Rebane's Ruminations
March 2022
S M T W T F S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

ARCHIVES


OUR LINKS


YubaNet
White House Blog
Watts Up With That?
The Union
Sierra Thread
RL “Bob” Crabb
Barry Pruett Blog

George Rebane

Allowing Russia to exercise asymmetric control of Ukraine’s airspace during its unwarranted, illegal, and rapacious invasion of the country is a big mistake.  At every turn in this war and the lead-up to it, the west, led from behind by Biden, has been visibly and overly concerned about how Putin may respond to this or that initiative designed to dissuade or delay the conquest of Ukraine.  Even politicians ignorant of history have now seen how such behavior does nothing to stay the hand of the tyrant.  Does no one on our side counsel that we too should demonstrate our strength against tyranny by actions that would concern Putin as to how we may react to his next atrocities?  At what point do we say ‘Enough!’?  No dictator with territorial ambitions has ever stopped on his own; they have all had to be stopped by nations allied with a common purpose to restore a humanitarian and peaceful world order.

My own strong opinion is that were we to populate Ukrainian skies with F-22s and F-35s (inviting other NATO nations to join), thousands of lives would be saved and the war would soon be over.  As Joe Lieberman also argues (here), in doing so we would be implementing “responsibility to protect”, the international norm that was unanimously adopted by the United Nations World Summit in 2005.  As I argued in the 12mar22 Scattershots (here), there is no natural stopping point for Putin before he controls the Eurasian continent.  And the more of his successes we continue to tolerate, the bigger will be the resulting war required to put an end to such conquests both in Europe and Asia.  If we don’t start Putin worrying about his own survival now, then when will there come a better time to re-establish the Westphalian world order?

[Addendum]  A longtime reader (@502pm below) contested the wisdom of NATO allies imposing a no-fly zone over Ukraine with the now widely accepted prognostication that such a tactic would immediately cause Putin to escalate his invasion into a cross-borders nuclear war – in short, WW3.  It was offered as the most probable response and ensuing scenario.  In my 547pm I rejected that as the only possible contingency, and offered the much more likely alternative contingency were we to continue Biden’s strategy of a limited defense that in effect is no defense.  This is corroborated hourly by Putin’s rapid expansion of the scope of his invasion, now expanding it into western Ukraine with attacks on multiple targets with scores of cruise missiles.

The west’s current response that lets Russia maintain air superiority to support his overwhelming numbers of mechanized infantry, armor, massed artillery, and amphibious assault will result in the inevitable ‘rubbling’ of Ukraine, no matter how ineptly the Russians execute their land attack.  To date, the west led by Biden, has made it clear that saving Ukraine is not our top priority; minimally irritating Putin is.  Given our feckless support and promise not to do more, President Zelensky will soon come to the decision to either surrender sooner and save Ukrainian lives or surrender later, leave Ukraine in a pile of rubble, and sacrifice tens of thousands of lives to no avail.  As he continues to shame NATO, Zelensky will do the right thing and save lives if the west is not willing to up the game and also start giving Putin worries as to what we will do.

And the latest surrender of Ukraine will cement Putin’s list of conquests – Georgia, Chechnya, Donbas, Crimea – as the proper strategy to continue expanding Russia.  We will inevitably then fight in Poland and the Baltics.  It will also affirm Xi Jinping’s assessment (repeating that of Hitler, Stalin, and Tojo) that America is now a weakened and fearful paper tiger, willing to surrender all in order to assure peace in our times.  Appeasement will most certainly bring about a drastic change to an Orwellian-structured world order.  My counter contingency of today’s ongoing appeasement has a long history of being practiced along with the mass suffering by all concerned.  And this contingency has a demonstrated high probability of coming to pass.  Putin pulling the nuclear trigger and thereby assuring his place in history as humanity’s ultimate pariah, eclipsing Mao, Stalin, and Hitler, is to me a reach and a low probability event.

So that’s the debate.  It’s all a matter of probabilities that the opposing sides assign to their contingencies going forward.  I’ll take my stand with history and Putin’s desire to live to fight another day.

[16mar22 update]  Brookings Institute leftwing maven William Galston is a nationally known regular contributor of progressive perspectives in the WSJ.  In the paper’s 16mar22 edition (here) he concludes “We shouldn’t risk nuclear war, but there’s still a lot more we could do” while arguing that we have a “moral obligation to help Ukraine against Russia”.  In supporting his argument he uses profoundly misguided and inappropriate examples of America’s reticence to intervene in the Rwandan slaughter of Tutsis and the 1964 stabbing of Kitty Genovese while bystanders watched and did nothing.

