[Unlocked] US admits to pushing Ukraine into a fight it can't win
A US "windfall" in Ukraine comes at an
unfathomable cost.
28 JUL 2023
https://mate.substack.com/p/unlocked-us-admits-to-pushing-ukraine
Nearly one
month into Russia’s invasion, the New York Times quietly abandoned any pretense
that the US aim was to defend Ukraine and bring the war to a quick end. The
White House, the Times
reported, “seeks to help Ukraine lock Russia in a quagmire without inciting
a broader conflict with a nuclear-armed adversary or cutting off potential
paths to de-escalation.”
Eighteen
months later, the desired quagmire has been achieved. This is due not only to a
massive influx of NATO weaponry, but a Western
blockade of every tangible path to de-escalation, most notably the
April 2022 Ukraine-Russia peace deal that Boris Johnson
nixed.
With a
Russian quagmire the overriding goal, the US and its partners have adopted an
attendant disregard for the tens of thousands of Ukrainian lives sacrificed for
the task.
In the war’s
early stages, only the most outwardly enthusiastic proxy warriors, such as Sen.
Lindsey Graham, could candidly admit that US support ensured that Ukraine would
“fight to
the last person.” With Ukraine now struggling to mount a widely hyped
counteroffensive, the prevailing indifference to its human toll is more widely
acknowledged.
As the Wall
Street Journal newly reports:
“When
Ukraine launched its big counteroffensive this spring, Western military
officials knew Kyiv didn’t have all the training or weapons—from shells to
warplanes—that it needed to dislodge Russian forces. But they hoped Ukrainian
courage and resourcefulness would carry the day. They haven’t.”
It is
unclear how Western officials could have “hoped” that Ukrainian
“resourcefulness” would make up for the training and weapons that they did not
provide. A war zone, after all, is not an episode of MacGyver or
the A-Team, and
Ukraine’s adversary happens to be one of the world’s most powerful militaries.
The operative Western definition of “Ukrainian courage”, however, is not hard
to discern: a willingness to use Ukrainian soldiers as cannon fodder.
“Senior U.S.
officials,” the New
York Times reports, have “privately expressed frustration that some
Ukrainian commanders... fearing increased casualties among their ranks” have
recently “reverted to old habits — decades of Soviet-style training in artillery
barrages — rather than sticking with the Western tactics and pressing harder to
breach the Russian defenses.”
The Times
did not ask these same US officials whether it is appropriate to express
“frustration” at the decision of another military – the one we claim to support
– to avoid “increased casualties” among its ranks. But Andriy Zagorodnyuk, a
former Ukrainian defense minister, asked an equally salient question of his US
counterparts: “Why don’t they come and do it themselves?”
Frustrated
US officials are well aware of Ukraine’s toll. According to
the New York Times, Western states now estimate that Ukraine lost about 20
percent of its weaponry in the first weeks of its counteroffensive, a
“startling rate of losses... as Ukrainian soldiers struggle against Russia’s
formidable defenses.” Oddly, the Times omits any mention of losses in Ukrainian
lives – a tacit admission, perhaps, that the human casualties are even more
startling.
As is also
increasingly admitted, all of this was foreseen. “U.S. Defense Department
analysts knew early this year that Ukraine’s front-line troops would struggle
against Russian air attacks,” the Wall
Street Journal notes. Or as the Washington
Post puts it: “Privately, U.S. military officials concede that their
expectation from early this year, described in leaked intelligence documents,
that Ukraine is likely to make only modest gains in its counteroffensive has
not changed, despite public pronouncements seeking to downplay fallout from the
disclosure.”
In other
words, US “public pronouncements” have entailed lying to the public to
“downplay fallout” of fueling a knowingly catastrophic and futile war. The
participants in this deception include Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin,
who declared
in March that the Ukrainian military had “a very good chance for
success,” despite privately
being told the opposite.
One reason
for Ukraine’s current woes, as President Biden recently
admitted to CNN, is that “the Ukrainians are running out of ammunition,”
and “we're low on it” as well. Another major factor, a classified Pentagon
assessment noted in February, was Ukraine’s “inability to prevent Russian air
superiority.” Or as a
senior European official now warns, “everyone worries that the
Ukrainians will run out of ammunition and air defenses.”
“America would
never attempt to defeat a prepared defense without air superiority, but they
[Ukrainians] don’t have air superiority,” John Nagl, a retired U.S. Army
lieutenant colonel and professor at the U.S. Army War College, observes.
“It’s impossible to overstate how important air superiority is for fighting a
ground fight at a reasonable cost in casualties.”
According to
the Pentagon, NATO’s latest influx of heavy weaponry will not change the tide.
Speaking at a Washington
security conference this month, John Kirchhofer, chief of staff at the
US Defense Intelligence Agency, claimed that the Ukraine war is at a
“stalemate” and that “none of these” newly provided weapons – including Storm
Shadow missiles and cluster bombs -- “are the holy grail that Ukraine is
looking for.”
Accordingly,
the Wall
Street Journal notes, the unlikelihood of “any large-scale breakthrough by
the Ukrainians... raises the unsettling prospect for Washington and its allies
of a longer war—one that would require a huge new infusion of
sophisticated armaments and more training to give Kyiv a chance at victory.”
For Washington,
perhaps that prospect is not unsettling. According to veteran Washington Post
columnist David Ignatius, the Ukraine war has already yielded a “triumphal
summer” for the NATO alliance.
“The West’s
most reckless antagonist has been rocked,” Ignatius
writes. “NATO has grown much stronger with the additions of Sweden and
Finland. Germany has weaned itself from dependence on Russian energy and, in
many ways, rediscovered its sense of values.”
Accordingly,
“for the United States and its NATO allies, these 18 months of war have been a
strategic windfall, at relatively low cost (other than for the Ukrainians).”
Indeed, it
is quite easy to reap a “windfall” from 18 months of war when the US is not
itself fighting it. It has instead sacrificed future generations of an entire
nation, whose worth is so devalued that their unfolding catastrophe is openly
reduced to an afterthought.
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