The West Won’t Like Russia’s Next Move in Ukraine
NATO leaders and the Western news media need to
realize that they may be celebrating the prelude to a prolonged, extremely
bloody war or even an impending nuclear catastrophe.
September 19, 2022
https://nationalinterest.org/feature/west-won%E2%80%99t-russia%E2%80%99s-next-move-ukraine-204873
NATO officials and the Western news media have not
concealed their glee that Ukraine’s counteroffensive has
forced a precipitous withdrawal of Russian troops from a sizable chunk of
territory near the eastern city of Kharkiv. The attack did appear to catch the
Kremlin by surprise. Russian leaders expected the main counteroffensive to come
in the south, and the bulk of Kyiv’s efforts do appear to be focused on that
region. Nevertheless, the loss in the east is a significant military
setback—and an even greater embarrassment—to
Russia’s military command and the Putin government.
Enthusiastic pro-Ukraine figures in Europe and the
United States are celebrating and contending that Kyiv’s success portends
Russia’s overall defeat in
the war. According to that thesis, Russian president Vladimir Putin will have
to accept a peace accord that falls far short of the Kremlin’s initial goals.
The best he can supposedly hope for is an agreement which restores the status
quo ante—which would mean that Moscow gains no territory, nor would Ukraine
be prevented from joining NATO. More optimistic types speculate that such a
spectacular failure, which comes after massive expenditures of both blood and
treasure, might well lead to Putin’s ouster.
Such celebrations are wildly premature. Russia still
has several military options,
and some of the scenarios should deeply worry the United States and its NATO
allies.
Option 1: Moscow could launch a
counter-counteroffensive—one focused on the Black Sea port of Odessa. That city
is Ukraine’s last outlet on the Black Sea, and its seizure would effectively
make Ukraine a landlocked country. It would also give Russia a stranglehold on
Ukraine’s principal economic lifeline, since the majority of Kyiv’s exports and
imports flow through Odessa. The loss of that city would be a colossal economic
and psychological blow to Ukraine. Given that Russia redeployed sizable numbers
of troops and quantities of weapons from eastern Ukraine to the south even
before Kyiv’s eastern offensive, there is a high probability that Odessa is now
Moscow’s principal target. Already overextended Ukrainian forces in the south
would be very hard-pressed to repel a concerted Russian attack.
Option 2: Although it would be extraordinarily
ambitious, the Russians could contemplate initiating a major “pincer movement,”
sending troops northward from existing strongholds in southern Ukraine and
launching a fresh offensive from Russia into Ukraine’s northeast. The goal
would be to cut-off the currently victorious Ukrainian troops near Kharkiv.
Such a strategy would be reminiscent of the Soviet Union’s offensive in 1942
that trapped an entire, overextended German army in Stalingrad. A similar
success in this case could be a death blow to Ukraine’s military resistance.
However, the logistics to execute such a maneuver over a large territory would
be daunting, and logistics have been a glaring weakness of the Russian military
in Ukraine to this point. That limitation likely makes such a complex operation
the least appealing option to the Kremlin.
Option 3: Putin could order a full national mobilization.
Thus far, Russia has fought the war in Ukraine with limited means. Most likely,
that decision was a reflection of the excessive optimism that Kyiv’s military
would collapse, pro-Russians in Ukraine’s southern and eastern oblasts would
rally to Russia’s cause, and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s
government would quickly sue for peace. None of those things happened. In
addition, the Kremlin underestimated NATO’s determination to pour vast
quantities of quality weaponry into Ukraine.
Putin may decide to correct his initial blunder. The
grinding war has already taken a great toll on Ukraine’s military personnel.
Since Russia’s population is nearly three times Ukraine’s, it is unlikely that
Kyiv could survive a long war of attrition even at the current levels of
Russia’s troop deployments. Full mobilization would give Moscow an
insurmountable advantage.
Option 4: Russia, smarting from its current
humiliation, decides to resolve matters quickly and decisively by using tactical nuclear weapons.
Such a strike with even a few weapons would wipe out large portions of Kyiv’s
military and cause effective resistance to crumble. Breaching the nuclear
threshold would be a monumental, extremely dangerous move, and Putin certainly
understands that point. Nevertheless, if he concludes that the only alternative
is accepting a humiliating, NATO-imposed settlement that would risk his hold on
power, it would be foolish to assume that he would never take the risk.
Indeed, as I have discussed elsewhere, Russia’s
leadership elite regards Ukraine as a vital national security interest.
Nations that confront a threat to vital interests will do almost anything to
repel such a threat. In Russia’s case, resorting to the use of tactical nuclear
weapons to defeat NATO’s proxy in the current war cannot be ruled out. The
United States and its European allies have been dangerously oblivious for years
to the Kremlin’s escalating warnings that Moscow will never allow Ukraine to
become a NATO political and military pawn. That arrogant, obtuse failure to
respect Russia’s core security zone was the primary trigger for Putin’s
invasion of Ukraine.
Using nuclear weapons would trigger a confrontation
between Moscow and Washington rivaling that of the Cuban Missile Crisis. But
NATO’s possible responses to Russia’s use of tactical nukes are decidedly
limited unless the United States wants to casually risk Armageddon.
Celebrations of Ukraine’s recent military successes
are both premature and greatly overdone. Indeed, the cheering could prove to be
entirely misplaced and inappropriate. NATO leaders and the Western news media
need to realize that they may be celebrating the prelude to a prolonged,
extremely bloody war or even an impending nuclear catastrophe.
Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior fellow at the Cato
Institute and a contributing editor at the American Conservative and the National
Interest, is the author of thirteen books and more than 1,100 articles.
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