By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
On November 1,
Ukraine’s top general, Valery Zaluzhny, changed the
debate about his country’s war with Russia with a statement. “Just like in the
first World War,” he said in an interview with The Economist, the
Ukrainian and Russian militaries “have reached the level of technology that
puts us into a stalemate.” Unless a massive leap in military technology gives
one side a decisive advantage, “there will most likely be no deep and beautiful
breakthrough.” These words prompted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
to issue a rebuttal. The war “is not a stalemate, I emphasize this,”
Zelensky argued. A deputy head of the office of the president noted that the
comments stirred “panic” among Ukraine’s Western allies.
Such fear is
understandable at a moment when the U.S. Congress, by far Ukraine’s largest
source of aid, is deciding whether to sustain its military support. Before
Ukraine launched its counteroffensive in June 2023, Washington evinced optimism
that the Ukrainian military could swiftly achieve major military successes
and secure Kyiv a stronger negotiating position to force concessions from
Moscow. This has not happened. Not much territory has changed hands, and high
hopes have yielded to a dispiriting narrative of impasse. A divided Congress
likely has no “mountain of steel,” as U.S. officials have called the
materiel they gave to Ukraine in early 2023, to provide for a renewed
counteroffensive in 2024, and European countries are falling short in the
assistance they have promised. In purely military terms, Ukraine’s path to
victory is unclear.
But Ukraine and its
allies must face, not fear, the war’s current reality. They should accept and
prepare for a multiyear war and for the long-term containment of Russia instead
of hoping for either a quick Ukrainian triumph or, absent that, an
imminent negotiated solution. An overwhelming victory is not guaranteed by
either Ukrainian valor or Russian folly. And any hope that negotiations right
now could benefit Ukraine is naive: Russia is not becoming more malleable or
more amenable to compromise. In fact, the Kremlin’s aspirations to reshape the
whole international order through violent conflict may be more ambitious now
than they were a year ago.
Russia continues
marshaling resources for its devastating war. And Russians’ support for Putin’s
invasion has not collapsed: not when Ukraine’s Western allies imposed sanctions
on the Russian economy, not when some Russians protested mobilization, and not
when the mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin staged his curious rebellion in June
2023.
But the war is not
lost for Ukraine. Far from it. Enamored of Kyiv’s early successes and high
morale, Ukraine’s supporters became accustomed to stunning Ukrainian triumphs.
Yet this David-versus-Goliath framing of the war now generates too much
pessimism when Ukrainian forces struggle or come to a deadlock with Russian
troops. Even a stalemate, as frustrating as it seems, represents a huge
accomplishment. Before February 2022, the idea that Ukraine could achieve
military parity with Russia would have seemed fanciful. With the West’s help,
however, Ukraine has deterred its much more powerful
neighbor. Over a year into the war, Russia has been unable to take Kyiv or any
major Ukrainian city besides Mariupol. Despite its vast economic and
military resources, Russia has not been truly on the offensive since the early
summer of 2022.
To make progress now,
Western and Ukrainian leaders need to rally around achievable strategic goals.
The most pressing is the containment of Russian forces—not only to protect all
that Ukraine has already accomplished but also to render Russia’s presence on
Ukrainian territory as insecure as possible. Russian positions must be
continuously pressured in a forward-leaning approach. This will not be doable
without U.S. military support, justified not by the claim that victory is
around the corner but by the argument that containing Russia is a core European
and U.S. interest. Containment is a policy that is already succeeding in
Ukraine. Failure would be giving up on it.
Swerving Fortunes
During the war’s
first six months, Ukraine was chronically underestimated. Then, in September
and October 2022, Ukrainian forces punched through Russian lines around Kharkiv
and expelled Russian forces from Kherson. Western allies came to see these
battlefield triumphs as setting a precedent. Ahead of last June’s
counteroffensive, which was planned over the course of months, many in the West
believed that the Ukrainian military’s innovativeness, determination, talent
for strategy, and flexible command structures would confer the same advantages
they did in 2022. By the summer of 2023, the war had already become grueling
and devastating, and the hope was that Ukraine could fairly quickly change the
momentum for good.
The West’s optimism
about the counteroffensive also stemmed from the scale and quality of its
military assistance to Ukraine. Over the course of the spring of 2023, the
United States and European countries sent Kyiv some of their best weaponry:
advanced tanks, rockets, and missiles, although their pace was
initially slow, and they withheld certain systems such as F-16
fighter jets and long-range ATACMS missiles. There is a possibility that
Western military support and Ukraine’s remarkable ability to transform it into
battlefield success could carry Ukraine to victory and restore its pre-2014
borders.
