Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Trump's lies about Ukraine

 From the Kyiv Post:

"FACT CHECK: How Much of What Trump Said Last Week About War in Ukraine is True?

US President-elect Donald J. Trump, during a press conference at his Florida mansion Mar-A-Lago on Jan. 7, made declarations about the war in Ukraine and his incoming administration’s plans to end it quickly among other subjects.

The New York real estate tycoon got a few things right but, most of it was way off. Kyiv Post analyzed Trump’s statements and found that a little of what he said about Russia, Ukraine, and security on the NATO eastern frontier was roughly accurate, but a lot wasn’t, and even more was misleading.

For brevity’s sake, we will ignore most of Trump’s iffy claims beyond the Ukraine war. It is worth mentioning however, that he asserted “there were no wars when I was President,” later taking credit for US forces’ defeat of ISIS in Syria, and makes no mention of Russia’s first 2014 invasion of Ukraine. The complete FOX broadcast of the interview can be seen here.

Here is a run-down of Trump’s statements on Russia, Ukraine, and NATO over the last week – along with an analysis of what’s real and what’s not.

Biden’s weak foreign policy

Trump said the weak foreign policy of the Biden administration was a main cause of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Had he been President instead of Biden in 2022, Russia would never have invaded Ukraine.

This is, at the very least, highly misleading.

Trump served as President from 2017-2021 and was the man responsible for US government deterrent policy towards Russia during that time. US support to Ukraine during Trump’s first term in office was limited to small numbers of anti-tank guided weapons and small-scale training with elements of Ukraine’s military.

Although the Trump administration did not preside over the 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia during its first term, it certainly failed to turn back the Russian occupation of Crimea, or end the occupation of parts of Ukraine’s Donbas region. Most Ukrainian analysts say that a Kremlin calculation that Ukraine lacked the weapons and training to defend against a major invasion, is one of the main reasons Russian leader Vladimir Putin decided to attempt regime change in Ukraine in 2022.

To the extent that the US might have improved Ukrainian defense capacity, or taken other steps to prevent Russian military aggression including the imposition of stronger sanctions, Trump and his 2017-2021 administration stand accused of being directly responsible for the failure of deterring Russia’s invasion the following year.

Most of Ukraine’s main communities have been destroyed

Trump asserted that Ukraine’s cities, towns and villages are mostly destroyed by the war – “Their cities are largely knocked-down.”

This is false.

In fact, a string of towns and cities along the 1,000-kilometer (625-mile) front line have been damaged to varying degrees and those locations that have seen major fighting such as Mariupol, Severodonetsk, Adviivka, Vovchansk and Bakhmut have been severely damaged, and in some cases virtually leveled.

However, Ukraine’s territory is massive, roughly the size of France and Germany combined, and relative to the entire country, war damage has affected only a small fraction of homes and businesses. By and large, dilapidated Ukrainian buildings and infrastructure are the result of decades of poor maintenance.

Russia’s objection to Ukraine joining NATO was ‘understandable’

 Russia invaded Ukraine because of its understandable concerns about NATO expansion because it was provoked by a tightening relationship between Ukraine and NATO, against a longstanding ban by Russia on that happening, that pre-dated Putin’s rise to power:

“That’s been like written in stone… somewhere along the line, Biden said they (Ukraine) should be able to join NATO...Russia has someone (from NATO) right on their doorstep and I could understand their feeling about that,” according to Trump

This is false.

Firstly, the Biden administration throughout its time in office actively resisted fast-tracking Ukrainian membership of NATO because of concerns about provoking Russia. Most analysts say Germany and France likewise opposed bringing Ukraine into NATO. Poland and the Baltic states have repeatedly complained that it was that stance that encouraged Russian aggression.

Secondly, in accordance with NATO’s charter, no third-party state may determine whether or not a country might become a member of the Alliance – it is the sole decision of member states. Neither Russia nor any other country outside the alliance has a veto over which countries can seek to join NATO. Trump’s assertion that Kremlin foreign policy priorities inherently outweigh NATO founding statutes directly contradicts the NATO charter, of which the US is a founding signatory.

In addition, Norway, Poland, Finland, and Lithuania all have become full-fledged NATO members bordering on Russia, and Putin has not invaded any of them, nor called their membership a significant threat to his country’s national security.

With these comments Trump seemed merely to echo longstanding Kremlin talking points that Ukraine is not a real country and so without the rights of a sovereign state, and that NATO is an “aggressive” alliance aiming to destroy Russia.

Europeans are using the war to take advantage of the US

Trump accused Europe of taking advantage of the US when it comes to Ukraine and security on the NATO eastern border – “I said it to President Zelensky. Europe is in for a tiny fraction of the money that we’re in for. Now, whether you like that situation or not, Europe is much more affected than the United States. We have a thing called the ocean in between us. Right? Why are we in for billions and billions of dollars more money than Europe?”

This is false. While the US is a key supporter of Ukraine, collectively Kyiv’s other allies contributions outweigh Washington’s. In terms of total money spent to date, Russia’s full-scale 2022 invasion of Ukraine has cost US taxpayers around $150 billion and European taxpayers something like $288 billion.

The Kiel Institute, the gold standard research group following international assistance to Ukraine, in its October 2024 review of outside support to Ukraine, found that US military support both promised and delivered to Ukraine from January 2022 to October 2024 was valued just shy of $60 billion. Over the same period, non-US military assistance to Ukraine was a shade less, about $59 billion.

In terms of financial assistance, the US has sent Ukraine about $90 billion and promised an additional $30 billion. Europe alone has sent about $128 billion and promised an additional $120 billion.

If the comparison in respect of money paid to support Ukrainian war refugees is taken into account, then the US has spent nothing and European states more than $100 billion, the Kiel Institute research found.

It is difficult to prove one way or another whether Russia represents a greater geo-political threat to the US or Europe, but geographically, the US shares a sea border directly with Russia and strategically, the mass of Russia’s nuclear forces are deployed to attack the American mainland by way of the Arctic.

Ukraine’s topography is the cause of high casualty rates

Ukraine’s flat terrain is responsible for the very high casualties in the Russo-Ukraine War.

