By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Key to
Victory by Ukraine
While today’s sanctions will gradually drain
Russia’s war chest, Ukraine’s key to victory in sustaining
the war has settled into a grinding fight for yards.
Ukrainian and Russian forces are shelling each other with medium- and
long-range artillery, leaving the Donbas’ already battered villages and towns
caught in the crossfire. Like the brutal battles of World War I, the current
conflict has seen only small swaths of territory change hands, often being
captured and recaptured from one week to the next. Although talk of a rapid
victory for either side has largely disappeared from the headlines, analysts
and officials still debate what piece of heavy military equipment or new
technology might turn the tide in Ukraine’s favor. With Russia running low on
supplies and manpower, an influx of more sophisticated Western weaponry could
allow the Ukrainians to turn back Russian advances and go on the
counteroffensive.
However, this emerging war of attrition is more likely to come down to
sustainment —the ability of each side to ensure a relentless influx of troops,
ammunition, and heavy equipment to the frontlines in the east, especially as
the conflict drags on and international attention dissipates. Logistics,
financial management, personnel services, and health services will all be
central to this effort, determining which side can better replace its depleted
units, resupply and maintain its equipment, and source food, fuel, and
ammunition. The Russian military clearly shows signs of strain, significantly
when reinforcing its troops after heavy losses.
The incremental nature of Moscow’s approach, from relatively subtle
measures to the overt use of military strength,
is a sign of despair.
Sustainment provides
leverage for Ukraine
In a conflict increasingly likely to end—or at least be contained—with
a negotiated settlement or cease-fire, sustainment could provide vital leverage
for Ukraine. By reinforcing its troops and resupplying and maintaining its
equipment, Ukraine may not be able to beat the Russians back, but it could deny
them significant gains, sapping their resources and will to fight. Western
military assistance, especially the provision of arms and training, will be
critical for sustainment. But so will domestic factors such as the return of
Ukrainian refugees, the recovery of the country’s economy, and the emergence of
Ukrainian resistance in Russian-occupied areas. Sustaining the fight against
Moscow, in other words, will take political, economic, and military commitment
from the Ukrainian people, the United States, and other NATO countries. The
challenge, however, is that sustainment will become increasingly costly as the
war continues, and Western countries find it increasingly difficult to muster
the political will to uphold their commitments to Ukraine.
Signs of strain
Early in the war, Russia gave little thought to sustainment, rushing
forward a vast force without setting up supply depots or establishing complete
air control. As the Ukrainians slowed Russia’s advance, distance and weather
compounded Moscow’s logistical problems—and Russian
soldiers paid a heavy price. The shift of the fighting to eastern Ukraine has
eased some logistical challenges for Moscow. The frontlines are now closer to
Russia and linked by rail and road to Russia and Russian-occupied territory.
But Moscow’s initial blunders burned through many of its resources,
undercutting Russia’s ability to resupply and sustain its forces even in the
east. Unable to reliably import supplies and parts because of Western
sanctions, Moscow is now digging deep into its Soviet-era stockpiles for
weapons such as mines and tanks.
Russia is having even more trouble shoring up its manpower. Estimates
of casualties vary widely and are likely distorted by political calculations on
both sides, but Moscow is struggling to reinforce its fighting forces. Russia’s
lower parliament, the Duma, recently removed the upper age cap for contractual
service in the Russian army to expand the pool of eligible recruits that can be
sent into battle.
For their part, the Ukrainians are also showing signs of strain. Before
Russia’s invasion in February, Ukraine had been making significant progress in
reforming its military, increasing civilian control, limiting corruption,
streamlining command and control, and modernizing its force structure to better
align with NATO’s model. These and other changes helped Ukraine fend off
Russia’s initial assault, thwarting the Kremlin’s ill-fated plan to take Kyiv
and other major Ukrainian cities. But the reform process was incomplete when
Russia invaded, and it has understandably slowed amid a major war.
In a conflict likely to end with a negotiated settlement, sustainment
could provide vital leverage for Ukraine.
One critical element of sustainment involves moving forces to where
they are needed most and reinforcing or replacing depleted units. These
functions become more challenging as the war drags on and military and civilian
casualties mount. The forces stationed in the east of Ukraine are some of the
country’s best and most experienced fighters. Still, they have taken the brunt
of the losses ever since Russia began concentrating its attack on the Donbas.
Ukrainian leaders had been relatively tight-lipped about the scale of Ukrainian
losses until last month when a senior presidential aide revealed that 100 and
200 troops were killed daily.
At that rate, retaining the manpower needed to prevent further
territorial losses, let alone win territory back, will require significant
reinforcements. And Ukraine’s troop reserves are not infinite. Indeed,
interviews with volunteers who joined the territorial defense forces in western
Ukraine paint a dire picture of troops being rushed eastward to the front
without adequate training, weapons, or support. Getting reinforcements and
supplies to the frontlines has also gotten harder as roads and rail networks
have been destroyed in the fighting and Russia has threatened Ukrainian supply
lines in parts of the east, especially now that Ukrainian forces have
strategically retreated from the beleaguered city of Sievierodonetsk.
