By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Ukrainian
military has conceded that Russian forces have been able to make small gains
near the Donetsk towns of Soledar and Vershyna in eastern Ukraine.
In the arena of the Russian-Ukrainian war,
as in most wars, the main hall does not define the war as a whole. This war did
not start with the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It has been underway for years as low-level pressure. We also
explained why it started intensifying in 2020.
Russia’s primary goal is to create geographic buffers protecting its
core from attack, particularly along historical lines of invasion. It is not
always necessary to achieve political ends – and all wars have political lots
through the direct use of force. Political ends can also be achieved
economically through covert action or threats. A fundamental principle of war
is to attack an enemy on the flanks. The main force is usually concentrated on
the center of the lines. The rear is difficult to reach. But the enemy’s flanks
are likely vulnerable points where an attack, if successful, can break the
opposing force.
The flanks are not only tactically significant. They can be
strategically critical, protecting the nation by eliminating a line of attack;
for the attacker, they create a line of attack, forcing the dispersal of
defending forces and creating openings. For Russia, the first flanking attack
occurred following a disputed election and protests in mid-2020 in Belarus,
along the northern border of Ukraine, with its westward border blocking the
North European Plain. It, therefore, meant that any attack from Poland, for
example, would be blocked from Russia by force in Belarus, diverting the attack
across Ukraine. It should be noted that a prudent strategist deploys forces
based not on an appreciation of enemy intentions at the moment but possible
actions. And for Russia, an attack by or from Poland was seen as possible, and
closing that line of attack was imperative. The solution was a soft intervention
to help quell anti-government protests. The Russians cemented President
Alexander Lukashenko in place and gained the opportunity to attack Ukraine’s
northern flank.
The second area where the Russians sought to protect their flanks was
in the South Caucasus. The South Caucasus was a line of attack used by Turkey
through the centuries. Russia locked the area down by securing a settlement
between Armenia and Azerbaijan that resulted in Russian peacekeepers deployed
to the region, securing it from immediate threats.
The United States is now countering Russia’s southern flank defense.
The Russian move was based on ending the Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict and
becoming the arbiter between them. With Russia preoccupied with Ukraine, this
week, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited both Armenia and
Azerbaijan, offering to mediate existing problems between them and discussing
energy in Azerbaijan. Georgia is already hostile toward Russia and relatively
close to the United States. The U.S. seeks to create a solid, pro-American bloc
in the South Caucasus and force the Russians to be concerned about the North
Caucasus and possibly divert forces there. Since this was a pathway of invasion
at one time, and since the United States has the potential to act on it, Russia
cannot ignore its southern flank.
At the same time, Russia is trying to build a flank to Ukraine’s
southwest in Moldova. Moldova is an independent, Romanian-speaking country. Its
politics are complex and unpredictable. Russia has sought to create a
pro-Russian Moldova for quite a while, but in general, it has failed to shift
Moldova’s alignment. Now, the Russians are pressing harder, seeing a possible
flanking maneuver in which they could threaten Ukraine from the south in an
area where conquest would mean the cutting of Ukrainian supply lines. The trick
is to elect a pro-Russian government, perhaps offering Moldova a piece of
Ukraine that would reduce Moldova’s vulnerability and dependence on Romania as
an incentive. This would create a threat to Ukraine that would be difficult to
tolerate. Romania, a U.S. ally, has tried to manage Moldova since the fall of
the Soviet Union in an environment in which no significant war was underway.
Russia has an overriding reason to try to prevail, and the U.S. has an
overwhelming sense to block it. This flanking maneuver is sufficiently
significant for a major Russian effort while diverting Ukraine and the United
States from more immediate demands on resources to maintain the status quo.
The Ukraine war began with an attempt by Russia to ally with China and
divert American attention from Europe. The effort to force the U.S. into an
Asian flank failed. One of the exciting things about flanking maneuvers in
international affairs is that large-scale ententes tend to forget because the
scale of powers is so large that it is filled with complexity. Flanking is a
maneuver that requires agility. A significant influence can try to maneuver; a
lesser power can at best ally with considerable force, but it can rarely maneuver
it into the desired position.
Of course, many other attempts are being made to recruit nations by
both sides of the war. But the flanking maneuver is different. First, a
geographical position is sought so that countries in this discussion are all on
or near the Ukrainian border. They pose a threat of military action that might
affect the military reality inside Ukraine. The threat posed by the flanking
maneuver – the possibility of an attack – may force one of the combatants to
redeploy forces needed for combat into a static position, weakening the
strength. Usual alliances can strengthen one side or another materially, but
they cannot directly threaten the other unless they're contiguous. Getting Iran
or New Zealand to declare their support might be satisfying and mean acquiring
some equipment, but it would not shift anything.
The war appears static, but it can change at any moment. When battles
become static, changing the shape of the playing field becomes essential. The
Americans and Russians are engaged in flanking maneuvers that could change the
shape of the battlefield and put one side at a disadvantage. The longer the
war, the more the battle flanks will matter.
Russian forces are
undertaking a "massive
redeployment" of troops to three southern regions of Ukraine in what
appears to be a change of tactics by Moscow, a senior adviser to President
Volodymyr Zelensky said on Wednesday.
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