Trump said: “Every day many, many young people are being killed, soldiers. You know, the land is very flat. And the many hundreds of soldiers from each side are dead. And they’re lying in fields. All over the place. Nobody even collects [Them]. There are land mines all over – it’s a disaster. But it’s very flat. It’s farmland. And it’s very, very flat. And the only thing that stops a bullet, is the human body. And the human bodies are stopping a lot of bullets.”

This is false. In fact, drones and indirect fire weapons such as mortars, rockets and artillery account for about four out of five injuries suffered by soldiers on both sides in almost all fighting, and in static combat gunshot wounds are negligible.

In the very heavy majority of cases, a man or woman is hit while in some kind of cover like a trench or building ruins, and a drone or shell launched from kilometers away impacts nearby and explodes.

Cases where men advancing across open fields are hit are extremely rare and even in those instances – most recently by poorly-trained North Korean troops against entrenched Ukrainians – the attackers were cut down by explosions, fragments and splinters, and not by bullets.

Also, the lion’s share of the terrain where fighting has taken place has been in rolling hills. Only on the war’s southern front, particularly in the Kherson region, is the ground mostly flat.

As for the statement that young people being killed on the battlefield, statistics show that the average age of Ukrainian military casualties is 43 while that of their Russian counterparts is 38, according to figures produced by the US Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs."

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Putin wants to destroy not only Ukraine but also NATO

 From the Institute for the Study of War:

"Russian President Vladimir Putin maintains his maximalist pre-war demands to isolate Ukraine and weaken NATO and reportedly aims to enforce these demands in any possible talks with Western leaders about ending the war in Ukraine. The Financial Times (FT) reported on January 10, citing a former senior Kremlin official and another source who has discussed this topic with Putin, that Putin will maintain his pre-war demands of preventing Ukraine from joining NATO and forcing NATO to withdraw from deployments in Eastern Europe in any such talks by "chang[ing] the rules" of the international system to ensure that there are "no threats to Russia," a callback to his December 2021 ultimatum to the United States ahead of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.[7] Putin demanded in 2021 that NATO commit to not accepting Ukraine or any other countries as new members; the United States commit to upholding the ban on NATO enlargement; NATO not deploy any military forces to states that became NATO members after May 1997; ban any NATO military activity in Ukraine, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia; ban deployments of intermediate-range missiles in areas that could reach Russian or NATO state territory; and ban the United States from deploying intermediate-range missiles in Europe or nuclear missiles outside of US territory.[8] 

Putin notably used and intensified this narrative in 2021 to shape the information space and justify the full-scale invasion of Ukraine ahead of his February 2022 full-scale invasion even though the prospect of imminent NATO membership for Ukraine did not drive him to invade Ukraine as he claimed.[9] NATO did not undertake any meaningful actions to expand in Eastern Europe or advance Ukraine's future NATO membership between the 2008 Bucharest Declaration, which promised Ukraine and Georgia eventual NATO membership, and 2022.[10] Putin's December 2021 demands notably extend beyond Ukraine and aim to roll NATO back. The Kremlin likely seeks to resurrect this narrative in an attempt to manipulate Western leaders into acquiescing to Putin's maximalist demands that would weaken NATO under the guise of "compromise" in any future peace negotiations regarding the war in Ukraine. Kremlin Spokesperson Dmitry Peskov reiterated on January 10 that the Kremlin is ready to hold talks with Trump without any "preconditions," but ISW continues to assess that no negotiations will result in a meaningful or sustainable peace as long as Putin remains committed to his pre-war demands for full Ukrainian capitulation and the weakening of NATO.[11]

[7] https://www.ft.com/content/f85a62b5-3627-44f5-9368-ef5ad779a44a

[8] https://mid dot ru/ru/foreign_policy/rso/nato/1790803/?lang=ru

[9] https://understandingwar.org/backgrounder/weakness-lethal-why-putin-invaded-ukraine-and-how-war-must-end

[10] https://understandingwar.org/backgrounder/weakness-lethal-why-putin-invaded-ukraine-and-how-war-must-end; https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/official_texts_8443.htm; https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/ISW%20Ukraine%20Indicators%20Update.pdf

[11] https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-january-10-2025"

 

Wednesday, January 08, 2025

Ukraine's defeat will be America's defeat

 Robert Kagan in the Atlantic:

"Trump Is Facing a Catastrophic Defeat in Ukraine

Vice-president Elect J. D. Vance once said that he doesn’t care what happens to Ukraine. We will soon find out whether the American people share his indifference, because if there is not soon a large new infusion of aid from the United States, Ukraine will likely lose the war within the next 12 to 18 months. Ukraine will not lose in a nice, negotiated way, with vital territories sacrificed but an independent Ukraine kept alive, sovereign, and protected by Western security guarantees. It faces instead a complete defeat, a loss of sovereignty, and full Russian control.

This poses an immediate problem for Donald Trump. He promised to settle the war quickly upon taking office, but now faces the hard reality that Vladimir Putin has no interest in a negotiated settlement that leaves Ukraine intact as a sovereign nation. Putin also sees an opportunity to strike a damaging blow at American global power. Trump must now choose between accepting a humiliating strategic defeat on the global stage and immediately redoubling American support for Ukraine while there’s still time...

The end of an independent Ukraine is and always has been Putin’s goal. While foreign-policy commentators spin theories about what kind of deal Putin might accept, how much territory he might demand, and what kind of security guarantees, demilitarized zones, and foreign assistance he might permit, Putin himself has never shown interest in anything short of Ukraine’s complete capitulation. Before Russia’s invasion, many people couldn’t believe that Putin really wanted all of Ukraine. His original aim was to decapitate the government in Kyiv, replace it with a government subservient to Moscow, and through that government control the entire country... Today, after almost three years of fighting, Putin’s goals have not changed: He wants it all.

Putin’s stated terms for a settlement have been consistent throughout the war: a change of government in Kyiv in favor of a pro-Russian regime; “de-Nazification,” his favored euphemism for extinguishing Ukrainian nationalism; demilitarization, or leaving Ukraine without combat power sufficient to defend against another Russian attack; and “neutrality,” meaning no ties with Western organizations such as NATO or the EU, and no Western aid programs aimed at shoring up Ukrainian independence. Western experts filling the op-ed pages and journals with ideas for securing a post-settlement Ukraine have been negotiating with themselves...

