President Biden provides an update on Russia and Ukraine.
Starting soon.
President Biden Update on Russia and Ukraine (LIVE)Post + Comments (120)
This post is in: Biden Administration in Action, Open Threads, War in Ukraine
President Biden provides an update on Russia and Ukraine.
Starting soon.
President Biden Update on Russia and Ukraine (LIVE)Post + Comments (120)
by Adam L Silverman| 296 Comments
This post is in: America, Foreign Affairs, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine
For those who have been patting themselves on the back that diplomacy was working so a military buildup for both deterrence and, if the worst should happen, response was not needed, well your diplomacy just failed!
Putin is expected to make an address to the Russian nation any minute now. Scheduled for 9pm Moscow time but he’s usually late.
— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) February 21, 2022
What does this mean, well given the rhetoric and statements coming out of Moscow, most likely this:
Something to be worried about: Russian Interior Minister Kolokoltsev told Putin that Moscow should recognize all of Donetsk and Luhansk regions as D/LNR. He said, “from Mariupol and ending with those historical borders.” So all the gray area in this OSCE map. Frontline is red. pic.twitter.com/j8bhHUHd6J
— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) February 21, 2022
Translation: Russia may very well annex Luhansk and Donbas. https://t.co/eoXY0wbtdm
— Terrell Jermaine Starr (@Russian_Starr) February 21, 2022
Regardless, please remember that EITHER scenario is an attack on Ukrainian sovereignty; the DNR/LNR "governments" are Russian proxies and Russia's recognition of them, just like its annexation of Crimea, S. Ossetia, Abkhazia, Transnistria, should not be tolerated. (2/2)
— Nina Jankowicz (@wiczipedia) February 21, 2022
We are going to have to wait and see what the actual recognition statement that Putin makes states, but if they recognize all of the Donetsk and Luhansk breakaway territories, it would double the territory Russia has grabbed in eastern Ukraine and put the current line of control right in the middle of Russia’s two newest vassal states. From Putin’s perspective this would, of course, turn the Ukrainian military forces on that line of control into invaders of the sovereign territories of Donetsk and Luhansk. Territory that Russia has pledged to defend. This is the final, fabricated pretext for war.
What do the two diplomatic geniuses Macron and Scholz have to say for themselves?
BREAKING: Germany's Scholz and France's Macron expressed 'disappointment' over Putin's recognition of the independence of Donetsk and Lugansk republics
— The Spectator Index (@spectatorindex) February 21, 2022
Well that’ll put Putin in his place! And a lot of Ukrainians are going to die because of it.
As much as I like the way Biden and his team have handled things so far, especially the information warfare and PSYOP campaign that has gotten inside Putin’s information cycle and wrong footed him, Zelensky, in his speech to the Munich Security Conference, was not wrong about how the US, the EU, and NATO have handled this crisis. And not just for the past several months, but going back to at least Spring of 2014.
If the US and our NATO and non-NATO EU allies and partners wait until Putin escalates and reinvades/further invades to take actions to punish him then simply announcing you will won’t deter him. And as we’ve seen they haven’t deterred him! Especially if either we or our NATO and EU allies have already taken the most powerful tools off the table. We’re not going to cut Russia off from SWIFT. We’re not going to use every last bit of our FINCEN capabilities and our allies’ equivalents to scarf up or seize every last one of Putin’s assets, his family’s assets, and those of his oligarchs and their families. We’re not going to revoke visas and green cards. We’re not going to cut Russia off from the Internet. We’re not going to deny flight into or out of Russia and his vassal states of Belarus, Kazakhstan, or Chechnya or make it impossible for flight between them. We’re not going to put an embargo on ground and sea lines of commerce against Russia and Putin’s vassals.
While doing any of these preemptively might focus Putin’s mind, the reality is they are acts of war in and of themselves. So we won’t do them because waging a war for the right reasons, which engaging Russia to deter its aggression in Eastern Europe would be, is not something we can do because of Afghanistan and Iraq something something, harrumph.
We love applying sanctions because it sounds tough, but it never works. If it did Cuba and Iran would both be a democratic paradise.