In these citations Galston misses two major points that characterize the Ukrainian war.  First, the assailants in both cases were weak, and not able to overwhelm the proximal agents able to aid the victims.  And second, neither attacker was prepared or capable of continuing his murderous rampage beyond committing their initial atrocities.  This is not the case with Russia invading Ukraine.  To the world Putin has made it clear that his intentions have been and will continue to be more than simply the return of a compliant Ukraine into the resurging Russian empire.

And echoing Biden’s peremptorily cowering announcement (joined by many Republicans), that the US will do nothing to risk nuclear war with Russia, seals an extremely dangerous future for all, while not reducing the eventual risk of nuclear war one whit.  For the decades during the cold war it was the prospect of MAD (mutually assured destruction) that reined in the USSR and kept us from a nuclear holocaust.  Had the Left’s ‘better Red than dead’ become the geo-strategic policy of the west and NATO to contain communism, we would all be fluent in Russian by now.  MAD worked only because Moscow knew we were willing to risk a nuclear war as we implemented policies (the ‘minor wars’ presaged by George Kennan) to stifle the spread of communism.  Without communicating such risk to the Politburo, MAD would have been toothless.

So, the bottom line for us today should be to counter Putin’s nuclear saber rattling with that of our own – ‘if you pull the nuclear trigger Vlad, we will incinerate you.’ – and bring back MAD. The time to stand up to a thug is early in the game before he and his star chamber become invested in the success of his previous threats – that should be our Plan A. The later we trade in our wish bone for a back bone, the more likely the thug will be willing to initiate a nuclear exchange.  Remember that Stalin blinked in 1948, Khrushchev in 1962, Brezhnev in 1981, Gorbachev in 1989.  Today again there is no endpoint in sight for retreating from such threats and conquests that does not involve eventual wholesale worldwide misery.

Anybody have a workable wishbone Plan B?

Posted in , , ,

148 responses to “Ukrainian no-fly zone (addended and updated 16mar22)”

  1. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    “‘Russia Fired Cruise Missiles At Ukraine From Russian Airspace, Pentagon Confirms’
    Makes no-fly zone irrelevant”
    It definitely makes it less relevant, along with cruise missiles generally. It’s all about the Benjamins I guess, a cruise missile is certainly more expensive than artillery. Drive the price of each round down far enough (and the intelligence up) and you end up with an air force consisting of surveillance and the occasional flying truck. No new thought there, but you do have to wonder about the wisdom of the F-35 program.
    Given the (claimed) Ukrainian strike on Millerovo Air Base within Russia, it works both ways. Given the fibs that come out of the Ukrainians (we don’t hear the Russian fibs), it’s hard to tell the truth of the matter…but every time the Ukrainians blow up something in Mother Russia, the Russian self-justification for turning up the knob to 11 grows. Naturally,as the Ukrainians and Ukrainian elite are fighting for survival, their interest in involving the rest of the world in their war is nearly unlimited.
    Lotsa lessons for everyone since people always equip and train for the last war.

    Like

  2. fish Avatar
    fish

    George
    Why do you think Trump failed in his promise to pull us out of Afganistan? We were there for 20 years before Biden with thousands of casualties so you can’t blame that on him or can you?

    Probably best to just think of Punch as a child in these matters George. Naggy and repetitive childlike questions, an inability to incorporate any nuance into the discussion…..all the trademark of your (painfully dull I imagine) lunch buddy.
    Just be grateful he’s not nagging you for a pony.

    Like

  3. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Scott O @ 9:03 am
    “The subject here is the Ukraine, Paul.
    Bringing up the disaster of what Biden did in Afghanistan hardly helps your case.
    BECAUSE of what Biden did in Afghanistan probably added to Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine.
    Weakness and timidity invite bullies and thugs to”
    ‘How Could This Happen?’: Secretary Of Defense For Obama Admin Says Biden Fumbled Afghanistan Withdrawal
    https://dailycaller.com/2022/03/14/chuck-hagel-afghanistan-withdrawal-joe-biden-could-have-handled-better/
    “Bringing up the disaster of what Biden did in Afghanistan hardly helps your case.
    BECAUSE of what Biden did in Afghanistan probably added to Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine.”
    Scott: Punchy believes that ‘Bringing up the disaster Biden did in’and to Afghanistan actually helps his cause.

    Like

  4. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 937am – I continue to have the feeling that somewhere within your TDS episodes you are desperately trying to make a point. Perhaps more astute readers understand your apologetics, but unfortunately, you have left me behind. If you actually do have a point, maybe including it with your comment would help readers like me.