Some hopeful souls argue that Putin will be more flexible once talks begin. But this is based on the mistaken assumption that Putin believes he needs a respite from the fighting. He doesn’t. Yes, the Russian economy is suffering. Yes, Russian losses at the front remain staggeringly high. Yes, Putin lacks the manpower both to fight and to produce vital weaponry and is reluctant to risk political upheaval by instituting a full-scale draft. If the war were going to drag on for another two years or more, these problems might eventually force Putin to seek some kind of truce, perhaps even the kind of agreement Americans muse about. But Putin thinks he’s going to win sooner than that, and he believes that Russians can sustain their present hardships long enough to achieve victory.

Are we so sure he’s wrong? Have American predictions about Russia’s inability to withstand “crippling” sanctions proved correct so far? Western sanctions have forced Russians to adapt and adjust, to find work-arounds on trade, oil, and financing, but although those adjustments have been painful, they have been largely successful... Today, Russia looks outwardly like the Russia of the Great Patriotic War, with exuberant nationalism stimulated and the smallest dissent brutally repressed... The Russian people have historically shown remarkable capacity for sacrifice under the twin stimuli of patriotism and terror. To assume that Russia can’t sustain this war economy long enough to outlast the Ukrainians would be foolish. One more year may be all it takes. Russia faces problems, even serious problems, but Putin believes that without substantial new aid Ukraine’s problems are going to bring it down sooner than Russia.

That is the key point: Putin sees the timelines working in his favor. Russian forces may begin to run low on military equipment in the fall of 2025, but by that time Ukraine may already be close to collapse. Ukraine can’t sustain the war another year without a new aid package from the United States. Ukrainian forces are already suffering from shortages of soldiers, national exhaustion, and collapsing morale. Russia’s casualty rate is higher than Ukraine’s, but there are more Russians than Ukrainians, and Putin has found a way to keep filling the ranks, including with foreign fighters. As one of Ukraine’s top generals recently observed, “the number of Russian troops is constantly increasing.” This year, he estimates, has brought 100,000 additional Russian troops to Ukrainian soil. Meanwhile, lack of equipment prevents Ukraine from outfitting reserve units.

Ukrainian morale is already sagging under Russian missile and drone attacks and the prolonged uncertainty about whether the United States’ vital and irreplaceable support will continue. What happens if that uncertainty becomes certainty, if the next couple of months make clear that the United States is not going to provide a new aid package? That alone could be enough to cause a complete collapse of Ukrainian morale on the military and the home front. But Ukraine has another problem, too. Its defensive lines are now so shallow that if Russian troops break through, they may be able to race west toward Kyiv.

Putin believes he is winning. “The situation is changing dramatically,” he observed in a recent press conference. “We’re moving along the entire front line every day.” His foreign-intelligence chief, Sergei Naryshkin, recently declared, “We are close to achieving our goals, while the armed forces of Ukraine are on the verge of collapse.”... Putin today sees victory within his grasp, more than at any other time since the invasion began...

If Trump cuts off or reduces aid to Ukraine, as he has recently suggested he would, then not only will Ukraine collapse but the divisions between the U.S. and its allies, and among the Europeans themselves, will deepen and multiply. Putin is closer to his aim of splintering the West than at any other time in the quarter century since he took power.

Is this a moment at which to expect Putin to negotiate a peace deal? A truce would give Ukrainians time to breathe and restore their damaged infrastructure as well as their damaged psyches. It would allow them to re-arm without expending the weapons they already have. It would reduce the divisions between the Trump administration and its European allies. It would spare Trump the need to decide whether to seek an aid package for Ukraine and allow him to focus on parts of the world where Russia is more vulnerable, such as the post-Assad Middle East.  Today Putin has momentum on his side in what he regards, correctly, as the decisive main theater. If he wins in Ukraine, his loss in Syria will look trivial by comparison. If he hasn’t blinked after almost three years of misery, hardship, and near defeat, why would he blink now when he believes, with reason, that he is on the precipice of such a massive victory?

A Russian victory means the end of Ukraine. Putin’s aim is not an independent albeit smaller Ukraine, a neutral Ukraine, or even an autonomous Ukraine within a Russian sphere of influence. His goal is no Ukraine. “Modern Ukraine,” he has said, “is entirely the product of the Soviet era.” Putin does not just want to sever Ukraine’s relationships with the West. He aims to stamp out the very idea of Ukraine, to erase it as a political and cultural entity... Putin’s call for “de-Nazification” is not just about removing the Zelensky government, but an effort to stamp out all traces of an independent Ukrainian political and cultural identity.

The vigorous Russification that Putin’s forces have been imposing in Crimea and the Donbas and other conquered Ukrainian territories is evidence of the deadly seriousness of his intent. International human-rights organizations and journalists, writing in The New York Times, have documented the creation in occupied Ukraine of “a highly institutionalized, bureaucratic and frequently brutal system of repression run by Moscow” comprising “a gulag of more than 100 prisons, detention facilities, informal camps and basements” across an area roughly the size of Ohio. According to a June 2023 report by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, nearly all Ukrainians released from this gulag reported being subjected to systematic torture and abuse by Russian authorities... Hundreds of summary executions have been documented, and more are likely—many of the civilians detained by Russia have yet to be seen again. Escapees from Russian-occupied Ukraine speak of a “prison society” in which anyone with pro-Ukrainian views risks being sent “to the basement,” where torture and possible death await...

Putin has decreed that all people in the occupied territories must renounce their Ukrainian citizenship and become Russian citizens or face deportation. Russian citizenship is required to send children to school, to register a vehicle, to get medical treatment, and to receive pensions. People without Russian passports cannot own farmland, vote, run for office, or register a religious congregation. In schools throughout the Russian-occupied territories, students learn a Russian curriculum and complete a Russian “patriotic education program” and early military training, all taught by teachers sent from the Russian Federation. Parents who object to this Russification risk having their children taken away and sent to boarding schools in Russia or occupied Crimea, where, Putin has decreed, they can be adopted by Russian citizens. By the end of 2023, Ukrainian officials had verified the names of 19,000 children relocated to schools and camps in Russia or to Russian-occupied territory. As former British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly put it in 2023, “Russia’s forcible deportation of innocent Ukrainian children is a systematic attempt to erase Ukraine’s future.”... 

