"KYIV, Ukraine — On the 30th
anniversary of the founding of Ukraine’s armed forces, President Volodymyr
Zelensky donned a helmet and flak jacket to tour the trenches this week and
announced with great fanfare the delivery of new tanks, armored vehicles and ships
to frontline units engaged in fighting Russian forces and Kremlin-backed
separatists.
The weapons systems may help to
maintain parity in the slow-moving war of attrition that has prevailed for
years. But neither they nor anything else the Ukrainian military can now muster
would be sufficient to repel a full-on Russian assault that Ukrainian and
Western officials say Moscow might be preparing.
With nearly 100,000 troops now
massed across Ukraine’s eastern, northern and southern borders and more on the
way, even the Ukrainian officials responsible for their country’s defense
acknowledge that without a significant influx of resources, their forces do not
stand much of a chance.
“Unfortunately, Ukraine needs to be
objective at this stage,” said Gen. Kyrylo O. Budanov, the head of Ukraine’s
military intelligence service. “There are not sufficient military resources for
repelling a full-scale attack by Russia if it begins without the support of
Western forces.”
General Budanov outlined his
nightmare vision of a Russian invasion that would begin with airstrikes and
rocket attacks aimed initially at ammunition depots and trench-bound troops.
Very quickly, he said, the Ukrainian military would be incapacitated, its
leadership unable to coordinate a defense and supply the front. After that, he
said, responsibility would fall to frontline commanders to carry on the fight
alone.
“They will hold up as long as there
are bullets,” General Budanov said. “They’ll be able to use what they have in
their hands, but believe me without delivery of reserves, there’s not an army
in the world that can hold out.”
While Russia could be prepared
militarily to launch an invasion of Ukraine as early as January or February,
Ukraine and Western intelligence services say there is no indication that
Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, has made up his mind whether to do so.
In a video call with President Biden on Tuesday, Mr. Putin dismissed concerns
about the troop buildup on Ukraine’s border, shifting blame to the United
States and NATO, which he accused of threatening Russia’s security by
supporting Ukraine’s military with arms and training.
“The Russian troops are on their own
territory,” an adviser to Mr. Putin, Yuri V. Ushakov, said in a briefing with
reporters after the presidents had spoken. “They don’t threaten anyone.”
Still, the amassing of troops and
heavy weaponry on the border has forced Ukrainian officials to face some hard
truths in recent weeks. The U.S. intelligence community has assessed that
Russia has devised plans for an offensive involving 175,000 troops.
Ukraine has only slightly more
enlisted soldiers and officers in its entire military, according to the
Ministry of Defense. It is outgunned on land, at sea and in the air, with only
about 200 aircraft in its Air Force, including transport vehicles, fewer than
the number of fighter planes that Russia has deployed already to the Ukrainian
border.
Russia’s forces include battle-ready
submarines and frigates in the Black Sea armed with cruise missiles, and
land-based units equipped with Iskander-M ballistic missiles, while Ukraine
lacks serious missile defense systems. The Russian missiles could wipe out a
significant part of the Ukrainian military in less than an hour, said Robert
Lee, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran and Ph.D. candidate at King’s College in
London, who is a Russian military expert.
“If Russia really wants to unleash
its conventional capabilities, they could inflict massive damage in a very
short period of time,” Mr. Lee said. “They can devastate the Ukrainian military
in the east really quickly, within the first 30-40 minutes.”
Ukraine’s military is not the
pushover it once was. In 2014, elite Russia troops were able to seize the
entire Crimean Peninsula in southern Ukraine without firing a shot. When Russian-backed
separatists then took over part of eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region, Ukraine had
to rely on volunteer brigades of people who took up arms, with little or no
military training, to help beat back the insurgency.
But the Ukrainian military clawed
its way back, fighting the separatists to a stalemate and putting a stop to the
most serious hostilities. It did so with help from Western allies. The United
States alone has provided $2.5 billion in military assistance that has included
high-tech surveillance and communications equipment and drones. In November,
the United States delivered about 88 tons of ammunition, part of a $60 million
military aid package pledged by the Biden administration.
On Wednesday, President Biden ruled
out deploying U.S. forces to Ukraine to deter Russia. But there are more than
150 U.S. military advisers in Ukraine, a combination of U.S. Special Forces and
National Guard, currently the Florida National Guard’s 53rd Infantry Brigade
Combat Team, according to two U.S. Defense Department officials, who spoke on
condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive troop deployments. About a dozen
other NATO countries also have military advisers in Ukraine now, the officials
said.
Under the Trump administration, the
Ukrainians, for the first time, were given anti-tank Javelin missiles.
Ukrainian forces have so far refrained from firing Javelins on the battlefield,
partly from a desire to avoid antagonizing the Kremlin.
The Biden administration has
continued to supply them, delivering a new cache of missiles in October. John
F. Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, said Wednesday that there were no conditions or
restrictions placed on the Javelins, except that the Ukrainian forces use them
“responsibly” and “in self-defense.”
In an interview with Radio Liberty
this month, Gen. Oleksandr Pavlyuk, the commander of the Joint Operation Forces
fighting the separatists, said the Javelins had already been deployed to
military units in eastern Ukraine. A senior Ukrainian military official,
speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military issues,
confirmed that Javelin missiles had been deployed to frontline military units a
month ago, but had not yet been fired in battle.
“The Javelins are there, and if our
enemies employ tanks they will be used,” the official said.
The Biden administration has
remained vague about how else it might come to Ukraine’s defense in case of
invasion.
In his video call with Mr. Putin on
Tuesday, President Biden looked his counterpart in the eye and warned the
United States would go beyond the economic punishments imposed on Russia after
the 2014 seizure of Crimea should Mr. Putin decide to order military action,
according to an account by Jake Sullivan, the president’s national security
adviser. What those penalties might be were left unclear, though few expect the
United States to commit significant military assistance beyond what has already
been provided.
The lack of firm commitments from
Ukraine’s Western backers is a source of consternation for Ukrainian officials.
“They need to decide, either we’re
allies as they declare — and in that case allies help one another — or they
need to say that this is not exactly the case,” said General Budanov, the
military intelligence chief. “If the civilized world wants to avoid catastrophe
— and this will be a catastrophe for everyone — we need military technical
support now, not tomorrow, not the day after tomorrow, not in year. Now.”
Those who understand that such a
level of support is unlikely have begun to speak darkly of popular armed
resistance against any Russian occupation. In an interview, General Pavlyuk
noted that Ukraine had up to half a million people with military experience. If
the West does not come to Ukraine’s aid, he said, “we’ll start a partisan war.”
“Eight years have passed and there
are very many people with military experience who are prepared with weapons in
their hands to fight,” he said.
One senior Ukrainian military
official who spoke on condition of anonymity said that if all else failed, the
military would simply open its weapons depots and allow the Ukrainian people to
take whatever they need to defend themselves and their families.”
Where is Saldžiūnas? Where is that fat person, alleged historian, Anušauskas, depicting himself as the Lithuanian warlord? Toys, for which we spend a billion euros a year on war, are proving worthless in our environment. Maybe we should come up with different games instead of this desperate one?
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