    Like

  5. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    Useful luddite idiots like the mentally ill greta game –
    “I have met allies who can report that Russia, as part of their sophisticated information and disinformation operations, engaged actively with so-called non-governmental organisations – environmental organisations working against shale gas – to maintain European dependence on imported Russian gas,” Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the former prime minister of Denmark and then-secretary-general of NATO, said, according to the Guardian.
    https://www.foxnews.com/world/russia-funding-environmental-groups-europe-united-state
    😉

    Like

  6. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Dr. Rebane @ 10:42 am
    You addressed Punch as PaulE. According to Paul emery, calling him PaulE is not in his list he will respond to if questioned. Thus, Paul by his own words and solemn promise will not respond to your question. Smart move, sir.
    If Paul responds to PaulE, that would make the former tiny FM station news director a BOLD FACED LIAR. Well, a liar anyway. Hard to call him bold faced.
    I applaud you, sir. Paul set the rules and as a man of high moral character, he will surely abide my his word.
    Keep digging Punchy, you are officially slightly more than half way to China.

    Like

  7. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Bill
    You fail in any way to hold Trump accountable for not fulfilling his promise of pulling out of
    Afghanistan. Why did he fail to pullout Bill?
    Biden accomplished that complex feat with minimal casualties in comparison to the thousands of Americans who died there under Bush, Obama and Trump. Should not those who created the situation in Afghanistan be held responsible not Biden who got us out?

    Like

  8. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    “Now and in the future I will not respond to any question unless address it to my name. Paul Emery or just Emery will do.
    Thanks “
    Your are welcome, Punchy. I showed you were you said that Punchadodo.

    Like

  9. Scott O Avatar

    Oh Lord, Paul – give it up!
    “Biden accomplished that complex feat…”
    You do mean F’ing it up as badly as he did?
    Biden can’t do anything more complex than deciding what flavor of ice cream to choose.
    But you enjoy that “Victory In Kabul” Paul.
    The Ukrainians have a slightly different of idea of what victory looks like.

    Like

  10. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Bill
    So you have no response as to the question as to who should be held responsible for the thousands of deaths in Afghanistan. Also you don’t have a clue as to how Trump would be tougher on Putin as evidenced by your failure to express an opinion on the matter other than stating that Putin wouldn’t have invaded if Trump was President. .

    Like

  11. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    What if…..we all know where Pat Buchanan stands of neo-cons and illiberal tyrants. I do enjoy his historical perspective and consistency.
    Is There a Peace Deal Putin and Zelensky Can Accept?
    By Patrick J. Buchanan
    https://www.intellectualtakeout.org/is-there-a-peace-deal-putin-and-zelensky-can-accept-/

    Like

  12. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    Charlie Browns teacher @1131! LOL
    😉

    Like

  13. fish Avatar
    fish

    Bill,
    You should probably ask Punch if he still believes a president who has had as many die “on his watch” as Grandpa Badfingers should resign as he advocated with Trump.

    Like

  14. George Rebane Avatar

    Administrivia – we’re getting a little far afield from Ukraine and the no-fly zone. Go to the Sandbox, especially to endlessly rehash the latest recurrence of TDS. We must all remember that diversion to Trump is literally ALL the progressives have to shield the most incompetent president in American history. They dare not let people focus on such a political failure that the Dems foisted on the country (well, actually two failures when you throw Kamala into the package). Sandbox please.

    Like

  15. Barry Pruett Avatar
    Barry Pruett

    Paul. You incorrectly conflate MAGA and Party affiliation. Yes, Trump ran as a Republican but his intent was to change the party from a bunch neocons to MAGA. Neocon Republicans and Democrats who started all the wars over the past 20 years are going the way of the dodo bird. I would posit to you that these neocons are responsible for these wars. Neocons in both parties. Trump and his supporters are generally anti-war. We don’t want these endless wars. You are in the midst of a sea change in politics. You and I agree that war is bad. All of them whether in Ukraine or Iraq or Afghanistan or Yemen or elsewhere. My opinion is that we are the one’s fighting everywhere and it needs to stop.

    Like

  16. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    BP, you can look at what Trump did after team 0 sent mre’s to Ukraine as a model. Give them the means and quality training and let them hold their own space. Just think how much different it would have been if there had been a surge of modern quality weapons in the year of creepy grampa joe and if there had been sanctions when it was obvious what would happen. Hell they even told the chi coms they knew vlad was gonna do it weeks in advance.
    😉