And we’re sure as hell not going to put the military foot print in place to give him pause and by the time he does attack a NATO state, which will be Poland to connect Belarus and Kaliningrad where he’ll claim, despite it being bullshit, his actions are to protect ethnic Russians in the northeastern tip of Poland between the two who are being targeted because they’re ethnic Russians, we’ll be so far right of boom that the military response will be that much more prolonged and deadly because we’ll have to fight onto the objectives to clear them. And that’s provided we actually do anything and don’t remain frozen by Russia’s anecdotally articulated doctrine on using tactical nukes in conventional war despite it not being in their formal doctrine.
Russia has been waging war in Ukraine since 2014. They’ve been waging war in Georgia since 2008. They’ve been waging a low intensity and unconventional war against the US and our EU and NATO partners since between 2011 and 2014.
Perhaps reality will finally overtake wishful thinking. The time for the semantic games of whether what Putin has been doing and is doing is really war or is just warfare or something something cyber crime has long passed. Putin has made it clear by his actions and, often, by his words, regardless of what is or is not really motivating him, that he seeks to roll back everything that has happened within the global systems since the Soviet Union collapsed. And, if possible, the whole post World War II international order. Regardless of why, Putin is going to do what he’s going to do. Right now he is the driver of these events and we have to wait and see where he steers things.
The only question now is whether we have the will to stop him.
Open thread!
This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Russia, War in Ukraine
Ukrainians’ support for NATO membership has reached an all-time high amid the standoff between Russia and the West over Moscow's demand to permanently block Kyiv from the military alliancehttps://t.co/e2olJeKKCL
— The Moscow Times (@MoscowTimes) February 20, 2022
What Russians planning “will be extremely violent. It will cost the lives of Ukrainians and Russians, civilians and military,” @JakeSullivan46 on NBC. US intel suggests “there will be an even greater form of brutality, because this will not simply be some conventional war.” https://t.co/l4iwVCFVVU
— Jennifer Jacobs (@JenniferJJacobs) February 21, 2022
President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin have agreed in principle to a summit over Ukraine, offering a possible path out of one of the most dangerous European crises in decades https://t.co/XeMQsTtBco pic.twitter.com/9C7u35AihE
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 21, 2022
Biden-Putin summit can't solve anything without Ukraine, Kyiv says https://t.co/sihDU3n9oT pic.twitter.com/UmF0dxa0be
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 21, 2022
The Kremlin dismisses talk of a Biden-Putin summit as “premature”. Says there are “no concrete plans” for a summit. Macron said last night he had secured Putin & Biden’s agreement “in principle” https://t.co/Xu8vzp0G6F
— Liz Sly (@LizSly) February 21, 2022
I love Ambassador Taylor's quick & tactful shutting down of Chuck Todd's nonsense. "No, Chuck." https://t.co/xP2k1LrqPo
— Laura Seay (@texasinafrica) February 20, 2022
Recall at the start of Putin's military buildup around Ukraine, people quoted Lenin about probing and finding mush or steel. They wanted a military buildup, macho posturing.
Putin found steel, but it wasn't what those quoters expected. https://t.co/C4jjplBkQc
— Cheryl Rofer (@CherylRofer) February 21, 2022
How can this question be asked? Forget even about Suddetenland. How can this question be asked by anyone? How can a crime be condoned and recognized in order to deter more crime? This is insane. Shameful. Horrific. Fuck this kind of journalism. https://t.co/p6ST3pdMcq
— Slava Malamud (@SlavaMalamud) February 20, 2022
He also claims that the takeover of Crimea wasn't a military operation. This is OANN-level nonsense. https://t.co/xmEblbz5wi
— Noah Shachtman (@NoahShachtman) February 20, 2022
the drumbeat of extremely specific intelligence continues https://t.co/WKxkTqxIQ4
— Gerry Doyle (@mgerrydoyle) February 21, 2022
I applaud the Biden Administration and Intel Community for their willingness to declassify, in real time, our collection… from Moscow, to the ground in Dombass.
