By Chris Trotter*
I’m what's known, on the Left, as a “Tankie”. That is to say I am not a reflexive opponent of the Russian regime. In the Georgian border regions; in Syria; and until 24 February 2022, in the Ukraine; I have, by and large, been sympathetic to the aims and objectives of the Russian Federation. More specifically, right up until this past week, I have had a sneaking admiration for the way in which President Vladimir Putin, in spite of finding himself in some extremely difficult positions, has nevertheless managed to checkmate his Western opponents.
But that’s all over now. It’s one thing to silence with tanks and artillery the Washington-inspired braggadocio of Georgia’s opportunistic leader. Or, to throw Russia’s military support behind the least worst protagonist in the Syrian civil war. But, to order a full-scale invasion on Ukraine? That’s not Chess, that’s Draughts – and not even very good Draughts. Putin has over-reached himself – quite possibly fatally.
It is difficult to understand why Putin couldn’t understand just how much ground he had made, diplomatically, by staging large-scale military manoeuvres on the Ukrainian border. The increasingly hysterical shrieks and yells emerging from Washington and NATO Headquarters in Brussels were achieving nothing useful for the West – apart from validating Putin’s critiques of NATO’s expansionist doctrine. As prediction after prediction of a Russian invasion of Ukraine proved inexact, Moscow gave every indication of being grimly amused. The Russian talent for irony and sarcasm was on full display.
Even better, the hysterical reactions of Washington and Brussels, were prompting the appearance of some no doubt very satisfying (to Moscow) cracks in the NATO alliance. To the evident delight of the Russian foreign ministry, Germany and France (both of which are guilty of invading Russia in the past, and then paying a terrible price for their aggression) took up their roles as guarantors of the Minsk Accords. For the price of an extended round of annual manoeuvres, the Russian Federation, and its Belarussian ally, were on the verge of reaping a bountiful diplomatic harvest.
So, what went wrong? How was the Kremlin’s master Chess-player suddenly robbed of both his strategic and his tactical senses?
In the harsh light of Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine, during which so many of the predictions and descriptions of the Russian armed forces’ battle-plans have been proved correct, it is surely reasonable to speculate that the Americans may have cracked the Russian military codes, giving them full access to all of the Kremlin’s strategic and tactical conversations. Or, they may have a highly-placed spy on the inside who is relaying to them the same information. They may even have both.
For Putin, a political leader schooled in the security services of the old Soviet Union, the revelation of such a catastrophic security breach would be devastating. The paranoid style of politics that pervaded the old KGB would have been intensified in Putin, the former KGB officer, to the point where he may simply have stopped thinking clearly.
If the debilitating revelation that Russia’s national security had been fundamentally compromised was further aggravated by serious disinformation concerning the character and intentions of the Ukrainian Government, then Putin’s descent into an enraged and murderous paranoia is readily explained.
Whatever happened, it was clear, several days out from the invasion, that something in Moscow had changed. RT, the Federation’s worldwide propaganda arm (now unavailable on New Zealand’s Sky Network, it’s former host) seemed to flounder as it struggled to come to grips with the Kremlin’s rapidly darkening tone.
Up until Putin’s rambling history lecture of 22 February, immediately followed by the recognition of the Donetsk and Luhansk breakaway republics, it had seemed as though RT’s leading lights were perfecting their scornful one-liners for the day Russia’s military forces on the Ukrainian border proved NATO wrong by simply turning around and returning to barracks.
Certainly, that was the outcome for which Putin’s government had been preparing the Russian people over the preceding weeks and months – and, it must be said, it was also the outcome the Ukrainians were expecting. Very few people on either side of the border wanted, or were prepared for, a full-scale invasion. The very fact that spontaneous anti-war rallies erupted all over the Russian Federation bears testimony to the shock and dismay provoked by Putin’s aggression against his fellow Slavs.
It is instructive to contrast Putin’s total failure to prepare his people for a full-scale invasion of Ukraine with the many months George W. Bush spent convincing the American people that his equally illegal invasion of Iraq was both militarily necessary and morally justified.
One is reminded of the decidedly unenthusiastic reception given to the Wehrmacht’s tanks as they rolled through the streets of Berlin in the early stages of the so-called “Munich Crisis” of September 1938. The German people did not want war with Britain and France, which is why they cheered to the echo the peacemaker, Neville Chamberlain, as he made his way through the streets of Munich – much to the disgust of the Fuhrer, who most emphatically did want war with Czechoslovakia.
It is worth contemplating the historical lessons of the Munich Crisis in relation to the crisis currently unfolding in Ukraine. Had Chamberlain, backed by France and Italy, not signed over the largely German-speaking Sudetenland to Adolf Hitler and, instead, warned him that Czechoslovakia would not be abandoned, then it is highly likely that Hitler’s generals (who were quite unconvinced that Germany could win such a war) would have deposed him in a military coup d’état. Had that happened, it is entirely possible that the Second World War could have been avoided.
