Russia and Ukraine: The Three Scariest Statements
by Ted
Snider Posted on July 31, 2022
https://original.antiwar.com/Ted_Snider/2022/07/31/russia-and-ukraine-the-three-scariest-statements/
Russia continues its war on Ukraine. The US and its
allies continue flooding weapons into Ukraine. The war goes on, and Ukrainians
continue to suffer and die.
The last several days have offered little hope but
lots of fear. They have also offered three of the scariest statements yet of
the war. They are scary because each one threatens to escalate or prolong the
war.
No Ceasefire
In a July 22 interview, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky rejected any ceasefire that allows Russia to hold on to Crimea and
territories it has acquired since the start of the war. Since no Russian leader
will return to Crimea, that formulation seems to kill any hope of a ceasefire in
this war.
"Freezing the conflict with the Russian
Federation means a pause that gives the Russian Federation a break for
rest," Zelensky said.
"They will not use this pause to change their geopolitics or to renounce
their claims on the former Soviet republics." Zelensky said a ceasefire
would allow Russia to swallow Crimea and the Donbas and "Then it will rest
and in two or three years, it will seize two more regions and say again: Freeze
the conflict. And it will keep going further and further. One hundred
percent."
The loss of hope for a ceasefire risks prolonging the
war. It could also risk escalating it. In Covert Regime Change:
America’s Secret Cold War, Lindsey O’Rourke argues that "chronic
divergence of policy preferences" leads countries to undertake coups.
When countries face solvable problems, they often use
diplomacy or coercion. One-time problems may even lead to war. But if the
problem is a chronic, intractable problem, since the problem appears
unsolvable, the source of the problem needs to be removed. That can motivate
countries to consider coups. It could also lead countries to expand their war
goals.
The no ceasefire statement is scary because if the war
can’t be stopped by a ceasefire, or if there can be no ceasefire without Russia
giving up land it cannot agree to give up, then the risk of Russia attempting
to end the war by accomplishing enhanced goals – be it coups or broader
conquest – goes up.
Long Range Missiles
In June, the US announced the
provision of High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) to Ukraine. At the
same time, the UK announced that
it will send Ukraine M270 multiple-launch rocket systems. These rocket launch
systems can fire rockets 50 miles and, so, are capable of striking inside
Russia.
Since Russia’s goals include keeping Ukraine out of
NATO and keeping Ukraine from becoming a base for NATO weapons so close to
Russia’s borders, Russia warned that weapons that can reach Russia from farther
away mean Russia would have to push the boundary of the territory that could
host them further away. "The longer the range of weapons you supply,"
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said, "the farther away the line
from where [Ukraine] could threaten the Russian Federation will be pushed.”
The US and UK not only sent the weapons, leading
Lavrov to declare that "the geographical tasks of the special operation of
the Russian troops will change. . . . It’s far from being just the DPR and LPR
[Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics], it’s also “Kherson and Zaporizhzhia
regions and a number of other territories,” they have promised to send
more. The New York Times reports that on July 20,
"American military officials said Wednesday that they planned to send four
more of the M142 HIMARS multiple-rocket launch vehicles, as well as more of the
guided rockets they fire and more guided artillery ammunition." Added to
the sixteen HIMARS the US has already sent, that would make the total delivery
to Ukraine twenty. The US has promised to
send the new shipment of four HIMARS "as quickly as possible."
On July 27, Russian officials said that
a key bridge that had to be closed after being damaged by Ukrainian fire was
the target of "fire from U.S.-supplied high mobility artillery rocket
systems (HIMARS)."
The statement promising to send Ukraine more
long-range rocket systems is scary because it risks expanding the war by
pushing Russia’s boundary goals further west into Ukraine.
Crimea a Legitimate Target
Though Ukraine has apparently provided
assurances to the US that it will not use the long-range missiles to
strike inside Russian territory, they have also apparently said that
they could be used to strike inside Crimea.
The problem is that to the massive majority of
Crimeans and Russians, Crimea is Russian territory. To Putin – or any Russian
leader – using US-supplied long-range missiles to strike inside Crimea is using US-supplied long-range missiles to strike inside Russia. That, according to the former president and current Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council
Dmitry Medvedev, would lead to the Ukrainian leadership
being “faced with a doomsday, very quick and tough, immediately.”
The statement that Crimea is a legitimate target of US-supplied weapons is scary because it may cross Russia’s red line for US
involvement in the war. Russia could expand its military targets and war aims
if it feels that US involvement has become sufficiently intense to threaten the
destruction of Russia or the loss of its acquired territories.
Attacks on Crimea with US-supplied long-range missiles
could be seen by Russia as both. It could be seen as the loss of territory no
Russian leader could lose. And, since Russia sees Crimea as Russia, the loss of
Crimea could be seen as the destruction of the Russian state. The declaration
that Crimea is a legitimate target, then, risks Russia escalating the war.
These three recent statements, the ruling out of a
ceasefire, the provision of more long-range rocket systems, and the declaration
that Crimea is a legitimate target, are three of the scariest statements yet
because they all risk prolonging, extending, or expanding a war that needs to
stop.
Ted Snider has a graduate degree in
philosophy and writes about analyzing patterns in US foreign policy and history.
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