Help wanted
Ukraine needs additional Western military support. The country had
limited defense production capacity even before the war, and over the last four
months, Russia has destroyed or captured much of that capacity. Russia has also
targeted many Ukrainian ammunition depots. As a result, Ukraine’s sustainment
effort will hinge partly on the resupply of Western ammunition, rockets,
drones, and other heavy equipment.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the U.S. defense industry has endeavored to
make this possible. Lockheed Martin, which manufactures the much-vaunted
Javelin antitank missiles that Washington has supplied to Ukraine, promised in
May to nearly double its annual output to meet demand, albeit over the next few
years. Raytheon, meanwhile, has been supplying Ukraine with Stinger
antiaircraft missiles. But even U.S. defense giants have limits. Raytheon has
already said it will not be able to increase production of Stingers until 2023
because it lacks parts. Some U.S. lawmakers have expressed concern that arms
shipments to Ukraine are depleting U.S. stockpiles of these weapons. The U.S.
Department of Defense is facing its sustainment demons, struggling to increase
the production of these and other supplies because of pandemic-related
shortages and generally lackluster defense industrial capacity.
Training the Ukrainian soldiers and civilian volunteers using this
equipment is just as crucial as resupplying weapons and ammunition. Advanced
weapons systems delivered by the United States and other NATO countries are
only helpful if Ukrainian soldiers know how to use and maintain the—skills that
are difficult and take time to learn. For example, the U.S. Army’s Javelin
training course is 80 hours long, while training on a mobile artillery rocket
system by Lockheed Martin can take up to two months. (The first of
these Lockheed Martin systems was confirmed to be in use in Ukraine last
week, suggesting that training is moving faster than expected.)
Ukraine needs Western
military support
Since U.S. military advisers had to withdraw from Ukraine to avoid the
possibility of confrontation with Russian forces, Ukrainian soldiers have traveled
to U.S. bases in Germany and Poland to learn how to operate artillery, air
defense radar systems, drones, armored personnel carriers, and according to
some reports, even sophisticated electronic warfare systems supplied by the
United States and other countries. These troops will now be able to train their
fellow soldiers back in Ukraine. But efforts such as these impose difficult
tradeoffs. On the one hand, they enable Ukraine to employ new military
capabilities. On the other, they take skilled soldiers out of the fight at
precisely the moment when manpower needs are at their most acute.
The maintenance challenge
Then there is the maintenance challenge. Artillery and radar systems
and other advanced military equipment require specialized and often highly
technical training. Ukrainian troops have received some of this maintenance
training in Germany and Poland—for instance, on artillery pieces known as M777
howitzers. But maintenance of even these relatively primary weapons is
complicated because they are manufactured using the imperial measurement
system, while Ukrainian wrenches use the metric system. This means that
American-made wrenches must accompany every American-made howitzer—one more
complication in an already intricate and fragile supply chain that flows from
Poland overland into western Ukraine and then to the frontlines in the east of
the country.
Test of wills
The strength of Ukraine’s sustainment effort will depend partly on what happens in
Washington and other Western capitals. European leaders met with Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv, promising
ongoing aid and affirming their support for Ukraine’s accession to the EU.
How long this support lasts will depend on the public mood in Western
countries. Support for Ukraine remains relatively high in the United States,
European countries, and allied countries such as Australia, Japan, and South
Korea. Yet popular opinion about the war is more mixed in parts of Southeast
Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, where Russia has more influence and has
concentrated its disinformation campaigns. If inflation, food shortages, and
supply chain disruptions persist, countries in these regions could push to
scale back sanctions on Russia or reduce aid to Ukraine.
But just as important as the international climate is what happens in
Ukraine. Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian refugees have returned home in
recent months. Repatriation on this scale could initially strain food and
health resources. Still, it could also help revive the economy and labor
market, facilitate the movement of supplies and medical support to the
frontlines in the east, and provide a morale boost to the nation. Already,
commercial goods have begun to move more freely in western Ukraine, indicating
that the overall logistical situation is improving. Getting the west of the
country—and especially cities such as Kyiv—up and running again will help
relieve some of the food and medical shortages in the east. Finally, reports of
increased resistance and sabotage in Russian-occupied areas suggest that
Ukrainians could disrupt Moscow’s supply lines—thereby eroding its ability to
sustain the offensive.
As the war in Ukraine has transformed into one of attrition, the
importance of sustainment has been elevated, perhaps above all else. Although a
decisive military victory in which the Ukrainians expel Russian forces from
their entire territory seems increasingly unlikely, Kyiv could still stymie
Moscow’s progress and strengthen its position for future negotiations by
continuing to surge reinforcements and supplies to the frontlines. If the past
four months of war have revealed anything, underestimating Ukraine is a
mistake. The United States and its allies must do their part to help Ukraine
sustain the fight.
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