    Like

  17. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    The mess vlad is in is a direct result of not really having a professional army with well-trained infantry thus throwing out the well-established combined arms concept. The fact that vlad is bringing in syrian cannon fodder with little training proves his conscripts won’t fight –
    Experts warned this might happen. “Shortages in ready maneuver forces, especially infantry, significantly limit Russian maneuver capabilities,” U.S. Army Capt. Nicolas Fiore explained in a 2017 paper for Armor, the official magazine of the Army’s tank corps.
    Tanks with their thick armor and big guns are powerful and imposing weapons, but they’re not invulnerable. A tank is supposed to fight while facing its foes, so its armor is thick up front and thinner everywhere else.
    At the same time, a tank crew suffers limited visibility while buttoned up inside the turret and hull. Those two factors—armor distribution and uneven situational awareness—can leave a tank vulnerable to ambush by infantry.
    In particular, infantry hiding in the rubble of a half-destroyed city while packing anti-tank guided missiles such as the American-made Javelin or Ukraine’s own Stugna-P.
    The remedy, for the tankers, is infantry. Dismounted squads that can clear the streets, alleys and buildings along the flanks of a tank platoon’s path. In the doctrine of pretty much all modern armies, tanks and infantry travel and fight together in combined-arms formations.
    But the Russian army long has suffered a dearth of trained, professional infantry. Russia is an aging and shrinking society that still relies on conscription to fill its military’s ranks. But short-term conscripts are all but worthless in combat—and, in fact, don’t usually deploy for combat.
    The Kremlin however did send conscripts into Ukraine, in clear violation of its own policies. When conscripts starting getting killed and captured, a Kremlin spokesperson uttered a rare public apology.
    The point is, professional infantry are the Russian army’s most precious resource. A Russian army brigade, which on paper possesses several battalions, in reality can generate just one BTG with around 36 squads, each with around a dozen professional soldiers. A U.S. Army brigade, by contrast, can field 60 squads.
    In Ukraine, this imbalance is most evident in dramatic videos of Russian T-80 and T-72 tanks fighting alone in cities—and often catching a missile from hidden Ukrainian troops. Those missileers have a clear shot, and the tankers have no idea they’re there, because too few infantry—or no infantry—are accompanying the tanks.
    “Russia’s disastrous tactics have been a terrible advertisement for tanks,” tweeted Nicholas Drummond, an armor consultant. “But we should be careful to avoid drawing the wrong conclusions,” he added. “No artillery support. No infantry support. No air support. This is not how combined-arms tactics work in an era of multi-domain operations.”
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/in-ukraine-russian-tanks-are-fighting-without-the-protection-of-infantry/ar-AAV4Jso?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531
    https://currently.att.yahoo.com/att/cm/putin-own-soldiers-refusing-fight-084141253.html
    😉

    Like

  18. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    Vlad is desperate squandering his decoy on nuclear capable strikes. That is a little concerning considering they are already counter programing every air denial munition on natos east flank. –
    The New York Times
    American intelligence officials have discovered that the barrage of ballistic missiles Russia has fired into Ukraine contain a surprise: decoys that trick air-defense radars and fool heat-seeking missiles.
    The devices are each about 1 foot long, shaped like a dart and white with an orange tail, according to an American intelligence official. They are released by the Iskander-M short-range ballistic missiles that Russia is firing from mobile launchers across the border, the official said, when the missile senses that it has been targeted by air defense systems.
    Each is packed with electronics and produces radio signals to jam or spoof enemy radars attempting to locate the Iskander-M, and contains a heat source to attract incoming missiles. The official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about intelligence matters, described the devices on the condition of anonymity.
    The use of the decoys may help explain why Ukrainian air-defense weapons have had difficulty intercepting Russia’s Iskander missiles.
    Powered by a solid-fuel rocket motor, the Iskander can reach targets more than 200 miles away, according to U.S. government documents. Each mobile launcher can fire two Iskanders before it must be reloaded.
    Photographs of the dart-shaped munitions began circulating on social media two weeks ago. They had stumped experts and open-source intelligence analysts — many of whom mistook them for bomblets from cluster weapons based on their size and shape.
    The use of the decoys may point to some level of carelessness or urgency by Russian military leadership, Lewis said, given that Russia knows they will inevitably be collected and studied by Western intelligence services so that NATO air defenses can be programmed to defeat the Iskander’s countermeasures.
    That suggests to me that the Russians place some value on keeping that technology close to home and that this war is important enough to them to give that up,” Lewis said. “They’re digging deep, and maybe they no longer care, but I would care if I were them.
    “I think that there are some very excited people in the U.S. intelligence community right now.”
    https://news.yahoo.com/russia-deploys-mystery-munition-ukraine-114716254.html
    😉

    Like

  19. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Dog Whistle Alert!
    Steven:
    Last I looked, Odessa has not yet fallen. Those Nazis down near the Sea of Azov are some tough bastards. Gotta root them on or else you are rooting for Putin. Go, Nazi Bastards, go kill those Red Bastards.