These horrors await the rest of Ukraine if Putin wins... Russian-occupation authorities will seek to stamp out this resurgence of Ukrainian nationalism across the whole country. Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians will flee, putting enormous strain on Ukraine’s neighbors to the west. But thousands more will wind up in prison, facing torture or murder. Some commentators argue that it would be better to let Ukraine lose quickly because that, at least, would end the suffering. Yet for many millions of Ukrainians, defeat would be just the beginning of their suffering.

This is where Ukraine is headed unless something changes, and soon. Putin at this moment has no incentive to make any deal that leaves even part of Ukraine intact and independent. Only the prospect of a dramatic, near-term change in his military fortunes could force Putin to take a more accommodating course...

Which brings us to President-Elect Donald Trump, who now finds himself in a trap only partly of his own devising... Trump himself seemed to think that his election alone would be enough to convince Putin that it was time to cut a deal... Trump’s first moves following November 5 exuded confidence that Putin would accommodate the new sheriff in town. Two days after the election, in a phone call with Putin that Trump’s staff leaked to the press, Trump reportedly “advised the Russian president not to escalate the war in Ukraine”... Days after the phone call in which Trump “advised” him not to escalate, Putin fired a hypersonic, nuclear-capable intermediate-range ballistic missile at Ukraine, and he’s been escalating ever since. He also had his spokesmen deny that any phone call had taken place. Even today, Putin insists that he and Trump have not spoken since the election... In a message clearly aimed at Trump’s pretensions of power, Putin suggested that the West make a “rational assessment of events and its own capabilities.”...

Trump has since backed off. When asked about the phone call, Trump these days won’t confirm that it ever happened—“I don’t want to say anything about that, because I don’t want to do anything that could impede the negotiation.” More significantly, he has begun making preemptive concessions in the hope of getting Putin to begin talks. He has declared that Ukraine will not be allowed to join NATO. He has suggested that Ukraine will receive less aid than it has been getting from the United States. And he has criticized Biden’s decision to allow Ukraine to use American-made ATACMS to strike Russian territory. Putin has simply pocketed all these concessions and offered nothing in return except a willingness to talk “without preconditions.” Now begin the negotiations about beginning the negotiations, while the clock ticks on Kyiv’s ability to endure...

What can Trump do now? Quite a bit, actually... The thing that Putin has most feared, and has bent over backwards to avoid provoking, is the United States and NATO’s direct involvement in the conflict. He must have been in a panic when his troops were bogged down and losing in Ukraine, vulnerable to NATO air and missile strikes. But the Biden administration refused to even threaten direct involvement, both when it knew Putin’s war plans months in advance, and after the initial invasion, when Putin’s troops were vulnerable. Trump’s supporters like to boast that one of his strengths in dealing with adversaries is his dangerous unpredictability. Hinting at U.S. forces becoming directly involved, as Trump reportedly did in his call with Putin, would certainly have confirmed that reputation. But Putin, one suspects, is not inclined to take such threats seriously without seeing real action to back them. After all, he knows all about bluffs—he paralyzed the Biden administration with them for the better part of three years.

Trump has a credibility problem... Putin knows what we all know: that Trump wants out of Ukraine. He does not want to own the war, does not want to spend his first months in a confrontation with Russia, does not want the close cooperation with NATO and other allies that continuing support for Ukraine will require, and, above all, does not want to spend the first months of his new term pushing a Ukraine aid package through Congress after running against that aid. Putin also knows that even if Trump eventually changes his mind, perhaps out of frustration with Putin’s stalling, it will be too late. Months would pass before an aid bill made it through both houses and weaponry began arriving on the battlefield. Putin watched that process grind on last year, and he used the time well. He can afford to wait. After all, if eight months from now Putin feels the tide about to turn against him in the war, he can make the same deal then that Trump would like him to make now. In the meantime, he can continue pummeling the demoralized Ukrainians, taking down what remains of their energy grid, and shrinking the territory under Kyiv’s control.

No, in order to change Putin’s calculations, Trump would have to do exactly what he has not wanted to do so far: He would have to renew aid to the Ukrainians immediately, and in sufficient quantity and quality to change the trajectory on the battlefield. He would also have to indicate convincingly that he was prepared to continue providing aid until Putin either acquiesced to a reasonable deal or faced the collapse of his army. Such actions by Trump would change the timelines sufficiently to give Putin cause for concern. Short of that, the Russian president has no reason to talk about peace terms. He need only wait for Ukraine’s collapse.

Putin doesn’t care who the president of the United States is. His goal for more than two decades has been to weaken the U.S. and break its global hegemony and its leadership of the “liberal world order” so that Russia may resume what he sees as its rightful place as a European great power and an empire with global influence. Putin has many immediate reasons to want to subjugate Ukraine, but he also believes that victory will begin the unraveling of eight decades of American global primacy and the oppressive, American-led liberal world order. Think of what he can accomplish by proving through the conquest of Ukraine that even America’s No. 1 tough guy... is helpless to stop him and to prevent a significant blow to American power and influence. In other words, think of what it will mean for Donald Trump’s America to lose...

Unfortunately for Trump, Ukraine is where this titanic struggle is being waged. Today, not only Putin but Xi, Kim, Khamenei, and others whom the American people generally regard as adversaries believe that a Russian victory in Ukraine will do grave damage to American strength everywhere. That is why they are pouring money, weaponry, and, in the case of North Korea, even their own soldiers into the battle. Whatever short-term benefits they may be deriving from assisting Russia, the big payoff they seek is a deadly blow to the American power and influence that has constrained them for decades... When the fall of Ukraine comes, it will be hard to spin as anything but a defeat for the United States, and for its president.

