to break Ukraine's will. And, because of deep structural problems in the Russian military, as well as the unhealthy competitio­n between mercenarie­s and the Russian military, Putin likely will not be able to achieve the kinds of improvemen­ts and success he envisions. But he's undeterred, believing that time is on his side. At the very least he will try to hold on to the territory he has now.

That, in his mind, may be enough to force negotiatio­ns while he is in a position of strength, create a "rump" Ukraine that Moscow can continue to choke, and produce enough of a victory on which he can capitalize.

Zelensky has a complex task. At the very minimum, he must force Russian troops out of the oblasts along the coast between Crimea and Donbas. To do so, he will have to prevent Russian advances and take, or at least threaten significan­tly, Russia's occupied Crimea and Donbas. While doing this, Zelensky also must continue to defend Ukraine's skies, use long-range fires and limited attacks to thwart Russian preparatio­ns, build an offensive capacity, and maintain Ukrainian morale. And he must do this before "Ukraine fatigue" really does set in. But this cannot be done without the U.S., NATO, and other allies changing their modus operandi.

No doubt the allies, especially the U.S. as evidenced in the latest American support package - have given Ukraine a lot, in terms of military, fiscal and humanitari­an aid. Equally without doubt, Putin remains steadfast and in a relatively good strategic position within Ukraine itself. In his mind, his aggression and war crimes will have paid off, if at the end of fall, he remains in his current positions. Only force can move him from where he is - physical force from a counteroff­ensive, diplomatic force from further isolation, economic force from expanded sanctions, and psychologi­cal force from Ukraine and allied unity. Negotiatin­g now will achieve none of this. War is about force. It's a sad reality, but it is reality. As emotionall­y disturbing as it is to watch the effects of Putin's debauchery, it will be more disturbing if he succeeds.

The U.S., NATO, and other allies must provide Ukraine with what it needs to accomplish the full set of tasks necessary to eject Russia from all the territory it has seized since February 2022 and at least threaten Putin's control of occupied Donbas and Crimea. This is the minimum criteria for Ukraine and allied success in this war. Otherwise, Ukraine's political sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity will mean nothing and the allied claim to stand against illegal aggression will mean even less. The allies must simply stop the "give them part of what they need, slower than they need it" approach to supplying Ukraine. This approach has gone on too long already. Ukraine needs more air defense systems, tanks, and long-range artillery - and rockets to do what is necessary.

The NATO Secretary General is right. This is a decisive period in the Ukraine War. And only allied actions - not words - will determine whether it was decisive for the Russians or the Ukrainians. Shipping notificati­ons don't count. What counts is the right equipment in hand, in sufficient quantity, and on time. Historians write about the foolishnes­s of negotiatin­g with Adolf Hitler. If Putin wins in Ukraine, future historians likely will write about the ineffectiv­e ways the allies dealt with the Ukraine crisis.

Vladimir Putin has never wavered from his primary goal in Ukraine: subjugatio­n. He continues to deny the existence of Ukrainian sovereignt­y; for him Ukraine is part of Russia. He also maintains the fiction of a Nazi regime that Russia must oust, and he is taking steps to improve his military's performanc­e for an upcoming offensive. In short, he remains the unrepentan­t and determined war-criminal aggressor that he has been from the start. Putin's idea of negotiatio­ns is Ukraine capitulati­on, Zelensky's removal, and Russian dominance of what's left. Putin has lost, in the sense that his aggression has only strengthen­ed NATO and the U.S./European transatlan­tic ties and weakened Russia economical­ly.

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