By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Prepare For A Long War
As
the Russian winter offensive reaches its culmination, Ukraine is poised to
seize the initiative. In the coming weeks, it plans to conduct an offensive
operation, or series of offensives, that may prove decisive in this conflict
phase. This is not Ukraine’s only remaining opportunity to liberate a
substantial amount of territory and inflict a significant defeat on Russian
forces. Still, the upcoming offensive may be when available Western military
equipment, training, and ammunition best intersect with the parties set aside
by Ukraine for this operation. Ukraine is also eager to demonstrate that its
military is not exhausted despite months of brutal fighting and can break
through Russian lines.
Policymakers,
however, have placed an undue emphasis on the upcoming offensive without
providing sufficient consideration of what will come afterward and whether
Ukraine is well positioned for the next phase. Ukraine’s Western partners must
develop a long-term theory of victory for Ukraine since this upcoming offensive
is unlikely to end the conflict, even in the best-case scenario. Indeed, what
follows this operation could be another period of indeterminate fighting and
attrition, but with reduced ammunition deliveries to Ukraine. This is already
a long war and will likely become protracted. History is an
imperfect guide, but it suggests battles that endure more than a year are likely
to go on for at least several more and are exceedingly difficult to end. A
Western theory of success must prevent a situation in which the war drags on
but where Western countries cannot provide Ukraine with a decisive advantage.
A Brutal Winter
After successive
defeats in Kharkiv and Kherson, the Russian military was vulnerable heading
into the winter. But the Ukrainian armed forces also sustained losses and
expended ammunition in those operations, which forced them to focus on their
reconstitution. Despite earlier optimism that Ukraine could press its advantage
into the winter, the Ukrainian military could not sustain its offensive and
achieve further battlefield gains. Mobilization and the successful withdrawal
from the right bank of Kherson helped Russia stabilize its lines,
build a reserve, and develop a more sustainable rotation for frontline units.
The Russian military also began building more sophisticated defenses across the
frontline in Ukraine with minefields, antitank obstacles, and trenches. By
shortening the front and upping the personnel deployed, the Russian military
also increased the force density relative to the terrain it was defending. What
followed was a period of grinding attrition where neither side had a
significant advantage.
Fortunately for
Ukraine, Russia’s political leadership proved impatient, abandoning a defensive
strategy and replacing the more competent General Sergey Surovikin
with Valery Gerasimov, the Russian chief of general staff, as the commander of
its forces in Ukraine. Gerasimov launched an ill-conceived and ill-timed
offensive across the Donbas starting in late January. The Russian military,
still recovering, was in no position to conduct offensive operations given its
force quality, equipment, and ammunition deficits. Moscow had mobilized more
than 300,000 personnel, which it quickly used to replenish the Russian forces,
but it could not restore sufficient offensive potential. Quantity matters, but
a military cannot rebuild its quality in just a few months.
Russia’s winter
offensive depended on a small percentage of its military, primarily naval
infantry, and airborne units. It had taken heavy losses throughout the war and
increasingly relied on mobilized personnel as replacements. At Bakhmut, most of
the fighting was done by Wagner instead of the regular armed forces, which
primarily played a supporting role. The Russian military demonstrated that it
was no longer capable of large-scale combat operations. Instead, it conducted
localized attacks with smaller formations and assault detachments.
The Russian military
attempted to attack along six axes—Avdiivka, Bakhmut,
Bilohorivka, Kreminna-Lyman,
Marinka, and Vuhledar—hoping to strain Ukrainian
armed forces across a broad front. But compared with the battle of the Donbas
in 2022, Russia had a weaker advantage in artillery during these campaigns, and
this deficiency further limited its offensive potential. Russian forces did
regain the initiative through these assaults and fixed Ukrainian troops in
place. Still, despite thousands of casualties, the Russian military gained tiny
territory, and the offensive did not result in a significant breakthrough.