This was not what Trump had in mind when he said he could get a peace deal in Ukraine. He no doubt envisioned being lauded as the statesman who persuaded Putin to make a deal, saving the world from the horrors of another endless war. His power and prestige would be enhanced. He would be a winner. His plans do not include being rebuffed, rolled over, and by most of the world’s judgment, defeated.

Whether Trump can figure out where the path he is presently following will lead him is a test of his instincts. He is not on the path to glory. And unless he switches quickly, his choice will determine much more than the future of Ukraine."

Trump's crazy land aspirations benefit Putin

 From the Daily Beast / Yahoo!News:

"Kremlin Insiders Reveal How Trump Is Already Secretly Helping Putin

Julia Davis, December 30, 2024

President-elect Donald Trump’s social media posts about annexing Greenland, Canada, and the Panama Canal startled America’s allies and delighted foreign foes. In Russia, the statements were interpreted to mean that Trump isn’t really opposed to foreign wars of conquest after all.

To them, Trump’s tirades revealed that—just like Russian President Vladimir Putin—Trump would be delighted to invade any country that couldn’t fight back. He would expect accolades and a lavish victory parade after seizing foreign territories, just like the fallout from Russia stealing Crimea in 2014.

Trump infamously described the annexation of Crimea as a “genius” and “savvy” move.

Putin tried to repeat the trick and take the rest of Ukraine in three days in 2022, and the Kremlin insiders believe Trump only disapproves of the war because it turned out to be lengthy and costly.

Russia’s premier propagandists and experts already believe that Trump can be persuaded to go along with Moscow’s wish list if Putin gets to influence him, tête-à-tête personally. They are vehemently opposed to the idea of negotiating with retired Lieutenant-General Keith Kellogg, Trump’s Ukraine envoy. The dream scenario that they envision would include legitimizing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and recognizing Moscow’s territorial demands.

In the meantime, Trump’s stated intentions towards Greenland, Canada, and Panama are being celebrated as implicit validation for Russia’s current and future land grabs. During Sunday’s broadcast of Vesti Nedeli (The Weekly News), host Dmitry Kiselyov devoted an entire segment to America’s planned expansion under Trump. He pointed out, “Trump isn’t joking. He is determined to expand American territorial possessions. Personally, I am convinced that he will succeed.” Kiselyov predicted, “Trump will grab strategically important parts of the world for America. It isn’t funny. What is funny is to see whether anyone in the Old World will try to sanction the United States in response to its territorial expansion. This is when we will find out how principled the lovers of sanctions truly are.”...

Professor Dmitry Evstafiev said, “Trump did something fantastic for Russia and for the whole world... He clearly answered a question, “Leadership or hegemony?” and chose hegemony. With his approach of geographical enlargement, he buried the entire collective West. There is no collective West, and it will never be united again.”

America expert Dmitry Drobnitsky emphasized, “Based on the team Trump is bringing along and who he is himself, it’s clear that he is certainly not a builder of a new world order. He is a destroyer. He will tear down the old world order.” Solovyov added, “By taking Canada, Trump is basically saying, “Russians, you can take the Baltics.””

Military expert Mikhail Khodaryonok noted, “After the statement of President-elect Donald Trump about Canada, Greenland, and Panama, in my opinion, we can now consider special military operations as the norm for resolving arguments between countries. The silence of European leaders clearly confirms this.”

Political scientist Dmitry Kulikov added the era of nation-states is over and that the world will return to the era of empires. He confidently said, “The new world is dawning.” Solovyov agreed, “This is the era of the strong.”"

 

Friday, January 03, 2025

Europe still buys energy from Russia

 From Foreign Policy:

"Europe Somehow Still Depends on Russia’s Energy

By , a Berlin-based journalist.  

Russia’s brutal, illegal war on Ukraine is lumbering into its fourth year, yet Europe still hasn’t used all its leverage against Moscow. Despite far-reaching cutbacks that have transformed global energy markets—and the European Union’s pledge to terminate all energy deals with Russia by 2027—the continent still maintains multifarious links to the Russian energy sector. Several European countries have failed to completely sever their energy ties to Russia, and the notoriously pro-Russian governments of Hungary and Slovakia are among them—but they are not alone.  In 2024, only Slovakia deposited more into Russian accounts for fossil fuels than France, followed by Hungary, Austria, and Spain.

A December report from the Center for the Study of Democracy (CSD) concluded, “Although Russian fossil fuel exports to the West have decreased, glaring loopholes in the sanctions’ regime persist.” Nowhere are the failings more prominent than with liquified natural gas (LNG). In 2024, the EU imported a record 16.5 million metric tons of LNG from Russia, surpassing the 15.2 million in 2023.

EU countries, led by Germany, have done much to truncate their Russian energy dependencies. Between early 2022 and the end of 2023, the EU slashed its imports of Russian fossil fuels by 94 percent, from $16 billion per month to around $1 billion per month, according to Belgian think tank Bruegel. Coal imports are nil. But countries across the bloc are still buying energy supplies from Russia and thus paying straight into Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war chest.

When it comes to Russian LNG, which is not sanctioned and remains a bargain compared to imported U.S. super-chilled gas, Europe has even regressed. According to the Financial Times, EU countries’ imports from Russia—led by France, Spain, the Netherlands, and Belgium—reached an all-time high in 2024.

Russian gas imports are Europe’s most glaring failure, with Russia still making up 18 percent of all EU natural gas imports as of late 2024. In 2022, it was Russia—not the Europeans—that scaled back gas imports. It was, namely, to penalize Europe for its refusal to pay in rubles... The Russia-Ukraine pipeline contract ends on Jan. 1, 2025, and Kyiv is adamant that the gravy train will stop: No more Russian fuel will travel through Ukraine. Despite Ukraine’s warnings, manufacturers in Austria, Italy, Slovakia, and Hungary protested vigorously—and futilely—to the European Commission in December, claiming that Ukraine’s decision not to renew the contract threatened supply security.

