Albuquerque Journal

American spy agencies review their misses on Ukraine, Russia

White House ramps up support, deliveries of high-tech weapons

- BY NOMAAN MERCHANT AND MATTHEW LEE

WASHINGTON — The question was posed in a private briefing to U.S. intelligen­ce officials weeks before Russia launched its invasion in late February: Was Ukraine’s leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, made in the mold of Britain’s Winston Churchill or Afghanista­n’s Ashraf Ghani?

In other words, would Zelenskyy lead a historic resistance or flee while his government collapsed?

Ultimately, U.S. intelligen­ce agencies underestim­ated Zelenskyy and Ukraine while overestima­ting Russia and its president, even as they accurately predicted Vladimir Putin would order an invasion.

But Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, did not fall in a few days, as the United States had expected. And while American spy agencies have been credited with supporting Ukraine’s resistance, they now face bipartisan pressure to review what they got wrong beforehand — especially after their mistakes in judging Afghanista­n last year.

Intelligen­ce officials have begun a review of how their agencies judge the will and ability of foreign government­s to fight.

The review is taking place while U.S. intelligen­ce continues to have a critical role in Ukraine and as the White House ramps up weapons deliveries and support to Ukraine, trying to predict what Putin might see as escalatory and seeking to avoid a direct war with Russia.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion announced it would give Ukraine a small number of high-tech, medium-range rocket systems, a weapon that Ukraine has long wanted. Since the war began on Feb. 24, the White House has approved shipping drones, anti-tank and anti-aircraft systems, and millions of rounds of ammunition.

The U.S. has lifted early restrictio­ns on intelligen­cesharing to provide informatio­n that Ukraine has used to strike critical targets, including the flagship of the Russian navy.

Lawmakers from both parties question whether the U.S. could have done more before Putin invaded and whether the White House held back some support due to pessimisti­c assessment­s of Ukraine.

Sen. Angus King, an independen­t from Maine, told officials at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last month that “had we had a better handle on the prediction, we could have done more to assist the Ukrainians earlier.”

Ohio Rep. Mike Turner, the top Republican on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in an interview that he thought the White House and top administra­tion officials had projected “their own bias on the situation in a way that lends itself to inaction.”

The Senate Intelligen­ce Committee sent a classified letter last month to the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce asking about how intelligen­ce agencies assessed both Ukraine and Afghanista­n. CNN first reported the letter.

Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines told lawmakers in May that the National Intelligen­ce Council would review how the agencies assess both “will to fight” and “capacity to fight.”

Both issues are “quite challengin­g to provide effective analysis on and we’re looking at different methodolog­ies for doing so,” Haines said.

While there is no announced timetable on the review, which began before the committee’s letter, officials have identified some errors.

Several people familiar with prewar assessment­s spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligen­ce.

Despite its vast advantages, Russia failed to establish air superiorit­y over Ukraine and failed at basic tasks such as securing its battlefiel­d communicat­ions.

It has lost thousands of soldiers and at least eight to 10 generals, according to U.S. estimates. Russian and Ukrainian forces are now fighting in fierce, close quarters combat in eastern Ukraine, far from the swift Russian victory forecast by the U.S. and the West.

While Russia has entered recent proxy wars, it had not directly fought a major land war since the 1980s.

Zelenskyy has received worldwide acclaim for refusing to flee as Russia sent teams to try to capture or kill him. Britain’s Churchill, throughout the yearlong blitz of London by German fighter aircraft during World War II, often watched the bombing raids from rooftops and he made special effort to walk the streets in places where thousands were killed.

In contrast, Afghanista­n’s Ghani slipped out of his country on Sunday last August, lonely and isolated, a few months after America’s top diplomat had urged him to forge a united stand as the American military pullout neared.

Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, the current director of the DIA, testified in March that “my view was that, based on a variety of factors, that the Ukrainians were not as ready as I thought they should be. Therefore, I questioned their will to fight. That was a bad assessment on my part because they have fought bravely and honorably and are doing the right thing.”

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