The Russian military,
meanwhile, appeared to suffer from poor coordination, poor motivation, and a
general sense of purposelessness. With the counteroffensive, Kyiv planned to
cut through Russia’s land bridge to Crimea and destroy Russian morale. Just two
weeks after the counteroffensive began with assaults in the Donetsk and
Zaporizhzhia oblasts and drone strikes inside Russia, Moscow’s accelerating
misfortunes culminated in Prigozhin’s mutiny. For weeks, Putin’s grip on power
seemed more fragile than it had ever been.
Just a few months
later, however, the situation looks less propitious for Ukraine. Putin has
stabilized his government and his military command structure. As of late 2023,
constraints on resources and manpower are more evident on the Ukrainian side
than on the Russian one. The long preparation time required to ready the
counteroffensive allowed Russia to build defenses, particularly mine belts,
which nullified many of Ukraine’s advantages in sophisticated weaponry. To
regain momentum, Ukraine has asked the West for ammunition, electronic warfare
and mine-breaching technology, longer-range missiles, and more planes. But
as Ukraine’s needs grew, the United States fractured politically. A
small band of Republican legislators are now using their leverage over moderate
Republicans to try to halt funding for Ukraine. Mike Johnson, the new Speaker
of the House, has voted repeatedly against Ukraine support packages but
recently spoke more favorably about backing Kyiv. It is impossible to know,
however, if he has the intent or the ability to ensure a useful level
of assistance.
Ukraine’s stocks of
ammunition and weaponry are already running short. A diminution of or end to
U.S. military support would have an immediate effect on Ukraine’s battlefield
performance, especially its air defenses. Those air defenses rely on interceptors,
a component the United States can provide. If the U.S. government becomes less
willing to fund Ukraine’s military efforts, no other country can fill the
vacuum. European countries lack the ammunition stockpiles and the military
production capacity. In March 2023, the EU pledged to send a million rounds of
ammunition to Ukraine by March 2024, but they are at risk of falling short. As
of late November 2023, less than a third of the promised supplies had been
delivered.
Even if the United
States and Europe fulfill all their commitments to help Kyiv militarily, the
war may not swing decisively in Ukraine’s favor. The United States has approved
the delivery of coveted F-16s in 2024, but they may be less helpful when they eventually
arrive. According to Zaluzhny, Russia has improved
its air defenses and will maintain “superiority in weapons, equipment,
missiles, and ammunition for a considerable time.” As the war enters its second
winter, Russia has been stockpiling missiles to attack the Ukrainian electrical
grid and thus undermine Ukraine’s morale and economy.
No Interviews With A Vampire
Extensive media
coverage drove political support for Ukraine’s war effort in the United States
and elsewhere. That coverage has faded from newspapers’ front pages as another
war rages between Hamas and Israel. The worry that the Israel-Hamas war would
widen now seems less probable, and a more limited war would save the U.S.
government from having to make a stark choice between helping Ukraine and
intervening in a hot war in the Middle East. But Russia has already benefited
considerably from the chaos unleashed on October 7.
Russian diplomats and
media platforms fuel the accusation that Washington applies principles of
international conduct unevenly and has a double standard about civilian
casualties when it comes to Ukraine and Gaza. This accusation is now echoing
across many countries in the global South. Moscow would be delighted if
skepticism about Western policy in the Middle East turned into skepticism about
Western policy in Ukraine.
Despite the stalemate
on the battlefield, negotiations are not the right way out of the current
impasse. The Kremlin would happily negotiate Ukraine’s near-unconditional
surrender. But given that Ukraine has not advanced on the battlefield for over
a year, negotiations held now risk, at best, recapitulating the diplomacy
behind the ineffective Minsk agreements, which ended the Donbas war of
2014–2015 without constraining Russia’s will to control Ukraine. The agreements
left Russia too free to build up military assets on Ukrainian territory, paving
the way for a much more aggressive invasion eight years later.
Putin has no obvious
reasons to make good-faith concessions to Zelensky. Russia’s economy has, thus
far, weathered the war. In fact, the Kremlin has been increasing military
spending and digging in for a long haul. Russia retains the option of ordering
additional mobilizations. Prone to hubris, Putin likely envisions his erstwhile
“special military operation” as a years-long war in which Russia will have the
fortitude to prevail. As long as he retains that attitude, then negotiation
offers no escape from the labyrinth of this terrible war.
Contain And Combine
Ukraine and the West are
in a difficult strategic predicament. However, not everything is gloomy, and
both Kyiv and the West should guard against defeatism. Victories in war can
come unexpectedly, and going forward, the countries supporting Ukraine will
have to strike a balance between self-confidence and sobriety. Sobriety
requires honesty: neither a battlefield victory for Ukraine nor negotiations in
which Kyiv starts from a strong position are near at hand. Self-confidence
requires patience and a steady pursuit of containment, never letting up on
pressure applied to the Russian presence in Ukraine.