Instead, Russia’s offensive further weakened its military by expending
manpower, material, and ammunition. These losses will give Ukraine its best
opportunity to launch a counteroffensive. Russia’s attempts to seize the Donbas
this year also illustrated that Moscow’s strategy continues to suffer from a
mismatch between political aims and military means.
The Battle For Bakhmut
Yet, in the battle for Bakhmut, Ukraine’s position became
precarious. The Ukrainian armed forces have been partially enveloped since
February, and they no longer enjoy as favorable an attrition ratio as they once
did. Bakhmut is surrounded by high ground, which gave Russian forces an
advantage once they seized the southern and northern flanks in January and
February, respectively. The situation looked dire in early March. Although
Ukraine stabilized the sides by committing additional forces, allowing it to
secure the remaining main supply route into the city, Russian forces have now
captured most of the town. Moscow did not have the details required to encircle
Bakhmut, which could have led to a significant victory, so it focused on the
more symbolic win of taking the city itself.
Compared with the
battle of Vuhledar and other parts of the front
during Russia’s winter offensive, Ukraine’s attrition ratio in Bakhmut is less
favorable. A smaller share of Russia’s casualties are from elite units.
Elements from Russia’s 106th Guards Airborne Division and other Russian
military units are operating along the Bakhmut front, but Wagner is leading the
fight, particularly in the city itself. Most Russian casualties sustained in
Bakhmut are from Wagner, and most of Wagner’s losses have been from minimally
trained convicts. Those losses matter, but losing convicts affects Russia’s
overall war effort much less than losing regular soldiers or mobilized
personnel, especially outside settings like Bakhmut. Wagner convicts represent
a minimal investment and are not individuals taken out of the economy, so their
losses lack political ramifications. Given Wagner’s heavy reliance on convicts,
it is not clear that approach would have proven effective outside an urban
setting like Bakhmut.
During Ukraine’s
previous offensives, the backstop for the Russian military was its airborne and
naval infantry, not Wagner forces. For Russia, it may turn out that the heavy
losses sustained among elite units in Vuhledar, such
as the 40th Naval Infantry Brigade and 155th Naval Infantry Brigade, were more
strategically significant than the relative losses in Bakhmut. The losses in Vuhledar could make it difficult for Russian forces to
defend against Ukraine’s upcoming offensive. But Ukraine may also find that the
troops and ammunition it expended to defend Bakhmut, in relatively unfavorable
terrain, will impose a constraint on operations later this year. Furthermore,
Wagner’s assaults fixed many Ukrainian forces over the winter, giving the
Russian military time to stabilize and entrench their lines.
Bakhmut is significant
primarily for political and symbolic reasons. Strategically, it is a gateway to
Slovyansk and Kramatorsk, but Ukraine continues to hold better defensive
terrain west of the city. Capturing it does little to help Russian forces
further advance, and they may be hard-pressed to defend it afterward. But in
the end, military strategy is political, as it bridges military
operations with political objectives. Ukraine’s leadership is keen to avoid
giving Russia any victory which might bolster Russian morale, and it has chosen
to continue defending Bakhmut.
It is, therefore, too
early to judge the effect of the battle for Bakhmut on this war. The result
will be more precise in hindsight. Ukrainian forces avoided encirclement and
inflicted high costs on the Russian military, even if most losses were among
Wagner units. Long term, the significance of the resources both sides expended
in the battle will likely be the most critical factor. Whether Ukraine could
have pursued a better approach will be a subject for historians to debate.
Grappling With Uncertainty
Ukraine has sought to
build a force capable of conducting an offensive on top of its currently
deployed formations. Kyiv has assembled three corps comprised of mechanized (or
motorized) infantry brigades. These new units include roughly nine maneuver
brigades armed largely with Western-provided equipment and at least three
generated by Ukraine. These brigades will likely consist of newly mobilized
personnel with a core of experienced soldiers. Several assault brigades will
back the units as part of the Ukrainian Ministry of Interior's effort to stand
up an ‘Offensive Guard” force in support. But as the offensive draws near, it
is unclear what percentage of these units will be completed for the operation or
if the supporting brigades will be assembled in time.