The Russian Federation’s possession of nuclear weapons rules out any overt military response on the part of NATO, but the harshness of the economic sanctions regime it has imposed is bound to give Putin’s generals and oligarchs pause.
Nothing is more expensive than full-scale war. While, geographically, Russia may be a vast country, economically it is smaller than Italy. Far from heralding the restoration of Russian greatness, a drawn-out war against Ukrainian resistance fighters (supported and supplied by a ferociously united West) coupled with the debilitating economic and political effects of swingeing sanctions (not to mention the financial and human costs of a prolonged occupation) can only weaken the Russian Federation profoundly.
Even from the perspective of hard-line Russian nationalists, Putin’s wild gambit makes no sense. Indeed, those of a Machiavellian disposition among the Russian elites may come to the conclusion that some of Putin’s more rational geopolitical objectives stand a much greater chance of being achieved if Putin is no longer on the scene. Amidst the palpable and near universal relief which a change of regime in Moscow, followed by the withdrawal of all Russian forces from Ukraine, would undoubtedly bring, a comprehensive revision of European security arrangements might end up being welcomed – by all sides.
As matters now stand, however, Putin has conjured into being the very strategic nightmare he spent the last 20 years attempting to forestall. His actions have given all the nations of Western and Eastern Europe a terrifying reminder of the wisdom of banding together against the Russian Bear.
Ironically, the Ukrainians Putin dismissed as “drug addicts and neo-Nazis” stand revealed as heroes and patriots: men and women willing to lay down their lives for their country. Certainly, President Volodymyr Zelensky has demonstrated communication skills even more impressive than those of our own Jacinda Ardern. His social-media broadcast from the heart of besieged Kyiv was nothing short of inspirational. No one, now, is interested in accusations of undue Washington influence, widespread corruption, and neo-Nazi militias.
Russia’s “tankie” support in the West was based on Putin’s moral, political and military jiu-jitsu: his hitherto impressive knack for using the weight and power of his Western antagonists against them; and his skill at exposing the crass hypocrisy of those powers who have never hesitated to commit the very same sins they are forever attributing to Russia.
But, there is nothing clever about Putin’s invasion of the Ukraine. It will achieve nothing but massive material destruction and untold human suffering. Even worse, from the perspective of the unfortunate Russian people, Putin’s invasion has provided an ex post facto justification for their enemies’ most predatory plans.
As the deeply cynical, but nonetheless brilliant, French statesman, Charles Maurice Talleyrand (1754-1838) said of Napoleon’s ill-judged decision to abduct and execute the politically unfortunate Duke d’Enghien:
“This is worse than a crime, it’s a mistake.”
54 Comments
This is the best historical timeline and current situation breakdown I have found to date...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAEybTns0Lg&t=3697s
and another good one from one of the best political channels on YouTube IMO...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugaZ3W47QaE
This playlist is excellent re Russia and the West featuring Stephen H Cohen...
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5wue8oAUyGpZNzMAMIFfH8UkqAUdIz9z
No mention here of China, the CCP. Yet Putin was in such cabinet lengthily during the Olympics. Has China not poked the bear, but instead just nudged it towards the brink? A further weakened Russia offers China expansion opportunities, starting with Mongolia then to the west?
CT's first paragraph is somewhat of a surprise. As an avowed leftist, a 'socialist' if you will, he admits to "In the Georgian border regions; in Syria; and until 24 February 2022, in the Ukraine; I have, by and large, been sympathetic to the aims and objectives of the Russian Federation. More specifically, right up until this past week, I have had a sneaking admiration for the way in which President Vladimir Putin, in spite of finding himself in some extremely difficult positions, has nevertheless managed to checkmate his Western opponents." so he has been in favour of Putin propping up autocrats and dictators? A report last week listed many that Putin has supported, and none were, if I recall correctly, a popular democratically elected government.
So rather than being a proponent of the people, he's actually a supporter of strongmen autocrats and dictators who will stoop as low as they need to build and preserve their power?
Indeed this article largely analyses Putin's failure to correctly read the political landscape, and his actions as a politician rather than decrying the crimes he is committing against the Ukrainian people or the threat he is posing to the rest of the world?
Recall some time back a report of a gun battle in Syria between A USA force and Russians said to be of the “mercenary” type but nevertheless armed to the full Russian capability. Well the Americans annihilated them in short order. Now reports of Russians in Ukraine no more than raw conscripts. Russia exposed as militarily overestimated?