Militarily, the West
should conceive of the war not just as stopping Russian territorial advances
and defending Ukrainian citizens but as keeping Russia off balance. Ukraine’s
improved ability to strike at Russian naval assets offers a pivotal opening. Long
a prized trophy for Putin, Crimea is no longer an attractive place for Russians
to live or vacation. Ukraine has put it within range of missile strikes, and
Russia must think twice before anchoring ships or submarines there or making
Crimea a logistics hub. By degrading the Russian navy, Ukraine has already
restored some blockaded shipping lanes in the Black Sea.
The more Ukraine can
target Russian naval assets and put Crimea at risk, the more it can make the
war seem purposeless to the Kremlin and the Russian population. However,
containment requires Western policymakers and the public to accept the need for
a long and demanding war in Ukraine. Implying that victory might be just around
the corner will only create the dangerous impression that Ukraine is
underperforming and that for some inexplicable reason, it cannot triumph in an
easily winnable war.
During the U.S.
presidential campaign season, the accusation that U.S. support for Ukraine is
just another one of Washington’s “forever wars” could sting, precisely because
it would resonate with familiar examples going back to the Vietnam War—which
ended for the United States after Congress decided to stop funding it. The
crucial difference, of course, is that the United States had troops on the
ground in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq, and all those wars were vastly more
expensive than the war in Ukraine. In Kyiv, the United States has a more
receptive, more independent, and more democratic partner than it ever did in
Saigon, Kabul, or Baghdad.
Victory will not be
defined only on the battlefield. Strategically, Western countries should ramp
up their efforts to integrate Ukraine into their institutions. The conflict
between Ukraine and Russia began in 2013, when Ukraine’s government yielded to
Russian pressure to withdraw from a trade agreement with the EU, prompting the
Maidan revolution, which swept a new, more pro-Western government to power in
Kyiv. Since then, Ukraine has received EU candidate status, drawing closer to
Europe through legal and political agreements and through the bonds of
sentiment. This is already a victory for Europe and Ukraine. Policymakers must
deepen Ukraine’s ties to the West by connecting it to Europe, even if full EU
and NATO membership likely cannot occur until the war ends.
A New Narrative
Russia’s long-term
containment can only redound to Ukraine’s benefit, though it may
seem a less grandiose goal than a resounding battlefield victory.
Ukraine’s leaders are acutely aware of domestic tensions in Western countries
and of the military challenges Kyiv faces. To encourage continued
Western support, Kyiv should base its case for Western investment in Ukraine on
the containment of Russia, emphasizing that ultimately prevailing over Russia
is as much in the West’s interest as it is in Ukraine’s.
The Russian military
is bogged down in Ukraine, and as a result, Moscow’s regional influence in
Central Asia and the South Caucasus has diminished. (Had Russia taken Kyiv, the
opposite would now be the case.) But at present, Russia is only imperfectly, and
perhaps temporarily, contained in Ukraine and beyond. For years to come,
containment will have to be supported with more European and sustained U.S.
military aid; the West must also maintain its sanctions on Russia and better
enforce their implementation. Aid to Ukraine is not philanthropy. For Europe,
the success or failure of containing Russia will shape the whole continent’s
security. For the United States, the success or failure of containing Russia in
Europe will define the future of the international order it leads.
Containing Russia
should be conceptualized—and celebrated—as a steady continuum of action that
started before February 2022 and came into its own with the Ukrainian defense
of Kyiv and battlefield advances in the fall of 2022. Containment, by
definition, can deliver only a partial victory, and for this reason, ups and
downs in public sentiment in countries allied with Ukraine are to be expected.
These ups and downs make it all the more worthwhile for Western leaders, who
are sensitive to surges of optimism and disappointment, to adopt
containment as their unchanging compass. Doing so will help both
Ukraine’s war efforts and the morale in Ukraine’s allies. Sticking to a
consistent, realistic strategy amid the ebbs and flows of sentiment in a major
war is its own source of self-confidence.
IDF chief of staff:
military 'ready to continue fighting' and using truce to 'strengthen readiness'
Israel’s chief of
staff Herzi Halevi has said the Israeli military is
using the truce to “strengthen readiness” and “preparing to continue fighting
to dismantle Hamas”.
In a press statement
in northern Israel, Halevi said:
Today,
the IDF is ready to continue fighting. We are using the days of truce as part
of the agreement for learning, strengthening readiness, and approving the
operational plans for the duration.
We are
preparing to continue fighting to dismantle Hamas. It will take time, these are
complex goals, but they are more than justified.
The
return of the hostages is a ray of light for all of us. It is also another
testimony to the results of significant military pressure and high-quality
ground manoeuvre. We created the conditions for the
return of our citizens home. We will continue to do so.
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