— William Evanina (@BillEvanina) February 21, 2022
U.S. embassy tells Americans: have an evacuation plan from Russia https://t.co/CSJXE7I43j pic.twitter.com/9WRScWPq51
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 21, 2022
Foreign Affairs Open Thread: The <del>March</del> February of FollyPost + Comments (129)
This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Proud to Be A Democrat, Russia, War in Ukraine
President Joe Biden made an impassioned appeal to Russian President Vladimir Putin to step back from war with Ukraine, speaking starkly of the ‘needless death and destruction’ Moscow could cause and international outrage Putin would face https://t.co/0f9mtqKlhp pic.twitter.com/23xDKX6Qka
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 16, 2022
I stand with Ukraine, and thank all the gods President Biden is the guy in the White House right now.
One putative deadline passes… https://t.co/yCzKe73SvR
— Cheryl Rofer (@CherylRofer) February 15, 2022
Pretty certain that if you loudly declare victory in a propaganda war it means you probably lost
— James Palmer (@BeijingPalmer) February 15, 2022
Ukraine says only it and NATO should determine membership https://t.co/W8T2Imitwu pic.twitter.com/GRdTM8KAvj
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 15, 2022
Ukrainians wary of Russian claims of withdrawal https://t.co/eWtR3aDfsD
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) February 16, 2022
Couldn't disagree more. Thus far, at any rate he has united the West, reminded NATO members of the alliance's importance, invigorated Ukrainian nationalism, and demonstrated that the US can track what he is up to. No need to be defeatist. https://t.co/RtkObwxbq6
— Eliot A Cohen (@EliotACohen) February 15, 2022
I think we know how this works: If Putin invades Ukraine, then Biden was too weak-kneed to stop it. If Putin doesn’t invade Ukraine, then Biden was making the whole thing up as a distraction.
— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) February 15, 2022
when Biden ended war in Afghanistan it was bad news for him
if Putin starts a war in Ukraine it’s bad news for Biden https://t.co/vDwhR5fJFd
— Eric Boehlert (@EricBoehlert) February 14, 2022
Wednesday Morning Open Thread: Ukraine, Russia, and UsPost + Comments (200)
This post is in: Foreign Affairs, War in Ukraine
For those in North America trying to grasp the size of Ukraine.
Wikimedia: https://t.co/aWXeWExTO1 pic.twitter.com/BO8MPni9Nu
— Alexander Lanoszka (@ALanoszka) February 13, 2022
Ukraine's Zelenskiy says he's making Wednesday, the day US intel indicated could be the date for a Russian attack on Kyiv, as public holiday.
— Jennifer Jacobs (@JenniferJJacobs) February 14, 2022
?Ukraine’s Zelenskiy spooks markets with what appeared to be a sarcastic comment about the rest of the world predicting a date for a Russian attack, which he said should be a day of unity instead, @business reports.
— Jennifer Jacobs (@JenniferJJacobs) February 14, 2022
“The aggressor is always peace-loving… he would prefer to take over our country unopposed.”
My favorite Clausewitz line is especially applicable today. Those who somehow buy that the country massing 150,000 troops on another’s border is not the aggressor should take it to heart
— Nicholas Grossman (@NGrossman81) February 13, 2022
"The path for diplomacy remains available if Russia chooses to engage constructively," @KJP46 says. "However, we are clear eyed about the prospects of that given the steps Russia is taking on the ground, in plain sight." pic.twitter.com/vFHu0cw7ul
— Jennifer Jacobs (@JenniferJJacobs) February 14, 2022
Ukraine-Russia crisis updates: Diplomatic efforts have entered a new round in a bid to head off what U.S. officials have warned could be an imminent Russian attack on Ukraine. https://t.co/iGvB2oPRDg
— AP Europe (@AP_Europe) February 14, 2022
Main Russian weekly news programme has stepped up rhetoric a bit. “Ukraine ready to kill again”; “West creating Cordon sanitaire to cut off Rus from Eur”. But it sounds flat compared to previous acidic narratives. If order has gone out to invade, tv guys haven’t yet been told pic.twitter.com/DosaqZHILg
— Oliver Carroll (@olliecarroll) February 13, 2022
Grateful for @AmbDanFried's clear-eyed analysis on #UkraineCrisis.