In fact, neither Budapest nor Bratislava will keel as a result of the higher prices they’ll have to pay elsewhere. They can access Russian gas from the TurkStream pipeline that runs under the Black Sea to Turkey and then passes through Bulgaria and Serbia. Politico reported that behind Slovakia’s protestations are its handsome earnings from the “reselling and transit of Russian gas” through Ukraine—around $1.5 billion a year. Balkan Insight found that Hungary’s interests are also pecuniary: Gazprom sells Hungary even more gas so that traders in Hungary can profit from the resale to third countries, “and the government collects a large chunk of the money in taxes.”...

As for petroleum, the G-7 and EU embargos that went into effect in late 2022 and early 2023—in the form of a $60-per-barrel price cap on Russian oil and a ban on direct imports—have taken tens of billions of dollars out of Moscow’s annual revenues. Yet Russian petroleum still manages to find its way into EU ports.  Exemptions for landlocked states allow Russian crude to continue flowing into EU markets, particularly Hungary and Slovakia. On a lesser scale, Belgium, Austria, and the Czech Republic also take advantage of the exemptions to purchase Russian oil.

These exemptions are not the only means Russian fossil fuels enter the EU market. Oil products refined from Russian crude frequently reach EU shores through third countries. In the first three quarters of 2024, EU countries imported 12.3 million metric tons of oil products from India, China, and Turkey, with 4.8 million metric tons directly from Russian crude, according to the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air. According to the CSD report, “The EU’s imports of oil products from the three main Indian refineries running on Russian crude increased 58% in the first three quarters of 2024 compared to the same period last year, widening the EU’s refining loophole.”

Compounding this leakage is the world’s shadow fleet, a ragtag collection of aging tankers that carry Russian crude oil and LNG but fly under foreign flags...

“Russia has been able to circumvent the restrictions to continue to earn billions of dollars from exporting oil, helping Putin finance the war,” said Stephanie Baker, author of Punishing Putin: Inside the Global Economic War to Bring Down Russia. Baker said that fear of stoking inflation stopped the G-7 from getting tougher on Russian oil sooner and that allies could have sanctioned the shadow fleet more aggressively or lowered the price cap to drive down Russian revenues. Likewise, the United States could have threatened to impose sanctions on anyone involved in purchasing oil from blacklisted tankers. The latest sanctions, at least, are a step in the right direction, she said.

Russia is also still the dominant fuel and technology provider to much of Europe’s nuclear-power industry... Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary all rely exclusively on Russian nuclear fuel and technology (and Finland largely so)... As for France, it “appears determined to maintain its nuclear relationship with Russia be it through the import of enriched uranium or numerous projects with Rosatom,” according to the 2024 World Nuclear Report.

Given the humanitarian tragedy in Ukraine and the war’s geopolitical ramifications, Europe should expedite the formulation of clear guidelines and earlier deadlines for phasing out all types of Russian energy imports."

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Prescient 2008 prediction of Russia's war against Ukraine

 From the Washington Times:

"KUHNER: Will Russia-Ukraine be Europe’s next war?

- The Washington Times - Sunday, October 12, 2008  

Europe faces the risk of another major war. In 1939, Nazi Germany’s invasion of Poland triggered the Second World War. Today the possible trip wire is not Poland, but Ukraine. And the aggressor will not be Adolf Hitler, but Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

Under his iron-fisted grip, Russia has been transformed into a gangster state. Democracy has been dismantled, corruption is rampant, journalists are murdered, dissidents are imprisoned and the media is controlled by the regime. Flush with petrodollars, Moscow is seeking to restore the Great Russian Empire. It poses a strategic threat to its neighbors and to the West. 

Mr. Putin is a former KGB apparatchik, who has called the Soviet Union’s collapse the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century.” The comment reveals his bloodlust and moral depravity. Soviet communism was the greatest system of mass murder in history. It was responsible for the deaths of more than 60 million people. The Soviet Union’s disintegration in 1991 was not a catastrophe but the very opposite: a victory for democracy, national self-determination and civilization.

Out of the rubble emerged an independent Ukraine. “No other people suffered under Moscow’s rule as much as the Ukrainians,” says Gerry Kelebay, a professor at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, and a leading Ukraine expert.

In 1932-1933, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin imposed a terror famine in Ukraine. More than 10 million Ukrainians were systematically starved to death. “If any country has earned the right to national statehood, it is Ukraine,” Mr. Kelebay said.

He is right: Kiev’s hard-won sovereignty and burgeoning democracy has come at tremendous cost. Unfortunately, Ukraine faces Russian aggression once again. Only this time, it comes not from Marxist-Leninists, but from messianic nationalists. 

Moscow is on the march. After invading Georgia and establishing Russia’s dominance over the secessionist regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Mr. Putin is now bent on dismembering Ukraine. The Russian strongman has made no secret of his contempt for Kiev’s independence. At a NATO summit in April, he told President Bush that Ukraine is “not even a real state,” and that much of its territory was “given away” by Russia. Mr. Putin warned that Ukraine would “cease to exist as a state” if it dared to join NATO. 

Ukraine, like Georgia, is despised by the Kremlin’s xenophobic elite for one simple reason - it seeks to break away from Moscow’s authoritarian grip. In response, Russia is trying to destabilize Ukraine.

Moscow’s main aim is to wrest the Crimean Peninsula from Kiev’s control. A majority of the Crimea’s inhabitants are ethnic Russians. More importantly, the Russian Black Sea Fleet is based in Sevastopol. Under a 1997 agreement between the two countries, the Russian navy is scheduled to leave by 2017. Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko refuses to extend the lease - rightly fearing Moscow plans to stay on indefinitely and eventually annex the entire Crimea. Russian officials have already said they will not abandon the base at Sevastopol and that Kiev’s maritime laws do not apply to them.

Moreover, Russia has been distributing thousands of Russian passports to supporters in the Crimea. The plan is to replicate what was done in South Ossetia and Abkhazia: Create a pretext to send in Russian “peacekeepers” to protect supposedly endangered Russian “citizens.” 

But Ukraine is not Georgia; it is a large, militarily powerful country with long memories of Russian domination. Any attempt at partition by Moscow would be met by fierce resistance. It would spark a bloody Russo-Ukrainian war. This would inevitably drag in Poland and the Baltic States - all of which are members of NATO. Mr. Putin’s bellicose nationalism threatens to ignite a European conflagration.

