From Yahoo:
“Russia still has a military
edge over Ukraine, but Ukraine has plans to make a future war more costly for
Moscow”
(Ukrainian troops train with
tanks in the Donbas region, April 18, 2021.)
Russia's recent military buildup
on its border with Ukraine pushed tensions to their highest point in years. US
defense officials said that Russian force was bigger than the one that massed
in 2014, when Russian seized Crimea. During that fighting, Ukraine's military
was at a low point, but Kyiv has rebuilt its forces to ensure a future conflict
is costly for its adversary. In April, Russia conducted a massive military
buildup about 100 miles from its border with Ukraine, which increased tensions,
stoked fighting between Ukrainian and separatist forces, and worried many that
another invasion was imminent. The buildup included over 100,000 troops, over
1,000 military vehicles, 200 aircraft, and some 60 warships - including vessels
from as far away as the Northern Fleet and Caspian Flotilla. The force was
"certainly bigger" than the one that invaded Ukraine in 2014,
according to the Pentagon .The moves, which Russian officials said were routine
training exercises, drew warnings from world leaders and pledges of support for
Ukraine. By April 22, the Russian military had ordered a pullback, though it
instructed its forces to leave behind heavy weaponry for future drills. It was
the closest to region has come to full-fledged fighting in years. In the past,
Ukraine was largely unprepared for war. Today, however, its military is in a much
stronger position and is making sure that any future hostilities have a high
price for their adversary.
2 decades of decay Ukraine's
military was in a sorry state in 2014, when Russia seized Crimea and backed an
invasion of eastern Ukraine. By 2014, after more than two decades of
peace, Ukraine's military had shrunk to just 140,000 troops - only 6,000 of
whom were ready for combat. Additionally, much of its high-end equipment,
including some of the newest gear produced by its domestic arms industry, was
sold to foreign countries. The annexation of Crimea also had a
devastating impact on Ukraine's navy, which Kyiv says lost 75% of its
personnel, most of its bases, and two-thirds of its ships - including its only
submarine and most of its modern vessels. As fighting intensified,
Ukraine was heavily reliant on civilians to supply frontline soldiers with
things like food, fuel, clothing, and communication equipment. Volunteer
battalions also played important roles. When Russia intervened in the
conflict in late August 2014, the Ukrainian military was driven back, quickly
reversing most of the progress it made in the months before.
Building a 'battle-hardened'
force Despite the setbacks, Ukraine's military is much larger and much
stronger today. "There's quite a few improvements," Andrew
Radin, a political scientist with the RAND Corporation think tank, told
Insider. Radin, who helped write recommendations on security-sector
reform for the Ukrainian government, described Ukraine's current force as
"a battle-hardened military, both in terms of volunteer personnel ... as
well as quite a number of veterans who are still available as reservists."
Ukraine has made progress in adopting NATO standards and practices, and its
forces - 255,000 active-duty personnel and 900,000 reservists - train regularly
with the US and other NATO militaries. Ukraine increased its defense
budget to 4.1% of GDP in 2020, and much of that money has gone to rearming. In
addition to US-made Javelin anti-tank missiles, the US has supplied Ukraine
with armored Humvees, inflatable boats, radios, counterbattery artillery
systems, and multiple Island-class patrol boats. Ukraine is also acquiring Turkish-made
Bayrakter TB2 drones, hoping to buy up to 48 of them. TB2s used by Azerbaijan
were extremely effective against Armenian military targets during their brief
war late last year. TB2s have also reportedly been effective against
Russian Pantsir-S1 air-defense systems in Libya and Syria. Pantsir-S1s have
been spotted in Ukraine, and Russian officials have expressed dismay about TB2
drones operating there. Ukraine's domestic defense industry is
sophisticated and growing. Ukroboronprom, the state-owned defense conglomerate,
is producing modern, domestically designed armored personnel carriers like the
BTR-3 and BTR-4 for the Ukrainian Army. A number of programs are set to
increase Ukraine's military capability in the future. Kyiv has signed a
deal with Turkey for an unknown number Ada-class corvettes, which can fire
anti-ship missiles. Ukraine's navy also hopes to acquire up to 16 new Mark VI
patrol boats from the US, at least two of which will be delivered by the end of
2022.
Raising the costs for Russia Ukraine
still faces plenty of challenges. Its air force, for instance, has not received
new aircraft in over two decades, and its top general has warned that most of
its warplanes may be unusable in the next decade. Ukraine is also
reforming Ukroboronprom to both fight corruption and make the defense industry
more efficient and attractive to Western investors and partners. But the
greatest challenge is the fact that Russia, with more resources and a much
larger population, is just far stronger than Ukraine can ever hope to be on its
own. Russia's force of nearly 1 million activity-duty troops and 2
million reservists and its total defense spending dwarf those of Ukraine.
Russia's fleets of aircraft, ground vehicles, and warships vastly outnumber and
overpower those of its smaller neighbor as well. Ukraine also needs to
worry about how Russia will support the separatists in its territory at least
as much as it does about the separatists themselves. While Kyiv may be
able to handle the separatists on its own, "at this point in the conflict
it's hard to separate the separatists from the Russians," Radin said,
adding that Moscow "can increase that support to counteract whatever force
Ukraine can bring to bear." "It's ultimately, from the
Ukrainian perspective, about what level of support Russia is going to provide,"
Radin said. Ukraine, with support from Western countries, has to focus
its investments on military capabilities that in a larger conflict will force
the separatists and the Russians to expend large amounts of men and resources.
"The question comes down to how is the Ukrainian army able to increase
the cost for Russia of escalations, and how are they able to do that on their
own?" Radin said.
^ Ukraine is come a long way
since 2014. They got rid of a Dictator. They have modernized their Military to
Western Standards and they have modernized their country into a real Democracy.
Ukraine’s Military may be small, but they have something Russia doesn’t – the desire
to free their homeland from foreign occupation. Russia and Putin are just
dragging their feet in Donbas and Crimea because they don’t want to admit defeat,
but eventually the Donbas War will end and annexed-Crimea will be returned to
Ukraine and there will be peace once again. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russia-still-military-edge-over-122900538.html
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