11th hour options include:
– show stick: send equipment to support prolonged resistance to possible Russian occupation
– offer carrot: a major “Helsinki 2.0" summit (citing @McFaul)https://t.co/UqGEKvzV8j
— Ryan Goodman (@rgoodlaw) February 13, 2022
"This next 10 days or so will be critical." A convergence of events could determine how the Ukraine crisis plays out. https://t.co/8cMdJJrzEo
— The Associated Press (@AP) February 13, 2022
The narrative that "Biden/the U.S. is afraid to confront Russia militarily" is really bothersome. It's not that we're afraid, it's that we're behaving responsibly, because *we*, not Russia, are responsible for the general security of both Europe and the larger world. (1/3)
— Zachery Tyson (@ZaknafeinDC) February 13, 2022
We didn't "confront Russia militarily" in '68 or '79, for similar reasons. Our responses, then as now, are calibrated via diplomatic, economic, and clandestine means both to avoid direct confrontation & provide aid to our partners to ensure an eventual Russian defeat. (3/3)
— Zachery Tyson (@ZaknafeinDC) February 13, 2022
At this point, no one has conceded anything to Putin. He now faces a choice between a potentially risky invasion with diplomatic and economic consequences, and pretending he didn’t mean it. I’m not sure how this amounts to winning.
— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) February 13, 2022
I think Putin is way in over his skis. He may be able to win militarily, but not strategically. He has played a bad hand very well for quite some time now, but it’s still a bad hand.
— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) February 13, 2022
This is such bullshit. Intel is routinely reported without underlying evidence that could compromise sources and methods and Jake Tapper knows that. Whether or not the skepticism is warranted, the quote lack of evidence is not unique. https://t.co/aA4CNYKWr1
— Tommy moderna-vaX-Topher (@tommyxtopher) February 13, 2022
Hard to argue with the results. All focus has been on US/UK intel and OSINT about the Russian build-up. Russian counter messaging including disinfo about Ukraine ACKCHOOALLY being the aggressor hasn't broken into western media outside of Tucker Carlson.
BIG shift from 2014. https://t.co/dGu9kk4mrR
— zeddy (@Zeddary) February 12, 2022
Riddle me this: how is the US saying “Russia better not invade Ukraine” a case of being -for- war? It feels like for some people trying to avert a war counts as warmongering and I really don’t get it.
— Hayes Brown (@HayesBrown) February 13, 2022
what kind of wild reverse psychology op do people think is happening? “oooh I sure would HATE it if Russia invaded Ukraine. Looking all vulnerable and at risk and geopolitically important. nobody [knowing glance] had better launch a war! hint hint.”
— Hayes Brown (@HayesBrown) February 13, 2022
anyway, barring some miracle that leaves Ukraine feeling secure against Russia and Moscow feeling chill towards NATO, the best case scenario for the US is Putin says “nah I’m good” and everything goes back to the status quo which is, to be clear, not war
— Hayes Brown (@HayesBrown) February 13, 2022
Just look at this provocative buildup of the Polish forces armed with lethal weapons supplied by Britain and France, we must find a diplomatic solution and address German security concerns and the unfair Versailles treaty! https://t.co/kuKqTl3oCo pic.twitter.com/pwZxAPtXjN
— Prisoner of consciousness ???? ???#NotOurTsar (@Mortis_Banned) February 12, 2022
Foreign Affairs Open Thread: The Situation in UkrainePost + Comments (95)
by Adam L Silverman| 312 Comments
This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine
I’m going to Bigfoot Cole here a bit, but I think it’s sort of necessary.
First, despite what the self proclaimed progressive left on Twitter and other social media platforms assert, Ukraine actually has agency. Whatever does and does not happen in the next week or several weeks or months is not because Putin has no agency and is merely responding to the US, which is the only actor in the global system with agency.
Putin does in fact have agency and he has escalated himself into a corner because what he’s really afraid of is the fact that the Ukrainians do in fact have agency. Whether Ukraine eventually decides to apply to join the EU and NATO is not the US’s decision. It is not any of the EU or NATO members’ decisions either. It is most certainly NOT Putin’s decision. It is Ukraine’s and the Ukrainians’ decisions to make. This is what has Putin so rattled. That in poll after poll after poll, 60% or more of Ukrainians consistently indicate that they want to ultimately join the EU and NATO.