I seem to remember that happened with the all of the wall. The US learned that the Soviet equipment was not anywhere near as good as they had thought. But there are counter balances - another quote from history 'quantity has a quality all of its own'. Sheer numbers can seriously overwhelm high technology forces. But at the moment Putin's forces look set to fight some nasty urban warfare against ordinary folk if they want to occupy the cities in Ukraine. That will cost him huge amounts of resources as history should teach him. Perhaps he should read up on the siege of Leningrad?
From memory the initial German commander of Army Group North Von Leeb was far too slow in the attack on Leningrad. So too was Von Bock when Hitler swivelled from Moscow to Stalingrad. These were veteran Field Marshalls and went stolidly by the text book. Ensure you have sufficient power before advancing, ensure supply lines are not exposed, ensure your flanks are covered. This infuriated generals such as Guderian and their Panzer tactics of lightning fast sorties, striking confusion & panic , forcing retreat ie the Blitzreig, before defences could set, before the enemy could regroup & reinforce.
Not forgetting thou, the French and Polish Calvary, was still comprised with horse cavalry. Hardly a foil for a Panzer attack with speed and no real weapons to counter.
Even to repeat that tactical surprise later in the war became far more difficult, and in today's war, modern defensive measures and weapons negate that somewhat.
No the French heavily outnumbered German armour & neither were their tanks inferior. Apart from De Gaulle the French generals were useless. Panzer tactics by speed and surprise completely undid the French who in WW1 tactics tied their armour up as infantry support. Still the Germans were not all Guderian & Rommel. Famous story that Guderian had been held back by FM Von Kleist but managed to get through to superior FM Von List who gave him the order to go ahead and “reconnoiter in force.”
ps. V D Hanson’s “The Second World Wars” tells it all.
Wasn't Syria's uprising an extension of the Arab spring? Which in turn had roots in rapidly rising food staple prices caused by restrictions on grain exports from Russia? Grain restrictions largely caused by drought caused crop failure. Drought amplified by heating caused by burning fossil carbon that Russia sells and Putin denies exists?
Or... the more chilling option - you don't have to worry about a decent NATO build-up in the next states on your hit-list if no one thinks you can credibly muster an invasion force. I'm not sure how you stage war-games for weeks on the border and then run out of fuel in the first ten minutes of a game.
I refuse to believe that Putin has suddenly lost his eye for this stuff in such a dramatic way. There's an endgame here of some kind - whatever credibility and international hits he's taking will be worth it, in his mind. So what could justify it? That's the real concern IMO.
I think he has simply overestimated his ability relying on yes men in the military who would be to frightened to tell him his limitations, coupled with believing his own propaganda that Ukrainians will welcome him and his crooked cronies as saviours from his self described nazi's. He will likely lash out using more powerful weapons such as the thermal missiles he has apparently brought up leading to huge loss of life and subsequent condemnation by more around the world including China. China will be watching this with particular interest after having set the useful fool on his way .
It's very easy to get that from what we can see on the ground, yes. But the price of making that as an assumption is catastrophic if it turns out to be incorrect. I simply can't believe a man who basically outfoxed the US on cyber-crime, intelligence and foreign policy for years suddenly made the most basic and established error in trying to blitzkrieg into the country next door. This isn't some front thousands of kilometres from the Motherland, this is literally a hop across the border. It just doesn't add up.
Imagine he was hoping Ukraine would roll over, capitulate, it's leaders disappear into exile and believes his own distorted propaganda that he's some sort of much loved savior to be welcomed with open arms? Perhaps he's infected with the same delusions of grandeur all lifetime leaders seem to eventually suffer? One way or another, this could be Putin's Waterloo and he knows it, hence his nuclear threat.
Putin's friends are Russian oligarchs; they have a habit of popping overseas, living it up and buying football clubs. He may have assumed Ukrainians are similar - Putin may have thought everyone of significance would run away (as per recent events in Afghanistan). Maybe they are more like Churchill and the Bristish govt with even the previous appeasers changing their tune once war was declared. I know no Ukrainians so included 'maybe's. It is easy to be misled if all your staff are fawning, you spend too long in the wrong company and are out of touch with public opinion.
Oh no, it's absolutely true. It's right here at about 1:28:00. Unfortunately it loses its humour somewhat without speaking Russian. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnU8NXEljk4&t=1371s&ab_channel=%D0%9D%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%8F%D1%89%D0%B5%D0%B5%D0%92%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%BC%D1%8F
That is a hilariously daft explanation (I assume you must have got it from a Russian apologist source). Armoured vehicles (including tanks) have their weakest armour at the rear - no tanker in his right mind is going to consent willingly to stripping his vehicle of mobility to allow an attack from 360 degrees. That is why when you see tanks 'retreat' they do it in full reverse to present their more protected front armour to the likely point of attack. Given that anti tank missiles these days have ranges of several kilometers you don't even need to get that close - just merely work around the rear of an immobile target for a killing shot. No driver of an armoured vehicle in the history of the world ever gave away mobility in a contested area so as to be 'ready later on'. Movement is one of the main things that protect such vehicles.
