The Mercury News

Putin must be stopped from making Kyiv another Aleppo

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

Vladimir Putin is reverting to full brutalist form after his military got off to a slow start in its effort to conquer Ukraine.

Russian missiles and rockets slammed into Kharkiv's central Freedom Square on Tuesday, blowing up a civilian government headquarte­rs and damaging the opera house and concert hall.

As Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on video after the Kharkiv blast, Russia's current attacks are “outright, undisguise­d terror” against civilians. But why should any Western leader be surprised? Putin has been getting away with war crimes for the past two decades.

Let's start with the First Chechen War in 1995.

In 1995, I flew from Moscow into Chechnya on a Russian military transport plane and arrived at a Russian base in TolstoyYur­t. There I watched for hours as Russian heavy artillery pounded nonstop into eight-story civilian apartment buildings directly below. The city of Grozny was essentiall­y destroyed.

Many military experts believe Putin may resort to that harsh military doctrine now because his forces have met unexpected resistance from the Ukrainian military and civilians.

“The initial Russian operation was premised on terrible assumption­s about Ukraine's ability will to fight, and an unworkable concept of operations,” tweets Michael Kofman, a top expert on the Russian military at CNA. “Sadly, I expect the worst is yet ahead, and this war could get a lot more ugly.”

To see what “ugly” means, one need only look at what Russian airstrikes did to Syrian civilians, in Putin's successful effort to keep Syrian leader Bashar Assad in power.

Russian pilots bombed civilian areas from 2015 on, in suburbs of Damascus, the ancient city of Aleppo and other Syrian cities, over and over. And in a pattern of unfathomab­le cruelty, they practiced what became known as the “double-tap” — waiting until civilian volunteers arrived to pull victims out of the rubble, and then bombing the same sites again.

“We haven't seen scenes like Syria, like the carpetbomb­ing and brutal attacks against civilians, like Aleppo,” said strategic expert Israeli Col. (res.) Udi Evental.

Moreover, Putin consciousl­y weaponized refugees in the Syria conflict, and no doubt envisions doing the same with Ukraine. By bombing infrastruc­ture and civilian housing, he forced hundreds of thousands of Syrians to flee to Europe, causing a huge political crisis in the European Union in 2015 and 2016. So far, EU countries are welcoming more than 600,000 Ukrainians who have fled, but that number could rise to millions.

It is essential for President Joe Biden and European leaders to recognize that Putin is a coldbloode­d killer who will not refrain from committing — and denying he committed — war crimes, even as video footage tells the truth.

It is also essential to recognize that the Russian leader was serious when he said in 2005 that the collapse of the Soviet Union was “the greatest geopolitic­al catastroph­e of the (20th) century.” He truly believes that Ukraine has no right to exist as a country and that all of Eastern Europe must return to Russian control.

Fortunatel­y, the Russian invasion of Ukraine has finally woken Western Europe up to the Putin threat and has impelled Biden to impose the harsh sanctions he promised. But Zelenskyy is still a Ukrainian David facing a Russian Goliath, and Putin has already sent in Chechen hit teams to kill him.

NATO must do what it takes to thwart the criminal in the Kremlin. There have to be means short of sending NATO troops — whether by shoring up Ukraine's cyber defenses, by finding ways to deliver those promised anti-air and anti-tank weapons or by covert means.

Cheering for Zelenskyy in the comfort of Western capitals won't save him. Putin must be stopped from turning Kyiv into Aleppo in order to achieve his criminal dreams.

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