Ukraine's challenge
is that, despite an influx of Western equipment, its force is largely mobilized,
uneven in quality, and training on a compressed schedule. And over the past
year, the Ukrainian military has taken significant casualties. Many junior
officers, noncommissioned officers, veteran soldiers, and troops previously
trained by NATO have been lost in the fighting. This is a short time for newly
mobilized soldiers to master new equipment and conduct combined-arms training
as a unit. In general, Ukraine’s advantage has been that as a force, it has
proven more adaptable, much better motivated, and more rewarding of initiative
than the Russian military.
Ukraine has fought
the war with a mixture of mission command at junior levels and sometimes
Soviet-style centralized control at the top. It has strongly emphasized
artillery and attrition over maneuver in warfare while also integrating Western
precision and intelligence for long-range strikes. The Western approach has
been to train Ukrainian forces in combined-arms maneuvers to have them fight
more like a NATO military would, similar to what the West has taught
in past train-and-assist programs. The challenge with this approach is that
NATO militaries are unaccustomed to fighting without air superiority,
especially air superiority established and maintained by American airpower, or
at least with the logistics and enabling capabilities that the United States
typically brings to the fight. As a result, Ukrainian soldiers must tackle
Russia’s prepared defenses without the air support and logistics their Western
instructors have long been accustomed to.
Russia’s defenses are
not impenetrable, but they could be strong enough to attrit Ukrainian forces
over multiple defensive lines while buying time so reinforcements can arrive.
Their defense-in-depth is designed to prevent a tactical breakthrough from
achieving strategic effects- mainly to stop a Ukrainian breakthrough from
generating momentum. The upcoming offensive will therefore test the current
theory of success in Kyiv and across contributing Western capitals: that
Ukrainian forces, trained and equipped with Western systems, can fight more
effectively and break through fortified Russian lines.
The new Ukrainian
formations and the Russian defensive preparations will be largely untested at
the start of the offensive, making the course of the coming battles challenging
to predict. Similarly, it is unclear whether the West has provided sufficient
enabling capabilities for Ukraine’s offensive, such as breaching equipment,
mine-clearing machines, and bridging gear. Despite the commonplace focus on big-ticket
items like tanks or fighter jets, enablers, logistics, and training often have
the most significant effect over time.
Russia’s sizable,
mobilized force proved ineffective at conducting offensive operations over the
winter, but it is easier for poorly trained units to defend than to attack. It
is unclear what effect attrition in elite Russian units and ammunition
expenditure during Russia’s winter offensive will have on Ukraine’s upcoming
offensive. Although the Russian military is preparing for Ukraine’s
counteroffensive, Russia has misspent valuable resources, and
Russian morale may be low—leaving its forces vulnerable. Soft factors
and intangibles, which are difficult to measure, are likely in Ukraine’s favor.
Nonetheless, the situation is less propitious for Ukrainian forces than in
Kharkiv in September. Ukraine’s task is daunting. It must not only succeed but
must also avoid overextension.
The Long Road Ahead
The challenge with
the upcoming offensive is that it appears to be a one-shot affair despite being
saddled with high expectations. Ukraine will likely receive a substantial
injection of artillery ammunition ahead of this operation, but this package
will offer a window of opportunity rather than a sustained advantage. Western efforts
to support Ukraine suffer from short-term thinking, delivering capabilities
just in time or as a surge for the offensive operation, but with little clarity
on what will follow.
Whether successful or
not, Ukraine may witness another period of indeterminate fighting after this
offensive, comparable to what followed its successes in Kharkiv and Kherson.
This is twofold: Western countries made critical investments in production
capacity late into this war, and much of the West’s support appears to be focused
on the short term—then seeing what happens next. The gap between Western
efforts is filled by Russian efforts to stabilize the lines and reconstitute,
along with prolonged periods of attrition. Indeed, Ukraine may be forced to
fight with less artillery or air defense ammunition late this year than it was
expending during the Russian winter offensive.