Dear international media, when covering ??, please remember, Ukrainians are not pawns in a geopolitical game. We are real people, 40 mln, with our agency, ideas and aspirations. Majority of us (~60%) want to join the EU&NATO. We are ready to resist Russiahttps://t.co/eUn7oJdvO4
— Olga Tokariuk (@olgatokariuk) January 23, 2022
Putin has agency here too and the question regarding it is he really going to do something this stupid just because he’s escalated himself into a position where he can either deescalate and lose (some) face or go all in and ultimately have to live with the negative consequences.
The US and our NATO and other EU, but non-NATO allies also have agency here as well. The question for us regards what point do we determine that should Putin decide to go all in on the stupid that we have to engage beyond military aide, humanitarian aide, military training, and economic sanctions.
Also, the suggestion that Ukraine pursue their own version Finlandization is naive, poorly informed, just plain stupid, and the premier of Finland itself has said it would be folly and has made it clear that if Putin chooses war, they will make a priority request to join NATO. Finlandization wasn’t something Finland actually pursued, it was forced on them by the Soviet Union.
Second, the signals coming back are not encouraging right now.
BREAKING: US officially announces departure of @USEmbassyKyiv employees. “On February 12, 2022, the Department of State ordered the departure of most U.S. direct hire employees from Embassy Kyiv due to the continued threat of Russian military action.” pic.twitter.com/bz575MsJRL
— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) February 12, 2022
US Embassy in Ukraine says work will continue. Just not in Kyiv. https://t.co/UwC1nkmQ2C
— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) February 12, 2022
Russia confirms diplomatic drawdown, saying that it is “optimizing its staff” at its government offices in Ukraine. Cites “possible provocations by the Kyiv regime and third countries.” Says embassy continues to fulfill “key functions.” https://t.co/o97wipa1gK
— Andrew Roth (@Andrew__Roth) February 12, 2022
These actions do not definitely mean that Putin has decided to reinvade/further invade Ukraine, but these are generally not positive indicators.
Third and finally, Christo Grozev, who is Bellingcat’s executive director, has tweeted this out:
Two independent sources claim US utilities companies are placed on high alert, following peaks of malware deployment at many of them in the last days. Expectation is for simultaneous muscle-flexing cyber attacks on US companies.
— Christo Grozev (@christogrozev) February 11, 2022
This does not surprise me at all. I’ve been stating in assessments on Putin’s activities going back to 2017 that if Putin were to reinvade/further invade Ukraine or move on the Baltics or on the Finns, Norwegians, and/or Swedes, that he would try to use his cyber warfare capabilities to sow as much chaos as he could in the US, in the EU, and in NATO to make it harder to respond by dividing the attention of our and our allies’ governments. Right now, a plurality within the GOP, the conservative movement, and the conservative news media, social media, and digital media spheres are opposed to the US intervening to help Ukraine and openly pro-Putin and Russia in regard to what Putin is doing. The only good news right now is that the Democrats control both chambers of Congress, which will prevent the MAGA/Trumpist/revanchist GOP members of both chambers from hamstringing President Biden should he decide we have to move beyond aide and sanctions in our response.
I would strongly recommend, that just to be prudent, everyone fill up their vehicles, make sure you have a week to ten days worth of non-perishable food and water including enough for your pets, and if possible you top up your prescription medications if you can just in case.
You may all feel free to call me paranoid, but if you were looking to make it hard for Canada to assist with NATO right now, what would be better than to create a crisis in Ottawa and other key cities and locations in Canada that overwhelm the ability of the police and the civilian authorities to deal with the situation and therefore require the Canadian military to respond. We know that there is a hard core group of hard right, authoritarian extremists using the Canadian protests as cover to try to challenge and bring down the Canadian government. We also know that they are being bolstered, funded, and supported in their efforts by Americans and other non-Canadians. And we know that they’re trying to recreate what they’re doing in Canada here in the US.
