The Mercury News

For Putin, invasion is latest in a long string of failures in Ukraine

- Neil MacFarquha­r

The signs of failure in Russia's invasion of Ukraine are readily apparent: the tarnished reputation of its military as a modernized, overpoweri­ng fighting force; its tattered economy; and a Western alliance more unified than at any time since the worst tensions of the Cold War.

But what is less appreciate­d is that this is only the latest and potentiall­y the most spectacula­r in a series of failures suffered by President Vladimir Putin of Russia in Ukraine. If Afghanista­n is the “graveyard of empires,” Ukraine is where Putin's imperial ambitions consistent­ly founder.

In fact, the main reason the Russian leader took such a potentiall­y self-destructiv­e step as a wholescale invasion, some analysts believe, was to reverse a long line of fiascos dating back to Ukraine's so-called Orange Revolution in 2004, during the early years of Putin's presidency.

“He has been obsessed with Ukraine since the early 2000s because Ukraine became the field where he kept losing, the only field where he kept losing,” said Mikhail Fishman, former host of a political talk show on TV Rain, the now-shuttered independen­t television network.

Putin long has plotted to undermine Ukraine, overtly and covertly, and has notched some wins along the way. He has kept the country bogged down in a grinding war in the east, sowed discord among the political class and damaged its infrastruc­ture with experiment­al cyberattac­ks — techniques later exported to the United States and elsewhere.

But on at least three significan­t occasions when Putin intervened directly to bring Ukraine under Russia's heel, he was thwarted.

There is always the chance that he could prevail this time, whether by reducing Ukraine's cities to rubble or seizing a large chunk of the country in the east and south and declaring victory. Support for the war at home seems to be strong.

But even those outcomes would bring costs, reinforcin­g Ukrainians' hatred for Russia, cementing Moscow's status as a pariah to the West and almost certainly requiring a lengthy and expensive occupation.

History has tended to smite Russian leaders who launched what they wrongly anticipate­d would be short, victorious wars. The Russian Revolution that ended 300 years of Romanov rule erupted a few years after Czar Nicholas II lost a disastrous war against the Japanese, and the Soviet Union collapsed in the wake of its debacle in Afghanista­n.

Some analysts believe that Putin is risking a similar fate. “He will lose Russia because of Ukraine,” said Fishman, who has just finished a book about why democracy failed to take hold in Russia after the Soviet collapse. Others are less emphatic, especially in the short term, and note the popular signs of support for him inside Russia. Still, they caution that Putin is uncharacte­ristically playing a poker game with an unpredicta­ble ending.

“This has been a major failure in Europe's biggest land war since 1945, and that is a big failure,” said Clifford Kupchan, chair of the Eurasia Group, a political risk assessment company in Washington. “I would not bet futures in Russian political stability over a five-year period.”

Though Putin has publicly emphasized the security threat posed by a westward-leaning Ukraine as a reason for going to war, others say his deepest concern is the possible political fallout from living next door to a boisterous democracy with decent economic prospects.

“Putin's ultimate nightmare is a color revolution in Russia, and that is the lens through which he views people voting in Ukraine,” Kupchan said. “Because it is so close, culturally, the threat of contagion, as he perceives it, is even greater.”

Putin's successes are legion, especially his entire career arc from an obscure, midlevel intelligen­ce agent — forced to drive a taxi to make ends meet after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc — to becoming one of the longest-running leaders ever to occupy the Kremlin.

Yet in Ukraine, Putin, 69, has taken repeated missteps.

In 2004, he campaigned personally in the presidenti­al election on behalf of his preferred candidate, Viktor Yanukovych, whom he twice congratula­ted on his win. But widespread accusation­s of voting fraud sparked a nationalis­t backlash and the Orange Revolution, with street protests culminatin­g ultimately in the election of Viktor Yushchenko (who was poisoned during the campaign) as president in a Westernori­ented government.

In 2006, Putin tried to wrest greater control over — and profits from — the natural gas distributi­on system carrying Russian supplies across Ukraine to Europe, creating an uproar by cutting the flow in the middle of winter. He backed down when it became apparent that he risked losing energy markets in Europe if supplies of Russian gas could not be relied upon.

In 2009, he attempted to effect a Cabinet reshuffle in Kyiv, Ukraine, that would have allowed his allies to dominate the government, but the effort collapsed.

Putin made his gravest error before now in 2013, when it looked like Ukraine would successful­ly slip Russia's orbit by signing an associatio­n agreement with the European Union. To head that off, he dangled a $15 billion loan that Yanukovych — by then the legitimate­ly elected but incorrigib­ly corrupt president — accepted. As in 2003, that triggered massive street protests on Kyiv's Independen­ce Square, or Maidan. After police violence encouraged by Moscow failed to deter the demonstrat­ors, Yanukovych fled to Russia in February 2014.

Putin called it a U.S.-inspired coup and invaded Crimea, eventually annexing it, and kindled a separatist war in the Donbas region, the resource-rich rust belt of eastern Ukraine. He thought he had found a means to dominate Kyiv in a proposed treaty called the Minsk agreements, which would have given the separatist­s veto power over important central government decisions. But the deal was never implemente­d, and the war became a grinding impasse that by 2022 had killed 14,000 people, many of them civilians.

As the failures piled up, Putin began to denigrate Ukraine. He claimed that it was not a real country, but an artifice cobbled together by Lenin using different bits of Russian land, and in recent years said it was presided over by a “Nazi” government that Ukrainians — particular­ly, ethnic Russians in the country's eastern parts — would be glad to see overthrown.

In the current invasion, the Russian military has attacked all six cities he mentioned. Yet, leaving aside Luhansk and Donetsk in the separatist regions, Russian troops have managed to capture only Kherson, with the rest resisting fiercely, apparently to Putin's surprise.

Ultimately, the invasion seems already to represent another failure for Putin in Ukraine, perhaps his greatest, wrecking his quest to become the historical hero who reconstitu­ted the Russian Empire.

“Without Ukraine, it means nothing,” Fishman said of Putin's quest. “He will never get political control over Ukraine. It is out of the question.”

 ?? IVOR PRICKETT — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The burned-out remnants of as many as nine Russian tanks and armored vehicles are left on a forest road outside Dmytrivka, Ukraine, west of Kyiv, on Saturday.
IVOR PRICKETT — THE NEW YORK TIMES The burned-out remnants of as many as nine Russian tanks and armored vehicles are left on a forest road outside Dmytrivka, Ukraine, west of Kyiv, on Saturday.
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Putin

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