The Daily Telegraph

Cyber attacks and shelling – the prelude to land invasion

- By Robert Mendick chief reporter

A FULL-BLOWN war between Russia and Ukraine is now inevitable, according to Western officials. How it will unfold, however, is unclear. With up to 190,000 Russian troops now massed on Ukraine’s borders and an additional 15,000 Russian-backed separatist­s already in the occupied Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, Vladimir Putin may give the order to invade any day now.

Communicat­ion attack

The US and UK have issued warnings that Russia will stage or claim “false flag” attacks to justify triggering an invasion. The propaganda war is already raging, with Moscow claiming that five Ukrainian troops have been killed in Russian territory and three civilians murdered by Ukrainian “saboteurs” in the Donetsk People’s Republic.

US intelligen­ce agencies have warned that a massive cyber attack on key Ukrainian infrastruc­ture as a prelude to full-scale invasion is likely. The Kremlin hopes to sever Ukraine’s communicat­ions with the outside world, jamming mobile signals and launching a cyber attack on internet services. It will also try to disrupt the Ukraine military’s internal communicat­ions.

The Atlantic Council, a US thinktank, has claimed Russia could cut off most of Ukraine’s internet traffic by slicing through a single undersea cable in the Kerch Strait installed by Moscow’s state-owned telecommun­ications firm.

Ukraine’s electricit­y grid, communicat­ion systems and government ministries have been targets of suspected Russian cyber attacks in the wake of the 2014 invasion of Crimea. Much of Ukraine’s critical infrastruc­ture, including its electricit­y grid, remain connected to Russia, making it virtually impossible to defend from attacks.

Aerial bombardmen­t

Russia is expected to launch wave after wave of mostly unguided long-range missile strikes before a ground assault. Any aerial bombardmen­t is likely to be short lived, lasting a few hours. Russia will fire shells from long range, well back from the front line, targeting any Ukrainian military out in the open but also deployed against known “choke points” such as strategic railway lines, crossroads, airfields and bridges in an attempt to cut off Ukraine’s forces and prevent reinforcem­ents.

Missiles can be fired from the ground hundreds of miles away. The BM-30 Smerch artillery launcher fires 300mm rockets from 12 barrels simultaneo­usly with a range of up to 530 miles.

The Iskander rocket launcher has a shorter range of 300 miles but a more explosive warhead. Both systems were spotted being driven into the Donbas region on Tuesday, putting Kyiv within reach.

Russia is expected to deploy drones to spot Ukrainian command and control centres and military communicat­ion hubs in the field and target artillery.

Missiles will be fired from the Donetsk and Luhansk regions occupied by Russian separatist­s, and now being claimed by Moscow, but also from the long border in the north east and from Belarus, where Russian forces have been amassing in recent weeks.

Ground assault

Russia’s ground campaign will begin once it is satisfied that the artillery has cleared a path for tanks and armoured vehicles to roll into Ukraine.

Analysts believe its forces will attempt to surround and isolate Ukraine’s troops, destroying them in pockets. Russia will hope to have knocked out Ukraine’s air force and air defence systems.

With air superiorit­y establishe­d, it is likely Russian special forces will be dropped by helicopter behind Ukrainian lines to further disrupt command centres and other strategic targets with sabotage operations.

It is estimated that of the 190,000 troops on the borders, about 30,000 are stationed in Belarus, no more than 150 miles from Kyiv. “The main effort of Russia’s ground campaign would be to create a pincer movement from the north that encircled Kyiv and enveloped the bulk of Ukraine’s ground forces in the eastern part of the country,” say Michael Kofman and Jeffrey Edmonds, experts in the Russian military at the US Centre for Naval Analyses, in a paper published this week.

Along with the armoured firepower will come specialist engineerin­g equipment to build bridges, repair roads and rail tracks, clear minefields and keep the Russian army on the move. Russia has a few hundred state-of-the-art T-14 Armata tanks and thousands of Sovietera T-72s and T-80s upgraded with modern armour and weaponry.

The Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington-based think tank, has identified “three likely axes of advance” for Russia to seize territory up to the Dnieper river and into Kyiv: a northern route that would include outflankin­g Ukrainian defences from Belarus; a 200-mile central route through Donetsk; and a third assault from Crimea in the south.

It suggests that Kharkiv, close to the Russian border but a hub for road and rail, is critical if Russia wants to win a war quickly. If Kharkiv resists, strategist­s believe Mr Putin’s army will struggle to strike out to Kyiv, particular­ly as February is one of the coldest months with daylight limited to 10 hours a day.

Air and sea

Russia’s Black Sea fleet has been strengthen­ed since the annexation of Crimea and is expected to play an important supporting role in any Kremlin invasion plan.

It consists of dozens of anti-submarine frigates and guided missile destroyers while Russian submarines have also been spotted in the area. Cruise missiles with a range of 1,000 miles would supplement any aerial bombardmen­t from the north and east.

Mr Kofman and Mr Edmonds believe the fleet is capable of launching a “significan­t amphibious operation” and could deploy 1,000 to 2,000 ground troops to assist forces launching an invasion across the isthmus connecting Crimea to the Ukrainian mainland.

Experts describe Ukraine’s navy as a “mosquito navy”, made up largely of small gunboats.

Fighter jets and helicopter­s could be sent in to destroy anything not taken out by the aerial bombardmen­t. They will also hope to win the remaining battle of the air early on. Ukraine has fewer than 100 combat aircraft, including 43 state-of-the-art, Russian-made Mig-29s and 15 combat helicopter­s. Russia in contrast has 10 times the firepower, including 70 Mig-29s and 80 Mig-31s.

Guerilla warfare

Strategist­s suggest that Russian forces will try to avoid Ukraine’s major cities in the push west. If the Ukrainian army finds itself overwhelme­d in the first few hours, its forces will likely retreat to the cities and draw a line at the Dnieper river and try to protect Kyiv and other urban areas on the river.

Street-by-street conflict would be messy and bloody, with ideal conditions for resistance fighters defending Ukraine.

Ukrainian forces have been training for this outcome in abandoned cities near Chernobyl.

The longer any conflict drags on the greater the problem for Russia in keeping up supply lines as well as the cost in life and to its economy.

The Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies says that “Russia may be unable to avoid sustained urban combat in several major metropolit­an areas (and the resulting high casualties) if it attempts more than a punitive incursion into Ukraine”.

Kyiv has a population of three million and a further 1.5 million people live in Kharkiv. Odessa and Dnipro are also major cities. “If defended, these large urban areas could take considerab­le time and casualties to clear and occupy,” says the think tank.

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