    Like

  20. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    May not go here…..but it’s kinda nuke related.
    ‘Biden Caves on Sanctions over Russia’s War Crimes against Ukraine to Preserve Russia’s Sponsorship of Terrorist Iran’s Nuclear Program’
    https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/biden-caves-on-sanctions-over-russias-war-crimes-against-ukraine-to-preserve-russias-sponsorship-of-terrorist-irans-nuclear-program/

    Like

  21. George Rebane Avatar

    [Yesterday I received the following extended comment as an email responding to my above commentary on the Ukrainian no-fly zone. The author is Gary Irving, my longtime dear friend and cohort in many adventures both professionally and recreationally(?). Gary is a professional engineer educated on a track parallel to mine in the systems sciences. He is still in the saddle working in middle management for a large multi-national defense/systems contractor on the east coast. In socio-political affairs Gary likes to position himself as a middle roader, although by any measure most RR readers would apply, he is a liberal short of being a progressive. His response, as received, and name are used by permission. gjr]
    Your writeup misses a major point: that the war is no longer limited to blowing things up. We (and Russia) have other choices: we have Economic weapons, already deployed but a not quick deterrent, and Russia has a Cyber superiority over our corporations and critical infrastructure. In all your historical references, the combatants didn’t have this diversity of war weaponry. I’m much less worried that Putin would start throwing Nukes around than that he would shut our corporations down along with our power grid. This would cause economic chaos on our end. We would dig out of it and certainly survive, but how long would it take? No one knows. To respond in kind has a lot of visceral satisfaction. Still, I would be worried that we have a war-weary citizenry, and the enthusiasm would dim when the inevitable body bags started coming home. Let’s not kid ourselves; we cannot contain a no-fly zone in a neat surgical fashion. The conflict would escalate immediately. Putin would invade Poland for sure. I’m outdated on how our Military technology stacks up to theirs. Ground-to-air missiles are cheaper than F-22s and F-35s, and replacements can be manufactured more quickly. Additionally, a highly trained pilot asset (very difficult to replace in the short run) is much more vulnerable than the crews manning such stand-off weaponry. I don’t know how our tanks would stack up to theirs, but our tank teams are ten times better than the Russians. I agree that the only way to deal with an egomaniacal bully is to punch him in the nose…repeatable. I also agree that if Putin conquered Ukraine (which might be imminent), it would take ten years of negotiations and concessions to get him out. Finally, I wouldn’t want to send US troops into a European war without NATO fully behind us. I’m afraid that would take forever while they fussed and dithered. From what country would you launch fighter planes? Poland? Or somewhere deeper into Western Europe? They might not permit us. We could use carrier launched warcraft, but you know my opinion about the vulnerability of WW II platforms (sitting ducks.) Maybe we could convince the Brits to use their Airbases; I don’t know the impact of such a round trip distance on fuel. So, though fraught with grave risks, I agree with imposing a no-fly zone combined with a list of demands to Putin. However, I wouldn’t pull the trigger without warning corporations and power companies about their cyber risks and deploying both active military and national guard to support the resulting economic and social chaos. It would be like a class 5 hurricane hit the whole country. Let’s be chess players and poker players against the Russians. (not like guileless Trump did in his tariff war with China.)
    BTW, as much as you and your readers enjoy kicking Biden for his cautious approach, do you really think Trump would launch planes against his buddy Putin (c’mon man!).

    Like

  22. George Rebane Avatar

    Re 217pm – In responding to Gary, I would begin by stating my belief that Gary avails himself to a more limited spectrum of news and socio-political commentary. From my experience I believe that he limits himself overwhelmingly to what I have here labeled as lamestream media – CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC, NYT, WaPo, Daily Kos, … . Although most of those leaning right (including me) read from both sides of the spectrum, we also focus more on the ‘rightwing’ media – Federalist, Daily Caller, FN, FB, Newsmax, Wash Times, NY Post, … . From our experience, these outlets’ coverage is a superset of the items covered by the lamestream. I’ve corroborated this with many left-leaning friends including Gary. But in the end our separate worldviews come down to having our own peculiar facts, histories, values, utilities, senses of justice, equity, equality, and so forth.
    My assessment of the relative cyber security cum warfare status of both sides is that 1) cyber warfare has been going on for some years now and continues today; 2) in our technical match-up, the west (led by US) gives at least as good as it gets. Our cyber defense capability has been widely distributed throughout the private sector, the public utilities, and the public/private institutions. While more needs to be done, neither Russia nor China are today able to reduce our IT infra-structure to cyber-rubble, nor will they necessarily want to try given our ability to impose MAD in that arena.
    Russia’s military has shown itself to be a shadow of its advertised (to the Kremlin) capacity in troop training, military equipment/systems (combat and logistics), field operations, and leadership. As usual, the Russian field commanders have been lying to their national leadership about their status of forces. Regarding leadership, since czarist times their military continues to suffer from an ‘initiative constraint culture’ – their field and company grade officers and NCOs are afraid to deviate from ‘the book’ and current standing orders, even though the situation on the ground would call for obvious innovative actions (that’s why today their flag officers have to be exposed with point units to get anything done, and are getting killed in the process).
    In the more empirical domain of military field operations, there is not a single aspect of Russia’s combined arms deployments (mechanized infantry, armor, artillery, ground-support gunship tactics, air superiority) that the US would not annihilate the Russians. They have now demonstrated their ineptness in almost all areas of operations save perhaps their use of a now dwindling inventory of cruise missiles launched from their own landmass. And we haven’t even addressed the lack of support the long-suffering Russian people have for this war as corroborated by Putin’s latest public tirades against Russia’s opposition, calling them “traitors” and “scum” that must be “purged” from the homeland. And then there’s always the possibility of someone with a 9mm Grach in the Kremlin changing the whole game.
    Finally, there is little chance of 1) getting Putin et al to give up Ukraine through negotiations once they are victorious. In resources, demographics, and strategic geography, the Russians need what the Ukrainians have; 2) the Russian military is relatively small and already two-thirds committed to the Ukrainian invasion. Without years of consolidation, repair, and build-up, they would have little capacity to successfully invade a mainstream NATO country like Poland, led by UK, Germany, and France, the EU itself would crush whatever Putin ordered into Poland or the Baltics. And in that case the US would become fully involved under Article 5. Putin knows all this and has so far depended on Bumblebrain’s cowering to bluff his way to a Russia-dominated cessation of hostilities, all in the name of avoiding WW3.

