The Hamilton Spectator

Why the goalposts moved in Ukraine

- GWYNNE DYER GWYNNE DYER’S NEW BOOK IS “THE SHORTEST HISTORY OF WAR.”

Two months ago, when Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, every message from Washington or NATO about the invasion included a prominent passage saying what the western alliance would not do.

It would not send NATO troops to help Ukraine. It would give Ukraine some “defensive” weapons but no “offensive” ones. It would, in other words, allow Ukraine to lose, but only slowly. And under no circumstan­ces would it do anything that gave Russia reason to fear that it might face military action by NATO.

How things have changed! In the past two weeks, the United States has declared some $2billion (U.S.) worth of state-ofthe-art weapons are on the way to Ukraine, including “Switchblad­e” combat drones and selfpropel­led howitzers. Even Germany (which originally offered nothing but helmets) is sending modern anti-aircraft guns.

Rhetorical­ly, the sky is the limit. In a press briefing at the Polish border last Monday after a quick visit to Kyiv, U.S. Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin said: “We want to see Russia weakened to the point where it can’t do things like invade Ukraine.”

This presuppose­s, of course, that Russia has already suffered a decisive defeat at the hands of the Ukrainian army. It also implicitly assumes that the devastatin­g economic sanctions NATO and other countries have placed on Russia will continue after the war ends.

What has given them the confidence to move the goalposts so dramatical­ly? Not the military situation, certainly. Ukraine has successful­ly seen off the initial Russian attack, which was a simultaneo­us offensive on far too many different fronts with inadequate numbers on each of them. But the war is far from over.

The initial Russian strategy could only have succeeded if Ukraine was what Russian President Vladimir Putin imagined it to be: a “fake” country with useless armed forces that would collapse at the first push. So victory in the first round went to Ukraine, but the second round is starting now and it will be more difficult. The Russians are mostly concentrat­ed on a single front in eastern Ukraine, which allows their traditiona­l, methodical tactics, depending on bigger numbers and superior firepower, to function.

There is still a lot of political interferen­ce driven by Putin’s impatience — Russian troops withdrawn from the abandoned Kyiv front are being thrown back into combat in the east with no time to rest and regroup — but they are slowly gaining ground. There are more and better weapons on their way to the Ukrainians, but it will take time to match the weapons with crews and get them to the front. It’s now unlikely, but Ukraine could still lose this war.

The rival scenario, in which the Ukrainians eventually stop the Russian advance and then drive them back, is more likely, but it would bring its own difficult and dangerous choices.

If the Ukrainians start taking territory back, where do they stop? On the line where the war started, leaving Crimea and some of Donetsk and Luhansk provinces in Russia’s hands. That would make sense, but it would be hard to convince bitter and vengeful Ukrainians.

It would also be hard to persuade the Washington crew to stop there at the moment, but they need to be persuaded. The alternativ­e is a new Cold War with Russia. Far better to stop at the 2022 border, declare a unilateral ceasefire, and leave Putin to twist in the wind. Russians would get rid of him eventually, and then you could end sanctions in return for reparation­s for Ukraine.

To reach that highly desirable outcome, the Ukrainians first have to win their war, which is not yet in the bag. And then their friends would have to convince them that stopping short of total victory is in their own long-term interest. Not an easy sell.

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