Putin’s ‘Winter War’ on Ukraine
by Patrick J. Buchanan Posted on November 22, 2022
Winter has often proven an indispensable ally of
Mother Russia.
The impending winter of 1812-13 forced Napoleon's
withdrawal from Moscow, a retreat from which his Grande Armee never recovered.
The winter of 1941-42 sealed the ultimate fate of the
invading armies of Adolf Hitler's Third Reich.
Vladimir Putin's new strategy in the war he launched
on Ukraine in February is to conscript the coming winter of 2022-23 as an ally
of his failing army.
For weeks, there have been reports of Russian air,
missile and drone strikes on power plants in every major Ukrainian city.
The false report that a Russian-fired rocket had
landed in Poland, killing two civilians, came on a day when 100 Russian bombs,
rockets, missiles and drones hit "infrastructure" targets across
Ukraine.
It was the heaviest Russian barrage to date in the
nine-month war.
Putin's goal: As the Ukrainian army battles the
Russian army in the Donbas and Kherson, the power grid upon which the Ukrainian
nation and people depend is to be systematically attacked, shut down,
destroyed.
Without electric power, Ukrainian homes, hospitals, offices or schools will have no light or heat. Without electricity, food
cannot be preserved, stoves do not work, water cannot be pumped.
Without power, light and heat, Putin's expectation is
that the Ukrainian people, who have patriotically supported their army, will,
in the tens of thousands this winter, be at risk of freezing to death in the
dark.
Winter, from mid-December to mid-March, is the coldest
and darkest of the seasons, and it begins in four weeks.
On Friday, CNN reported that, after the latest wave of
Russian strikes, 10 million Ukrainians, a fourth of the nation, were without
power.
"Russia is turning winter into a weapon, even as
its soldiers flail on the battlefield," wrote The New York Times on
Sunday. "In a relentless and intensifying barrage of missiles fired from
ships at sea, batteries on land and planes in the sky, Moscow is destroying
Ukraine's critical infrastructure, depriving millions of heat, light and clean
water."
Ukraine's state energy company adds: "Due to a
dramatic drop in temperature, electricity consumption is increasing daily in those
regions of Ukraine where power supply has already been restored after massive
missile strikes on November 15 on the energy infrastructure."
The U.S. stance in this war is that the fighting stops
and peace talks begin only when Kyiv says the fighting stops and the
negotiations begin.
But Americans, whose support for Ukraine has been
indispensable in this war, also need to have a voice in when the war ends.
For us, the greatest stake in this Russia-Ukraine war
is not who ends up in control of Luhansk, Donetsk or Kherson, but that we not
be drawn into a military conflict that would put us on the escalator to a war
with Russia, a world war and perhaps a nuclear war.
Nothing in Eastern or Central Europe is worth a major
U.S. war with Russia that could go nuclear and cost millions of American lives.
The Donbas and Crimea may be of great importance to
Kyiv and Moscow, but nothing in these lands would justify a U.S. war with a
nuclear-armed Russia, the kind of war we managed to avoid through the Cold War
from 1949-1989.
The recent incident of the S-300 surface-to-air
missile misfired by Ukrainian forces, which landed several kilometers inside
Poland, killing two Polish citizens, is a case in point.
Hawkish cries for NATO retaliation against Russia,
under Article 5 of the NATO treaty, revealed that America's War Party is still
very much with us and eager for the next confrontation with Putin's Russia.
In the final days of this lame-duck Congress, before
control of the House passes to Republicans in January, Democrats are expected
to approve Joe Biden's request for another $38 billion for the Kyiv regime, its
army, and its war. Passage of this legislation would virtually guarantee that
the U.S. continues to finance this war and extend the fighting until spring.
Why would we do this?
The U.S. ought not dictate to Kyiv when it should move
to the negotiating track to end this war. But we Americans do have, given our
indispensable contributions to the Ukrainian war effort, the right to tell Kyiv
when we believe that the risks of further fighting exceed any potential gain
for us; and, if Kyiv is determined to fight on, to give notice that Ukraine
will be doing so without any more U.S. munitions.
Great powers should never cede to lesser powers,
unconnected to their vital interests, the capacity to drag them into unwanted
wars.
The Polish missile incident, and the noisy clamor that
arose for retaliation against Russia for hitting a NATO country, exposed the
risks inherent in our many treaty commitments, where we are obliged to go to
war for scores of nations, most of which are not remotely related to the
security or vital interests of the United States.
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