    Like

  23. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    BillT: “Those Nazis down near the Sea of Azov are some tough bastards. ”
    I’m talking out of school here, but have a strong feeling that the Russians have put the ‘Azov’ folks on their naughty list.
    My guess is that the Azovs have to be right careful about not being cornered (possible at this point) and to keep plenty of what are essentially hostages (civilians and buildings) nearby. It’s a case where things get hairy once they are cut from the herd.
    Do you get Fallujah II? Maybe. A costly and ugly situation no matter what. Interestingly, those ‘thermobaric’ weapons you keep hearing about? Used in Fallujah.
    There ain’t much new in the world I guess.

    Like

  24. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    GeorgeR: “the Russian military is relatively small and already two-thirds committed to the Ukrainian invasion. Without years of consolidation, repair, and build-up, they would have little capacity to successfully invade a mainstream NATO country like Poland, led by UK, Germany, and France, the EU itself would crush whatever Putin ordered into Poland or the Baltics. ”
    So if Russia is simply unable to expand beyond a part of Ukraine, why the need for a conventional war with the Russians (which a no-fly zone would become in about 10 minutes)? Why is there so much tearing of hair and rending of clothes over the danger to the Baltic states or Poland?
    The US model of fighting to the last Ukrainian has limited value also.
    It’s probably just best to bribe the Russians to leave, that’s what the Byzantines would have done (and did).

    Like

  25. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Another opinion.
    ‘Victor Davis Hanson: 10 realities of Ukraine’
    https://tribunecontentagency.com/premium-content/opinion/international/victor-davis-hanson/

    Like

  26. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    The thing is that we’ll never know a tiny fraction of the sketchy doings, by both sides, over the last decade.
    https://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-secret-cia-training-program-in-ukraine-helped-kyiv-prepare-for-russian-invasion-090052743.html
    BillT’s quote: “Three — Europe, NATO members, and Germany in particular have de facto admitted that their past decades of shutting down nuclear plants, coal mines, and oil and gas fields have left Europe at the mercy of Russia.”
    I’d say that decades of depending on the US to carry all the military water can’t have helped much. If nothing else, take the cost of an F-35 and put it to a proper militia program with a lot of anti-tank/anti-plane magic.
    GeorgeR’s quote: “he (Putin) would shut our corporations down along with our power grid.”
    Methinks there’s a whole bunch of single points of failure that just require bolt cutters, a hammer, and/or a bolt action rifle. No software exploit needed.

    Like

  27. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Not on the No Fly Zone, bit war news in general. What perked my interest three weeks ago there was some uproar propaganda blurb that Sweden had violated its neutrality by sending arms and troops to Ukraine and violating some Article of Neutrality Proclamation.
    Turns out it was Lithuania. 🙂 Do you know that Lithuania was once a kingdom? Big deal in the 1300’s. Anyway, I am doing my geography homework now and learning about ‘the place’ above Budapest. :).
    PS to the Doc: Estonia has been invaluable in moving stuff through the routes. One of the first to jump all in. They were the first to send two American made fighter jets to another NATO country BEFORE the invasion….and were richly rewarded. 🙂 Even the Turks are horse swapping trying to get rid of some of their older stuff for something new.
    Feb 15: Lithuanian Troops in Ukraine to Provide Missile Training
    https://www.thedefensepost.com/2022/02/15/lithuania-ukraine-missile-training/
    Feb 24. “Ukraine attack leaves Baltics wondering: Are we next?
    “To Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians — particularly those old enough to have lived under Soviet control — Russia’s belligerence toward Ukraine has some worried that they could be the Kremlin’s next target.”
    “The battle for Ukraine is a battle for Europe. If Putin is not stopped there, he will go further,” Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis warned last week in a joint news conference with U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin.
    https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/ukraine-attack-leaves-baltics-wondering-83079302
    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/14/world/europe/lithuania-russia-attack-ukraine-nato.html