Ultimately the only person who knows what Putin is going to do is Putin. And I’m not sure he has yet decided which of the bad choices he’s left himself with he’s going to choose. All we, our allies and partners, and the Ukrainians can do is wait, watch, and prepare ourselves.
Open thread!
by Adam L Silverman| 77 Comments
This post is in: America, Foreign Affairs, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine
In the comments to my post on Russia and Ukraine last night several people asked why I was very explicit about the force posture I would like to see happen to deter Russian aggression in Europe and against Ukraine. These were all excellent questions and they deserve a bit of attention and a response in something more than just a comment. Here’s what I wrote:
And this is why I think we are still moving far too slowly and are far too late in placing the necessary assets in place to back up our diplomacy and our use of economic power to try to deter Putin. Right now Putin is getting what he wants: bilateral recognition and negotiation with the US. Putin believes Russia is still a great power the way the Soviet Union was during the Cold War. Being able to negotiate with the US, publicly demand written answers – as if formal diplomatic communication would be done some other way – and then receive them because that’s simply how diplomacy is done allows Putin to claim that victory. In order to deter him, he has to be shown that we have the will and the capability to respond. Deploying some Operational Detachments Alpha and putting the equivalent of a brigade combat team and a half on standby is not going to cut it.
In order to actually demonstrate that we have the will and the capability to respond we would need to mobilize and deploy V Corps and all of 1st Armored Division (all combat brigades and the division artillery), plussed up with one brigade combat team each from 4th Infantry Division, 101st Airborne Division/Air Assault, the 82 Airborne Division, and the 1st Stryker Regiment. This should be accompanied by a country team from the 853rd Civil Affairs Brigade with a full complement of Civil Affairs Teams Alpha (CAT-As) and a country team from the 4th Psychological Operations Group’s 6th Psychological Operations Battalion to place Tactical PSYOP Teams (TPTs) into theater. I’d put the Corps headquarters in Poland, the Division headquarters in either Finland or Estonia, and distribute the conventional forces throughout Poland, Eastonia, Latvia, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. The Special Operations assets – Civil Affairs and PSYOP – go into Kyiv. Then I’d put the Wasp and Kearsarge Amphibious Warfare Groups (AWG) into theater. Wasp and her float off of Finland and Kearsarge and her float in the Black Sea. I’d keep the carrier group farther out for now. In fact I’d put it in the Irish Sea and even more specifically in the “Irish Box” between Ireland and England. I’d also want Air Force Special Operations – Air Commandos and Para-Rescue, as well as forward observer controllers who paint targets – moved into theater. I’d also want our NATO allies to keep doing what they’re doing, put moving three or four Dutch F-16s to Poland isn’t sufficient either.
Just so that everyone else knows, and courtesy of Leto, the forward observer controllers are formally referred to as Tactical Air Controllers (TACs) and a group of them are known as a Tactical Air Control Party (TACP).
There are three reasons for the suggestions I made last night and that I’ve copied and pasted above. The first is the strategist’s and policy maker’s dilemma: how much risk is one willing to assume. Right now every time something seems to bring some clarity to what Putin may be doing or might be planning to do something else then brings a new layer of obscurity to the situation. This means that President Biden and his team, as well as NATO’s leadership, the leadership of our EU partners and allies, and of our non-NATO European partners and allies have to determine how much risk they want to assume given that things are not particularly clear. Rotating an appropriate amount of military capability into the theater provides us with the ability to manage and mitigate the potential risk arising from Putin’s actions. They give us the ability to have a warm start should that unfortunately be necessary. I was assigned, under temporary assigned control (TACON), to the US Army Europe Commanding General in 2014. I was at his headquarters in January 2014 when the signals began to become clear that Putin was going to invade Ukraine. And, as a result, I know what it is like when the theater army commanding general does not have enough capability to be able to undertake his contingency plan to respond should it become necessary to do so.
Let me just take a moment and anticipate a rebuttal to this. Specifically that I’m letting my experience from 2014 color my judgement now. This is a legitimate question. I don’t think it is happening though. Our military footprint in the EU is not what it was even a decade ago despite some rotating, short term deployments to Poland. Given that we’ve steadily drawn down our military presence in the EU and relocated back to the US, temporarily relocating a force large enough to allow us to credibly respond if necessary would make sense in terms of mitigating and managing risk.