Yet what has remained
constant is that analysts and policymakers who believe that the next weapon
system sent to Ukraine would prove to be a game-changer have consistently been
disappointed. Conventional wars on this scale require large numbers of
equipment and munitions and scaled-up training programs. Capability matters,
but there are no silver bullets. Ukraine will likely retake territory in its
upcoming offensive and may significantly breach Russia’s lines. But even if
Ukraine attains a military victory or a series of victories, this does not mean
the war would end at that point. It is up to the loser to decide when a war is
over, and this conflict is just as likely to continue as a war across the
Russian-Ukrainian border.
There is little
evidence that Russian President Vladimir Putin will willingly end the
conflict, even if the Russian military faces defeat. He may seek to continue it
as a war of attrition, no matter the prospects for Russian forces on the
battlefield. Putin may assume that this offensive represents the high point of
Western assistance and that, over time, Russia may still exhaust the Ukrainian
military, perhaps in the third or fourth year of the conflict. These
assumptions may be objectively false, but as long as Moscow believes that the
next offensive is a one-off affair, it may reason that time is still on
Russia’s side. Similarly, if Ukraine is prosperous, neither its society nor political
leadership will be keen to settle for anything other than total victory. In
short, it is unlikely that the coming offensive will create good negotiation
prospects.
That said, Russia
does not seem well positioned for a forever war. Russia’s ability to repair and
restore equipment from storage appears so constrained that the country
increasingly relies on Soviet gear from the 1950s and 1960s to fill out
mobilized regiments. As Ukraine acquires better Western equipment, the Russian
military has increasingly come to resemble an early Cold War–period
museum. There are also growing signs of strain on the Russian economy, where
energy sale revenues are constrained by sanctions and Europe’s pivot away from
Russian gas. Even if Moscow can keep mobilizing manpower and bringing old
military equipment onto the battlefield, Russia will face growing economic
pressures and shortages of skilled labor.
Russian forces in
Ukraine still face a structural manpower problem, and despite a national
recruitment campaign, Moscow will likely need to mobilize again to sustain the
war. It is desperate to avoid doing so. If the West can support Ukraine’s war
effort, Russia may find its disadvantage growing despite its resilience and
mobilization reserves. In recent months, European countries have begun
investing in artillery production and issuing procurement contracts. However,
some of these decisions are coming more than a year into the war.
Some may hope that a
successful offensive may soon after that lead to a negotiated armistice, but
this must be balanced against the prospect that a cease-fire will yield a
rearmament period, after which Moscow will likely seek to renew the war.
Whether an armistice favors Russia or Ukraine is debatable. Russia will
undoubtedly seek to rearm, but the extent of continuing Western military
assistance to Ukraine is uncertain. Consequently, the way this war ends could
lead to a follow-on war. After all, the current conflict continues with the
original 2014 Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Western countries have
competing visions for how the war might end. A defeat for Moscow is different
than a victory for Kyiv. One does not have to travel widely in Europe to
discover that not everyone defines a Ukrainian win similarly. Some see the
present situation as a strategic defeat for Moscow; this outcome remains
indeterminate for others. What follows the coming offensive will reveal whether
Western countries are arming Ukraine to help Kyiv fully restore territorial
control or just to put it in a better position for negotiations.
Although the coming
Ukrainian offensive will do much to set expectations for the future trajectory
of this war, the real challenge is thinking through what comes after. The
offensive has consumed planning, but a sober-minded approach would recognize
that supporting Ukraine will be a long-term effort. It is time for the West to
plan more actively for the future beyond the coming offensive. History shows
that wars are brutal to end and often go on well beyond the decisive phases of
fighting, including as negotiations continue. For Ukraine and its Western
backers, a working theory of victory must be premised on endurance, addressing
Ukraine’s long-term force quality, capability, and sustainment needs. The
United States and Europe must make the necessary investments to support the war
effort well beyond 2023, develop plans for successive operations —and avoid
pinning their hopes on offensive action.
For updates click hompage here