    Like

  28. George Rebane Avatar

    scene 255pm – Don’t know who believes that Russia won’t be able “to expand beyond a part of Ukraine.” I most certainly don’t. If the west keeps limiting its support of Ukraine, and the Russians keep pouring in more troops, no matter how inept, Ukraine will fall. And as I’ve stated before, I belong to the school that does not believe a no-fly zone will lead to WW3. Poland and the Baltics are NATO countries whose invasion would trigger Art5 and start a regional war. I believe that in such a case the Russians would just be pushed back to within their borders; there would be no ensuing march on Moscow. Even with his residual army Putin can do a lot of damage to the Baltics, but not so much to Poland. For the near term Putin just wants Ukraine and then consolidate the resulting new world order. We shouldn’t let him. But I think your idea of a bribe deserves more thought.
    As a native Estonian, I would like to see a peaceful and prosperous Russia securely integrated into the European community, and looking west for its long term security against the inevitable Chinese foray into eastern Siberia.

    Like

  29. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    The American public is so fickle. Some observers say schizophrenic.
    ‘Most Americans Oppose A No-Fly Zone, Don’t Want To Risk War With Russia To Help Ukraine: Poll’
    https://www.dailywire.com/news/most-americans-oppose-a-no-fly-zone-dont-want-to-risk-war-with-russia-to-help-ukraine-poll

    Like

  30. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    A no fly zone doesn’t risk war with Russia.
    It is war with Russia.
    We should continue to ensure Ukraine has the stuff to resist.

    Like

  31. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    GeorgeR: “Don’t know who believes that Russia won’t be able “to expand beyond a part of Ukraine.” I most certainly don’t.”
    They don’t seem to be able to subdue Ukraine.
    In your words, “They have now demonstrated their ineptness in almost all areas of operations “.
    So they are going to sweep to the English channel?
    It’s a thing I read a lot lately, that the Russians are incompetent and bogged down yet will take over all of Europe given the chance. It seems to involve just what point the author is trying to make that paragraph.
    “As a native Estonian,…” Well, see, that’s definitely a difference. I feel the same filial duty to Eastern Europe that I might to Tibet. It’s obvious that the politics of that whole swathe of humanity is so complex and so crazy-making that I would prefer to think in terms of US national interests only. Don’t be angry, but it’s like discussing the IRA with Irishmen in Boston…best to avoid the issue.
    Gregory: ”
    A no fly zone doesn’t risk war with Russia.
    It is war with Russia.
    We should continue to ensure Ukraine has the stuff to resist.”
    Got it in one.
    There appear to be agreed-upon rules for this sort of situation as Afghanistan and South Vietnam have shown. If you want to keep a country burning until another larger country finally gives up, you can keep shoveling in arms. If the population of the invadee is cool with it, who am I to tell them to stop fighting?

    Just don’t be surprised if the natural countermove is to pound the bejeepers out of the entry points for new fuel for the blaze. You could probably expect a few warehouses just across the border to accidentally catch fire. It ain’t just applying force with a known outcome after all, the opponent is a reasoning critter and will respond.

    Given the elegance of the invasion (whatever that was on paper, didn’t survive contact with the enemy as usual) disappearing, I think that the big question is whether the Russians extricate themselves by deciding on less expansionist objectives or if they simply form a line and flatten the place bit by bit. No doubt there are different teams at the Kremlin trying to convince Fearless Leader of each approach.

    Like

  32. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    Just a side thought on a corner of the war.
    Since (a)Mariupol seems to be where the infamous Azov Battalion hangs out and (b)the Russians appear to have it in a cauldron, you have to wonder how that whole thing will come down.
    For one thing, the Russians are bound to be looking closely at any people hightailing it out of town or who are captured.
    pro tip: if you’re an extremist in a war, don’t have a bunch of tattoos installed showing your affiliations. The SS even had that problem with blood group tattoos.