The second reason that I think we should do an increase way beyond just placing 8,500 personnel on standby is to reassure our allies. Sweden and Finland, which are not NATO allies, but do have security partnerships with the US, as well as Norway, which is a NATO member, are all exceedingly concerned regarding Putin’s actions. So are our NATO allies Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. The Swedes have sent military personnel to reinforce Gotland because senior Russian military and civilian officials, as well as state controlled Russian media have been agitating to try to take it. Never mind that the last time non-Swedes tried this it got their stångas kicked. Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania see themselves as the frontline of conflict if Putin decides to probe for mush and, along with Poland, have moved towards a war footing just to be ready.
The need to reassure our allies is just as important as the need to deter our potential adversaries. It is especially important in order to further rebuild the trust that was eroded during the Trump administration when Trump would never miss an opportunity to denigrate our alliances, crap all over our allies, and suck up to the leaders of hostile powers and potential peer competitors. Usually all at the same time. Remember, Trump, as he was scheming to bring his autogolpe to successful fruition also ordered Acting Secretary of Defense Miller to pull all of our military personnel out of Germany by the end of January 2021. It is understandable if you had forgotten this. I can assure you that our allies and partners certainly have not forgotten. Reassurance, like deterrence, also helps to manage and mitigate risk.
The third and final reason I made the suggestion is that a lot of people are throwing around that what President Biden and his team are proposing is to small a response, but they rarely put down specifics. Some of this is because the people making the criticisms are just criticizing in order to criticize. Some just don’t have the expertise and experience to name specific elements in specific amounts. I am not criticizing just to criticize. I have either worked on or closely followed this problem set since January 2014. I have spent a lot of time thinking about what might be necessary, in terms of troop deployments, to give us a successful warm start if Putin decided he really wanted to challenge the US and NATO. I’m not just making lists to make lists.
For instance, there’s a reason I’ve got Civil Affairs built into this. Specifically because they’ve been working, albeit slowly due to a variety of constraints, to reconstitute their historic mission from World War II: military support to government. And the reason I named this specific Civil Affairs brigade is that among its leadership is the colonel that did the vast, vast majority of the concept development to bring this important and historic capability back. No one knows it better. And I know this because I was the subject matter expert assigned to assist him by his commanding officer at the time. This wasn’t just: I’ll throw some CA bubbas in so they’re not left out. The same thing with the PSYOP teams. Yes, as I’ve indicated several times, I’ve done work with the Army PSYOP community over the years, but given that Russian military doctrine is to never begin kinetic operations until the theater has been prepared through psychological and information operations, it would make sense to put the tactical PSYOPers where they can do the most good. I will suggest, with a day’s worth of reflection, that they should go to Estonia, which has worked very hard to build an effective counter-PSYOP capability.
We can fairly quickly lay on an extended war game with our NATO and non-NATO allies, similar to what the Russians are doing with the Belarusians, and conduct the deployment within that dynamic. But, regardless, having the capabilities in place to respond if necessary is always better than not having them when you need them.
Just one final point, as Gin & Tonic pointed out in a comment to BettyC’s post on Ukraine earlier today, this thread is spot on! Specifically the author’s discussion of the reality that for Ukraine, they are and have been at war with Russia, what the author refers too as permanent war, since at least 2014.
7/ The real takeaway for those who would help Ukraine is to understand this reality and how to respond to it, which is to adopt a permanent opposition to Kremlin goals on every front, civilian and military, and every slice of "grey zone" in between.
— Edward Hunter Christie (@EHunterChristie) January 28, 2022
This is why I have been saying, over and over and over, and will continue to do so, since I began writing on the front page here that we are at war. It may not be a kinetic war. It may not be a lethal war. Or, at least not always, but we are and have been at war with Russia since at least 2014 and most likely since late 2011/early 2012. Putin and the Russians certainly think so and have acted accordingly for the past 8 to 11 years. It would behoove us to finally begin to take this to heart and act accordingly.
I’ll leave it there.
Open thread!
The Strategist’s & Policy Maker’s Dilemma: Assumption of RiskPost + Comments (77)