Long-range cruise missiles supplied by UK and France, hit Russia’s Black Sea fleet at its home port of Sevastopol, Sept 13, 2023
17.9.23
The ground war in Ukraine has run its course, a new phase is beginning. Even diehard supporters of Ukraine in the western media and think tanks are admitting that a military victory over Russia is impossible and a vacation of the territory under Russian control is way beyond Kiev’s capability.
Hence the ingenuity of the Biden Administration to explore Plan B counselling Kiev to be realistic about loss of territory and pragmatically seek dialogue with Moscow. This was the bitter message that US Secretary of State Antony Blinken transmitted to Kiev recently in person.
But President Zelensky’s caustic reaction in a subsequent interview with the Economist magazine is revealing. He hit back that the western leaders still talk the good talk, pledging they will stand with Ukraine “as long as it takes” (Biden mantra), but he, Zelensky, has detected a change of mood among some of his partners: “I have this intuition, reading, hearing and seeing their eyes [when they say] ‘we’ll be always with you.’ But I see that he or she is not here, not with us.” Certainly, Zelensky is reading the body language right, as in the absence of an overwhelming military success shortly, western support for Ukraine is time-limited.
Zelensky knows that sustaining the western support will be difficult. Yet he hopes that if not Americans, European Union will at least keep supplying aid, and but may open negotiations over the accession process for Ukraine possibly even at its summit in December. But he also held out a veiled threat of terrorist threat to Europe — warning that it would not be a “good story” for Europe if it were to “drive these people [of Ukraine] into a corner”. So far such ominous threats were muted, originating from low ranking activists of the fascist Bandera fringe.
But Europe has its limits, too. The western stockpiles of weapons are exhausted and Ukraine is a bottomless pit. Importantly, conviction is lacking whether continued supplies would make any difference to the proxy war that is unwinnable. Besides, European economies are in doldrum,’ the recession in Germany may slide into depression, with profound consequences of “deindustrialisation.”
Suffice to say, Zelensky’s visit to the White House in the coming days becomes a defining moment. The Biden Administration is in a sombre mood that the proxy war is hindering a full-throttle Indo-Pacific strategy against China. Yet, during an appearance on ABC’s This Week, Blinken explicitly stated for the first time that the US would not oppose Ukraine using US-supplied longer-range missiles to attack deep inside Russian territory, a move that Moscow has previously called a “red line,” which would make Washington a direct party to the conflict.
The well-known American military historian, strategic thinker and combat veteran Colonel (Retd.) Douglas MacGregor (who served as advisor to the Pentagon during the Trump administration), is prescient when he says that a new “Biden’s phase of the war” is about to begin. That is to say, having run out of ground forces, the locus will now shift to long-range strike weapons like the Storm Shadow, Taurus, ATACMS long-range missiles, etc.
The US is considering sending ATACMS long-range missiles that Ukraine has been asking for a long time with the capability to strike deep inside Russian territory. The most provocative part is that NATO reconnaissance platforms, both manned and unmanned, will be used in such operations, making the US a virtual co-belligerent.
Russia has been exercising restraint in attacking the source of such enemy capabilities but how long such restraint will continue is anybody’s guess. In response to a pointed query about how Washington would see the attacks on Russian territory with American weaponry and technology, Blinken argued that the increasing number of attacks on Russian territory by Ukrainian drones are “about how they’re [Ukrainians] going to defend their territory and how they’re working to take back what’s been seized from them. Our [US] role, the role of dozens of other countries around the world that are supporting them, is to help them do that.”
Russia is not going to accept such a brazen escalation, especially as these advanced weapon systems used to attack Russia are actually manned by NATO personnel — contractors, trained ex-military hands or even serving officers. President Putin told the media on Friday that “we have detected foreign mercenaries and instructors both on the battlefield and in the units where training is carried out. I think yesterday or the day before yesterday someone was captured again.”
The US calculus is that at some point, Russia will be compelled to negotiate and a frozen conflict will ensue where the NATO allies would retain the option to continue with Ukraine’s military build-up and the process leading to its membership of the Atlantic alliance, and allow the Biden Administration to focus on the Indo-Pacific.
However, Russia will not settle for a “frozen conflict” that falls far short of the objectives of demilitarisation and denazification of Ukraine that are the key objectives of its special military operation.
Faced with this new phase of the proxy war, what form the Russian retaliation will take remains to be seen. There could be multiple ways without Russia directly attacking NATO territories or using nuclear weapons (unless the US stages a nuclear attack — of which the chances are zero as of now.)
Already, it is possible to see the potential resumption of military-technical cooperation between Russia and the DPRK (potentially including ICBM technology) as a natural consequence of the aggressive US policy towards Russia and its support for Ukraine — as much as of the current international situation. The point is, today it is with DPRK; tomorrow it could be with Iran, Cuba or Venezuela — what Col. MacGregor calls “horizontal escalation” by Moscow. The situation in Ukraine has become interconnected with the problems of the Korean Peninsula and Taiwan.
Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu said on state television on Wednesday that Russia has “no other options” but to achieve a victory in its special military operation and will continue to make progress with their key mission of mowing down the enemy’s equipment and personnel. This suggests that the attritional war will be further intensified while the overall strategy may shift to achieving total military victory.
The Ukrainian military is desperate for manpower. In the 15-week “counteroffensive” alone, over 71,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed. There is talk of Kiev seeking repatriation of its nationals in military age from among the refugees in Europe. On the other hand, in expectation of a prolonged conflict, the mobilisation in Russia is continuing.
Putin disclosed on Friday that 300,000 people have volunteered and signed contracts to join the armed forces and new units are being formed, equipped with advanced types of weapons and equipment, “and some of them are already 85–90 percent equipped.”
The high likelihood is that once the Ukrainian “counteroffensive” peters out in another few weeks as a massive failure, Russian forces may launch a large-scale offensive. Conceivably, Russian forces may even cross Dnieper river and take control of Odessa and the coastline leading to the Romanian border, from where NATO has been mounting attacks on Crimea. Make no mistake, for the Anglo-American axis, encircling Russia in the Black Sea has always remained a top priority.
Watch the excellent interview (below) of Col. Douglas MacGregor by Professor Glenn Diesen at the University of North-Eastern in Norway:
MacGreggor’s ever-victorious Russians (The dude is an absolute idiot):
https://www.reddit.com/r/UkraineWarRoom/comments/16luyje/all_uninvited_ruzzian_occupiers_leave_ukraine/
All of our enemies should be “victoriouss” like this. BTW Here’s the glorious Russian navy, humiliated by a country with no navy:
https://televisor.tlgrm.dev/012/eBoAAIkFFkYAAAAAaARbpnNb3n0.G9ExG2PhSEhlgUUCYgATQAI.AkYWBYkAABp4ZQg6kTpcI7KP7GJuA3UQaAxU3E8/photo-x.jpg?hash=NEz5B_wSGQT7Q-DQtmESTw&ts=1695073114
The most time-consuming part of the Ukrainian offensive used to be clearing mines. Now, it’s burying the thousands of dead Russian soldiers.
@ Adam Dalgliesh
Re: MacGregor: He has his own sources, and better ones, apparently, than the west has. Some, he divulges, some, he chooses not to. In any case his info is much more to be trusted than the New York Crimes or the London fish wrappers.
Re: India: I think they are smart enough to do what is in their own best interest.
Re: The west selling out Ukraine: Yes, I’m sure that they will, sooner or later. They will eventually tire of it, especially if they are getting diminishing returns on their investment.
Re: Western reaction to a Russian total victory: The threat of boycotts, sanctions, being banned from SWIFT, or anything else like that has already been demonstrated to be a joke. It didn’t work. Russia has gotten stronger and it has caused the west to get weaker. This “threat” of even stronger sanctions which already has the Russian economy in “tatters” is the western narrative, based entirely on wishful thinking.
Re: Russia being forced to negotiate or compromise: Nope. Unless something drastically changes, the west is not in a position to force Russia to do anything that they don’t want to do.
The usual unsourced, undocumentwed nonsense from McGregor. I would like to know whose paying him. Or just get all his information from reading RT and TASS?
India is supporting Russia in this war but I think they are crazy to do so.; The Russians are no true friends of India.
It is certainly true, however, that Biden and the Europeans are planning to sell Ukraine out. Theyare already pressing Ukraine to accept “territorial compromise.” Exactly the way they have been pressuring Israel to accept “territorial compromise” for the past75 years. or the past 86 years, if you include the British mandate period. Now they are adopting the same strategy with respect to Ukraine. Their motivation in both the Palestine and Ukraine conflicts is to keep their putative adversaries in conflict, leaving the balance of power in their (Anglo-American) hands. It is a “let’s you and him fight” strategy.
True,Russia can inflict a total defeat on Ukraine eventuallly, because oof its overwhelming superiority in manpower and weapons-manufacturing capapbility. However, they will be fools to seek total victory, because the Western reaction, at least for a year or so, will be crippling. The present partial boycott of Russia, which is already taking an appalling toll on the Russian economy, will be transformed into a total boycott. That would mean Russia would completely run out of foreign currency, since its semi-Allies India and China will not provide them with currency except at extoionate prices for thier oil. They will be totally banned from the SWIFT system, which still plays an important role in international trade. To avoid national bankrupcy and the complete collapse of the ruble, Russia will probably be forced to accept Western terms for a “negotiated” or “compromise” peace.
The word “virtual” should be removed.
So why don’t they vacation somewhere else? They could ask Michael for suggestions. I’ve heard Northwest Nigeria is nice this time of year.