    Like

  33. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    ” Even with his residual army Putin can do a lot of damage to the Baltics, but not so much to Poland.”
    Just to show that I read that.
    If I had to guess, what is needed here are tolerable exit strategies for the Russians. For all I know, some other office at the State Department is interested in that rather than involving us/them in a forever proxy war.
    Just to throw out a flyer from my EZ-chair, I think things will change somewhat once they take Mariupol. It not only frees up battalion tactical groups (enabling the Russians to negotiate with more strength), but they can now claim that they removed a ‘Nazi menace’ from the gameboard and thus achieved a major objective.
    Dunno if the Ukraine leadership is serious or not when they list non-negotiable demands (return of Crimea) with Russian non-negotiable demands (nonreturn of Crimea, in fact, official recognition of it’s current status). Of course, Zelenskyy wants to make his war into my war, with no upper bound, and I’m right tired of it.
    There’s no solution here that consists entirely of punishing the Russians, regardless of what many people seem to want.

    Like

  34. George Rebane Avatar

    scenes 917pm – Don’t misunderstand. Despite my Estonian heritage, I view the possible Russian conquest of the Baltics totally from the national interest perspective of the US. In that light I don’t think it in the west’s interest to have Russia reestablish a fortified boundary on the shores of the Baltic Sea. And the current state of Russia’s military does not mean that they cannot improve in men and materiel. As long as ‘the west wants to destroy Russia’ mentality endures in the Kremlin, Russia will continue to be a burr under the blanket for Europe. They can wait, but in the interval we shouldn’t have national leaders who invite Russian adventurism.

    Like

  35. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    George
    Who specifically are the “national leaders who invite Russian adventurism.” I assume you are referring to China and North Korea. Who are the others?

    Like

  36. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 230pm – No Paul, I’m talking about our national leaders.

    Like

  37. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    GeorgeR: “As long as ‘the west wants to destroy Russia’ mentality endures in the Kremlin”
    Is that a false statement?

    Like

  38. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    GR
    I consider ourselves fortunate Ukraine didn’t choose NATO when the chair was pulled out for them.
    No, I don’t think Ukraine is worth risking a Russkie MIRV’d ICBM dropping a warhead on, say, Beale AFB. Or Estonia for that matter, but a treaty is a treaty.

    Like

  39. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    And, before we go to war with Russia there had better damned be a proper declaration from the Congress.

    Like

  40. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    So specifically George are you saying that Biden and the Dems “invite Russian nationalism” and can you share a few examples?

    Like

  41. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Golly, Punch, what words of George’s did you translate into that? I can’t find those words except in your comment.
    Are you inventing words to put into other’s mouths a’gin?

    Like

  42. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    George
    Perhaps you’re referring to Republicans like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) who is quoted as saying on her facebook page ” “If we truly care about suffering and death on our television screens, we cannot fund more of it by sending money and weaponry to fight a war they cannot possibly win!” she said. “The only effect of more arms and more money from America will be to prolong the war!”
    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his people are giving “false hope about a war they can’t win.”
    Here’s a link to the video where she says these things.
    https://www.rawstory.com/marjorie-taylor-greene-2656985573/

    Like

  43. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    punch… rawstory? really?

    Like

  44. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    Gregory: “And, before we go to war with Russia there had better damned be a proper declaration from the Congress.”
    roflmao.
    It made me curious just what declarations had happened.
    11 of those suckers.
    Great Britain in 1812.
    Mexico in 1846.
    Spain in 1898.
    Germany and Austria-Hungary in 1917
    Japan,Germany,Italy,Bulgaria,Hungary,Rumania in 1942
    Strangely no Finland or Vichy France
    “punch… rawstory? really?”
    Oh well, you can argue that it’s simply a news-aggregator-that-agrees-with-you. It’s Infowars minus the gay frogs.
    Having said that, it sounds like Rep. Greene makes an arguable point. It would make a good half of a debate and I can’t say which way I would go on it.
    Strangely, to Paul Emery, this whole war is about US domestic politics. That’s really all that matters. I’ve run into the type before, you veer away from them at parties.

    Like

  45. George Rebane Avatar

    scenes 315pm – that is a preposition made up of a conditional phrase (indicated in semi-quotes), the truth of which instantiates the predicate (here, burr under blanket). Think of it as an ‘if/then’ statement.

    Like

  46. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Follow the links reader (18 March 2022 at 04:47 PM) and you’ll here her exact words.

    Like

  47. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    Yeah I’m with you scenes about declaration of war from congress. No declaration for Korea, no Vietnam, no Afghanistan no Iraq on and on and on and on……

    Like

  48. Scott O Avatar

    No, Paul – the Dems “invite Russian (and Chinese) nationalism and adventurism” by being weak and making horrible deals with our enemies. See: Iran.
    “Please be nice or we’ll have to send you pallets of cash”.
    You lefties are such a laugh. You ignore the Chinese brutalizing the Uighurs (as well as their general citizenry) while puffing out your chests against Russia. Save it, please.

    Like

  49. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    So Scott I suppose you supported The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan started by Bush and the Neocons. Hats off to Biden who pulled us out of Afghanistan after 20 years, something that Trump failed to do after promising to do so.

    Like

Leave a comment