The battle over Ukraine is more than a regional test of wills. It is a clash over the future of Europe - and of Russia’s role in it. Orthodox Slavophiles, such as Mr. Putin, dream of a “Slavic Union” composed of Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. They favor a resurgent Russian imperialism, which seeks to dominate its neighbors, assert its sphere of influence in Eastern Europe and the Balkans and undermine American power abroad. It explains Moscow’s support for rogue regimes like Slobodan Milosevic’s Serbia, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Iran. 

However, a democratic, unified Ukraine stands in the way of Mr. Putin’s goal. Ukraine is the strategic bulwark against Russian expansionism - the eastern ramparts of Western civilization. Kiev is not some regional capital of a Greater Russia, but a fundamental part of the European mainland. This is why Ukraine seeks to embrace NATO and the European Union.

And it is also why Moscow desperately wants to derail Ukraine’s integration into the Euro-Atlantic alliance. A prosperous and pluralist Orthodox Slavic state on Russia’s borders would provide an attractive alternative to the Kremlin’s brutal dictatorship. A successful Ukraine would pave the way for liberal democracy to triumph in Russia. And Mr. Putin is willing to do anything to stop this from happening - including possibly plunging Europe into another disastrous bloodbath. We are all Ukrainians now."

 

 

Monday, December 23, 2024

Putin wants to destroy Ukraine completely

 From the Hill / Yahoo!News:

"Opinion - Only acceptable outcome for Putin: Ukraine’s complete destruction

Jonathan Sweet and Mark Toth, Opinion Contributors

December 19, 2024

Russian President Vladimir Putin is hell-bent on bringing about the complete destruction of Ukraine either on the battlefield or at the negotiating table. To date, Mad Vlad has lost 766,690 soldiers dead or wounded — and now he is increasingly throwing North Korean troops into his meat grinder...

The introduction of North Korean ground forces — a third-party nation and unofficial member of the Axis of Evil — has put the conflict on a bad trajectory. This latest Russian escalation demonstrates Moscow’s unwavering determination to destroy Ukraine. Ditto the introduction of the Oreshnik hypersonic missile, “a cutting-edge intermediate-range ballistic missile” first used against civilian targets in Dnipro on Nov. 21.

Putin’s war against Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has clearly become personal. He suffers from Ukraine Derangement Syndrome: A disdain for the Ukrainian people, their culture and their president has overcome his sense of logic and judgment.

He is essentially doubling down on Ukraine by recently abandoning key military installations in Syria, his gateway into North Africa, the Sahel, Sudan and the Middle East – all in his reckless pursuit of a victory in Ukraine. The use of North Korean troops is just his latest escalation to make up for the Kremlin’s military shortcomings.

Surrounded by yes-men, Putin is marching his now largely conscripted pick-up game of an army into oblivion. They are now forced to fight with 1950s Korean War-era weapons. And in waging this war, Putin is rapidly destroying Russia’s economy.

Failure, however, is not yet an option for Putin. Instead, he continues to play a game of nuclear bluffing, diplomatic obfuscation and repeated accusations that the West is pushing Russia to its “red lines.”

Essentially, Putin’s “red lines” comprise all actions, weapons or munitions uses that would prevent Russia from completely annihilating Ukraine. To get there, Putin continues to raise the specter of war with NATO. On Monday, Andrei Belousov, the Russian defense chief, said the Kremlin was preparing for “possible military conflict with NATO in Europe in the next decade.”

Putin’s continued threats of nuclear escalation play on an advantage given to him by the Biden administration when then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley asked Russian General Valery Gerasimov, “Under what conditions would you use nuclear weapons?”

Putin recently told a meeting of defense officials that “Russia was watching the U.S. development and potential deployment of short and medium-range missiles with concern,” and that “Russia would lift all of its own voluntary restrictions on the deployment of its own missiles if the U.S. went ahead and deployed such missiles.”

What restrictions is the Russian president talking about? He has used nearly every conventional munition in his arsenal. And he launches drones, ballistic missiles and ICBMs from deep within the Russian interior, intentionally targeting almost exclusively civilian population centers and Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.

Ukraine has every right to fight back. In June, then-NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Ukraine had the right under international law to attack legitimate military targets in Russia to defend itself. “The ‘s “right to self-defense … includes the right to hit legitimate military targets on the territory of the attacking party, the aggressor, in this case Russia.”

U.S. forces in the Middle East routinely destroy enemy weapon systems “that present a clear and imminent threat to U.S. and coalition forces.” Why should Washington and Brussels not afford Ukraine that same right?

The Russian military has only one real advantage: mass, in infantry and artillery. The “deployment of short and medium-range missiles” could be used to interdict those forces before they arrive on the Ukrainian battlefields. Until then, the carnage will remain on the scale of World War I.

If left unchecked, Russian and North Korean forces will continue their incremental advance one ‘meat assault’ at a time.

The Kremlin is not in pursuit of peace or a ceasefire. Just listen to former-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who recently said out loud what Moscow is thinking, “Today, Ukraine faces a choice to be with Russia or to disappear from the world map altogether.”

Submit or face extinction — really one and the same choice.

Or consider the stance on Monday of Russia’s representative to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenz: “No schemes to freeze the [Ukrainian] conflict are agreeable to Russia.” His diatribe was based on falsehoods and designed to play into Russian disinformation that NATO is at the heart of Putin’s war against Ukraine.

Even Russian propagandist and TV host Vladimir Solovyov has made Putin’s intentions clear: “We will kill all of you,” in response to President-elect Donald Trump’s idea of deploying European peacekeepers to monitor a potential ceasefire in Ukraine.

Trump needs to put an end to Putin’s bluffing and grandstanding come Jan. 20, to demonstrate to him that he cannot win. Washington must stop playing by Putin’s rules and seize the initiative. Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity cannot be up for negotiation. Rewarding Russian aggression is not an acceptable course of action.

Retired Army Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, can do just that. He must proceed deliberately and not be distracted by Russian double-speak, disinformation and misinformation. Rather, he must believe what he sees on the battlefield.