They ran out of fuel - their logistics are crap. No-one should be surprised (and the Ukrainians have been blowing up their supply vehicles).
He wants to narrow the Carpathian gap, and has to do it now before Ukraine gets the weapons and is strong enough to repel an attack 5 - 10 years from now. His probes around Kyev and the east are being repelled because he's sacrificing his greenest and working out where to send his Spetsnaz and concentrate his firepower. He's been planning this since 2014 so is ready. Don't underestimate him, he's wily and has played a bad hand well. The West should have put in place a Marshall plan after the fall of communism to avoid corrupt dictators like this getting their hands on the steering wheel. That would've been cheaper than the price we'll pay now.
"The West should have put in place a Marshall plan after the fall of communism to avoid corrupt dictators like this" Well, we don't know Putin was avoidable, but agree, the cold war hatred of Russia from extreme capitalists certainly humiliated and flushed Russia down the toilet. I think it was Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" had an illuminating section on the wests treatment of Russia.
You seem to have a good opinion of Lenin.
The figures of victims of Leninism, from November 1917 to January 1924
- More than a million people murdered for political or religious reasons.
- Between 300,000 and 500,000 Cossacks killed.
- Hundreds of thousands of workers and peasants killed for striking.
- 240,000 killed in the suppression of the Tambov rebellion.
- More than 50,000 white prisoners of war executed.
- Between 3.9 million and 7.75 million deaths from famines among Russians, Kazakhs and Tatars.
So many people seem to assume Putin has lost the plot. I disagree, this has clearly been planned for a long time, and it seems to be following an operational strategy designed to minimise casualties. Rather than hold a line Ukraine has concentrated its military inside its major cities, which will increase civilian casualties. The worst thing would be for Russia to force a quick victory by overwhelming firepower in the middle of Kyiv.
There is a lot of propaganda from both sides but it does seem like Ukraine is very desperate, giving away guns to anybody, no age limits to enlistment and establishing military hardware in residential zones. It's not the kind of thing that would happen if the Russians were not such an overwhelming force.
Russia formally warned that cutting off from SWIFT would be viewed as an act of war so it's no surprise that the nuclear forces are on special mode of combat duty.
People should recall when the US invaded Iraq the same accusations were leveled, such as "taking too long!", "resistance greater than expected!".
Ever since the Wehrmacht's so-called blitzkrieg in WW2 there has been a bit of a fetish for this style of warfare. This doctrine is useful when you are facing a somewhat superior opponent and need to overcome that with a highly mobile shock attack with forward commanders making snap decisions as they go along. It does usually result in high casualties here and there though.
If you have a huge advantage and are on the offensive why not take it slowly and carefully? Wait for supply lines to catch up. Carefully reconnoiter ahead with drones.
That's what I would do. Having your convoys wrecked and burnt and your soldiers strewn about or taken prisoner is a very bad look and just not worth risking for just the sake of a rapid victory when it's not necessary.
There you go, Zachary Smith rewrites Sun Tzu!
Well if you follow the principles of Zhukov you are spot on. It tends to be forgotten that he perfected his wide sweeping encirclements in the Mongolia region 1939, where the Russians destroyed the Japanese. This the Wehrmacht knew, and were about to receive. Once he got to stop Stalin meddling Zhukov took control. Massed artillery & armour, widespread sweeping up infantry, find the weak spots, Romanians, Hungarians, Italians around and through you go, time after time. Text book outflanking with superior power. That was used to re-take even Kharkov twice. Different today though from the look of it.
'Certainly, President Volodymyr Zelensky has demonstrated communication skills even more impressive than those of our own Jacinda Ardern. His social-media broadcast from the heart of besieged Kyiv was nothing short of inspirational.'
There is so much right, and so much wrong in this statement.
Zelensky speaking direct to his attackers and the world, won't leave and is willing to die to uphold the democratic ideals of Ukraine.
Ardern won't speak to the protestors, who say she is not holding up the democratic ideals of NZ.
Hardly a like-for-like comparison on impressive communication skills.
The economic sanctions carve out energy, which is their major export, making the sanctions a toothless tiger. Russia will still be making 700 Million US$ a day in gas exports and have made agreements with China regarding supplementing Chinas food security losses from Ukraine in agricultural products. Plus, Russia planned for this since 2014 by reducing their national debt, increasing prices to stock pile foreign currencies and gold, ensuring sanctions would hurt even less. They will have to tighten their belts again, but Russians are rather practiced at that now. The average Russian has far less distance to fall in relation to living standards than that of a western citizen in an economic depression.
We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.
Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.