The Mercury News

Critical battles for Ukraine, America being fought now

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a Philadelph­ia Inquirer columnist. © 2022 The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Americans are being tested right now about the kind of country and world they want to live in.

At home — as children are slaughtere­d with easily acquired assault weapons — members of Congress must decide whether they prefer the rule of law or the law of the jungle.

Abroad, the Biden administra­tion, and the American public, must decide whether the strong U.S. support for Ukraine will be continued for the long haul (and even strengthen­ed) as Vladimir Putin breaks all the rules that have kept peace in Europe since World War II.

Putin's new war crime: starving world's poor by blockading Ukraine's ports.

After the Ukrainian military's early successes against Putin's invaders, the war has entered a phase of attrition in eastern Ukraine.

The war has largely disappeare­d from U.S. front pages and been overtaken by domestic crises — like mass shootings.

But that doesn't mean the outcome of Putin's war has become less important. Many Americans may not realize that a Putin “victory” is still possible, enabled by a brutal autocrat who has no qualms about slaughteri­ng civilians and laying waste to whole cities.

Moreover, some European leaders, like France's Emmanuel Macron, are agitating for premature peace talks with Putin, refusing to recognize that he is committed to controllin­g and/or destroying Ukraine. The only thing that can bring Putin to the table is to push him back from seized Ukrainian land.

Indeed, the war's outcome will be shaped by whether the West finally delivers the necessary weapons in sufficient quantity and with sufficient speed.

Putin clearly has a new strategy after failing to blitz Kyiv and depose President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. At this point, the Russian goal is to seize the whole of the eastern Donbas region (Moscow occupied one-third of that area in 2014), and to annex a broad band of contiguous territory in the south, running from occupied Mariupol all the way to the major port of Odesa.

This would cut Ukraine off from the sea, including the critical ability to export grain (a looming reality that is already causing a global famine). A truncated Ukraine with a crippled economy would be hard-pressed to attract a Western Marshall Plan to rebuild its cities or entice millions of refugees to come home.

Should this disaster come to pass, Putin no doubt thinks he could sit back and wait for Zelenskyy's fall, pushed out by an embittered public — and then try again to impose a pro-Russian leader in Kyiv.

The heavy weapons loudly promised by the United States and several European countries are either insufficie­nt in numbers or arriving too slowly.

“The Ukrainians are not doing well because we're not sending them what they need,” retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, a former NATO commander, told me last week.

Retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, former commander of the United States Army Europe, said he believes the Russians are near exhaustion, in both weapons systems and manpower, but are making gains because the Ukrainians don't have the long-range weapons they need. “We're at the critical point in the war,” he said. “Hopefully in three or four weeks, stuff will start showing up in numbers.”

Hodges said he believes that with new heavy weapons, “the Ukrainians can start doing successful counteratt­acks. By September, they will have the potential to push the Russians back to the pre-invasion lines.”

Whether or not this can be achieved, it won't be feasible unless the West delivers more and more sophistica­ted weapons systems ASAP.

The critical battle to prevent Putin from imposing his law of the jungle on Europe is now being waged in Western capitals — and on Ukrainian soil.

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