Trump can best strengthen Kellogg’s negotiating hand by ending the sanctuary afforded to Moscow on the battlefield by the Biden administration. That means letting Ukraine interdict Russian and North Korean troops, their weapons systems and ammunition storage facilities on the Russian side of the border.

It also means destroying drone and missile launch sites in Russia, along with their crews, and empowering the Ukrainians to push Russian forces in the close fight out of Ukraine.

Anything less and Putin will not come to the negotiating table, save to buy time and attempt to snooker Trump into a bad deal — into capitulating to Russia in Ukraine."

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Timothy Garten Ash describing the future if Russia wins

 From the Guardian:

"What if Russia wins in Ukraine? We can already see the shadows of a dark 2025 

Timothy Garten Ash 

A member of the Ukrainian emergency service at the City Hall following shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 1 March 2022. Photograph: Pavel Dorogoy/AP

There are human activities in which both sides can win. War is not one of them. Either Ukraine wins this war or Russia does. Ukraine’s former foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba says bluntly that unless the current trajectory is changed, “we will lose this war”.

To be clear: this is still avoidable. Suppose the roughly four-fifths of Ukrainian territory still controlled by Kyiv gets military commitments from the West strong enough to deter any further Russian advances, secure large-scale investment in economic reconstruction, encourage Ukrainians to return from abroad to rebuild their country, and allow for stable, pro-European politics and reform. In five years, the country joins the EU, and then, under a new US administration, starts the process of entering Nato. Most of Ukraine becomes a sovereign, independent, free country, firmly anchored in the west.

The loss of a large amount of territory, the suffering of at least 3.5 million Ukrainians living under Russian occupation and the toll of dead, maimed and traumatised would amount to a terrible cost. This would not be the complete victory Ukrainians have hoped for and deserve; but it would still be a victory for Ukraine and a historic defeat for Russia...

However, to get to this outcome with Donald Trump in the White House would require a European coalition-of-the-willing to make security commitments of a size and boldness not seen so far. There’s a growing understanding of this among European leaders, but the democratic politics in most European countries are miles away from empowering them to do it. To try to persuade Europeans to support the necessary policies, but also to understand the consequences if – as seems most likely – they don’t do so in time, the question we have to ask is: what if Russia wins?

If Russia wins, we should realistically expect the following consequences for Ukraine, Europe, the United States and world peace. Ukraine would be defeated, divided, demoralised and depopulated. The money would not come in to reconstruct the country; instead, another wave of people would leave it. The politics would become rancorous, with a strong anti-western trend. New possibilities for Russian disinformation and political destabilisation would emerge. Necessary reforms would stall, and hence also progress towards EU membership.

Europe as a whole would see an escalation of the hybrid war that Russia is already waging against it, still largely unnoticed by most blithely Christmas-shopping west Europeans. Not a week passes without some incident: a Russian destroyer fires a flare at a German military helicopter; there are exploding DHL packages, sabotage on the French railways, an arson attack on a Ukrainian-owned business in east London; undersea cables in the Baltic Sea are cut; there’s a credible death threat to a top German arms manufacturer. Not all can definitely be traced back to Moscow, but many can.

Full spectrum hybrid warfare includes election interference. In Georgia, the election was rigged. In the Moldovan EU referendum, about 9% of the votes were directly bought by Russia, according to the president, Maia Sandu. In Romania, the first round of the presidential election will be re-run, because a court found large-scale violation of campaigning rules on TikTok. “Ah, that’s eastern Europe!” cries the complacent Christmas shopper in Madrid, Rome or Düsseldorf. But the head of Germany’s domestic security service recently warned that Russia will try to interfere in next February’s German general election, which is hardly marginal to the future of Europe.

This week we saw Vladimir Putin again supremely confident in his annual end-of-year marathon press conference cum Call-the-Tsar phone-in, despite the recent Ukrainian assassination of his WMD general. His is now a war economy, dependent on military production for sustaining growth, and a dictatorship defined by confrontation with the west. It would be beyond naive to hope that diplomacy can achieve some magical moment when Putin’s Russia will suddenly become “satisfied” with an outcome in Ukraine, and return to peacetime business as usual. When NATO planners say we should be ready for possible Russian aggression against NATO territory by 2029, they are not simply peddling horror stories so as to increase military budgets.

Maga voters in the United States may say “well, what’s all that to us? You Europeans look after yourselves! We have to worry about China”. But Russia is now working more closely than ever with China, North Korea and Iran. Putin may be indicted by the international criminal court, but he still travels half the world as a welcome guest. He himself has talked of a new “global majority” and “the formation of a completely new world order”. In that new order, war and territorial conquest are entirely acceptable instruments of policy, on a continuum with poisoning, sabotage, disinformation and election interference. Victory for Russia in Ukraine will encourage China to step up its pressure on Taiwan and North Korea its needling of South Korea.

That brings us to the most serious consequence of all: nuclear proliferation. Remember that Ukraine voluntarily gave up its nuclear weapons in 1994, in return for security assurances from the US, the UK and Russia – and then got hammered by one of the powers that promised it security. In the latest KIIS polling, 73% of Ukrainians support Ukraine “restoring nuclear weapons”. Remarkably, 46% say they would do so even if the west imposed sanctions and stopped aid. In effect, Ukrainians are saying to the west: if you won’t defend us, we’ll [expletive deleted] do it ourselves. On recent visits to Ukraine I’ve been told several times, “It’s NATO or nukes!” But this is not just about Ukraine. Vulnerable countries around the world, also looking at what is happening in the Middle East, will draw the same conclusion. The more countries – and possibly non-state actors – acquire nuclear weapons, the more certain it is that one day they will be used.

In the German election, Chancellor Olaf Scholz has been shamelessly and shamefully trying to exploit the fear of nuclear war for electoral advantage over his chief rival, the Christian Democrat Friedrich Merz. In fact, it is precisely the consequences of the west’s self-deterrence for fear of Russian nuclear escalation in Ukraine, personified by Scholz and skilfully exploited by Putin, that are increasing the likelihood of nuclear proliferation and therefore the long-term risk of nuclear war.

The conclusion is clear, and depressingly familiar. European democracies’ reluctance to pay a high price now means that the world will pay an even higher price later."