From Reuters:
“Q+A What is the risk of a war
between Russia and Ukraine?”
(A serviceman of the Ukrainian
Armed Forces takes part in military drills at a training ground near the border
with Russian-annexed Crimea in Kherson region, Ukraine, in this handout picture
released by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine press service
November 17, 2021.)
Russian troop movements near
Ukraine have drawn concern from Kyiv and the United States that it might be
considering attacking its neighbour. Here is a look at some of the questions
that raises.
WHAT ARE THE TWO SIDES SAYING
ABOUT THE RISK OF CONFLICT? Russia denies threatening anyone and says it
can deploy its troops on its own territory as it pleases. It has accused
Ukraine and NATO of whipping up tensions and suggested Kyiv might be preparing
to try to seize back two eastern regions controlled by pro-Russian separatists
since 2014. Russia's foreign spy agency this week compared the situation with
the build-up to a 2008 war in which Russia's forces crushed those of
neighbouring Georgia. Ukraine
denies planning any such offensive and says Russia has more than 92,000 troops
massed near its borders for a possible attack.
HOW LIKELY IS A RUSSIAN
INVASION? Reuters spoke to more than a dozen sources, including Western
intelligence officials and Russians familiar with Kremlin thinking, and nearly
all agreed that an invasion is unlikely to be imminent. A more plausible
scenario, they said, was that President Vladimir Putin is using the credible
threat of military force to signal that Russia is serious about defending its
"red lines" on Ukraine. It has stated numerous times in recent weeks
that it is not prepared to accept the supply of NATO weapons to Ukraine or any
NATO military presence there, let alone the prospect of eventual Ukrainian
membership of the alliance. Putin, these sources added, is adept at escalating
and de-escalating crises - as he did in the spring, when more than 100,000
Russian troops gathered near Ukraine's border and subsequently pulled back. In
this way, he is keeping Russia's opponents guessing about his intentions and
reminding the West that Russia is a force to be reckoned with.
IF IT DID COME TO WAR, WHAT
MIGHT THAT LOOK LIKE? Russia's armed forces have 900,000 active personnel
compared with 209,000 for Ukraine, an advantage of more than four to one,
according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). But
Samir Puri, senior fellow in hybrid warfare at the IISS, said the real
advantage for Russia was that it already has proxies fighting in the separatist
war in eastern Ukraine, giving it the option to link up with them and extend
the area already under their control. Were it to go for a broader invasion, he said,
it could contemplate attacking from the north (from Russia and its ally
Belarus), from the east or from the south (via Crimea, which Russia seized from
Ukraine in 2014), with a naval assault on the cities of Odessa and Mariupol.
HOW PREPARED IS UKRAINE TO
DEFEND ITSELF? Ukraine is significantly stronger militarily than in 2014,
when it lost Crimea to Russia without a real fight. It has advanced anti-tank
missiles supplied by Washington, and could draw on U.S. intelligence support.
But it would still face an overwhelming adversary - the Russian advantage in
battle tanks, for example, is more than three to one. "For Ukraine,
the issue would be ... to resist as much as they can, pray for assistance from
the West, and ultimately fight back," said Mathieu Boulegue, a research
fellow at London's Chatham House think-tank. "If Russia invades in full,
the question for Kyiv will be to mount counter-insurrection-style warfare to
make the cost of invasion tremendous for Russia."
WHAT ELSE MIGHT DETER MOSCOW? The
West imposed sanctions on Russia after the seizure of Crimea and could add
painful new measures, such as preventing it from pumping Russian gas through
the newly built Nord Stream 2 pipeline to Germany. Putin would risk a complete
rupture of relations with the West if he invaded. It is unclear how far NATO
might come to the defence of Ukraine, something that would be fraught with risk
for all sides. Ukraine is not a member of NATO, but doing nothing would leave
the alliance looking irrelevant. "This is the brinkmanship game
that is playing out. Both in NATO in Brussels and in Moscow there will be
calculations around where the escalatory steps could lead. If NATO was to
deploy to fight ... the Russians would see this as an unbelievable
escalation," said Puri. "Whether (Ukraine) ends up as a
battleground I think is unlikely - but really that's the issue that Russia and
NATO are fencing around at the moment in Ukraine."
^ I think Russia will try to
invade the rest of Ukraine sometime next year so Ukraine, NATO, the US and all
the other countries need to be prepared to stop them. ^
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/qa-what-is-risk-war-between-russia-ukraine-2021-11-23/
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