By Scott Ritter
February 05, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "RT"-
In a recent press
conference held on the occasion of a visit to
Moscow by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban,
Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke about
continued NATO expansion, and the potential
consequences if Ukraine was to join the
trans-Atlantic alliance.
“Their [NATO’s] main task is to contain the
development of Russia,” Putin said.
“Ukraine is simply a tool to achieve this goal. They
could draw us into some kind of armed conflict and
force their allies in Europe to impose the very
tough sanctions that are being talked about in the
United States today,” he noted. “Or they
could draw Ukraine into NATO, set up strike weapons
systems there and encourage some people to resolve
the issue of Donbass or Crimea by force, and still
draw us into an armed conflict.”
Putin continued, “Let us imagine that Ukraine
is a NATO member and is stuffed with weapons and
there are state-of-the-art missile systems just like
in Poland and Romania. Who will stop it from
unleashing operations in Crimea, let alone Donbass?
Let us imagine that Ukraine is a NATO member and
ventures such a combat operation. Do we have to
fight with the NATO bloc? Has anyone thought
anything about it? It seems not.”
But these words were dismissed by White House
spokesperson Jen Psaki, who likened them to a fox
“screaming from the top of the hen house that
he's scared of the chickens,” adding that any
Russian expression of fear over Ukraine “should
not be reported as a statement of fact.”
Psaki’s comments, however, are divorced from the
reality of the situation. The principal goal of the
government of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
is what he terms the “de-occupation” of
Crimea. While this goal has, in the past, been
couched in terms of diplomacy – “[t]he synergy
of our efforts must force Russia to negotiate the
return of our peninsula,” Zelensky
told the Crimea Platform, a Ukrainian forum
focused on regaining control over Crimea – the
reality is his strategy for return is a purely
military one, in which Russia has been identified as
a “military adversary”, and the
accomplishment of which can only be achieved through
NATO membership.
How Zelensky plans on accomplishing this goal
using military means has not been spelled out. As an
ostensibly defensive alliance, the odds are that
NATO would not initiate any offensive military
action to forcibly seize the Crimean Peninsula from
Russia. Indeed, the terms of Ukraine’s membership,
if granted, would need to include some language
regarding the limits of NATO’s
Article 5 – which relates to collective defense
– when addressing the Crimea situation, or else a
state of war would de facto exist upon Ukrainian
accession.
The most likely scenario would involve Ukraine
being rapidly brought under the ‘umbrella’ of NATO
protection, with ‘battlegroups’ like those deployed
into eastern Europe being formed on Ukrainian soil
as a ‘trip-wire’ force, and modern air defenses
combined with forward-deployed NATO aircraft put in
place to secure Ukrainian airspace.
Once this umbrella has been established, Ukraine
would feel emboldened to begin a hybrid conflict
against what it terms the Russian occupation of
Crimea, employing unconventional warfare capability
it has
acquired since 2015 at the hands of the CIA to
initiate an insurgency designed specifically to
“kill Russians.”
The idea that Russia would sit idly by while a
guerilla war in Crimea was being implemented from
Ukraine is ludicrous; if confronted with such a
scenario, Russia would more than likely use its own
unconventional capabilities in retaliation. Ukraine,
of course, would cry foul, and NATO would be
confronted with its mandatory obligation for
collective defense under Article 5. In short, NATO
would be at war with Russia.
This is not idle speculation. When explaining his
recent decision to deploy some 3,000 US troops to
Europe in response to the ongoing Ukrainian crisis,
US President Joe Biden
declared, “As long as he’s [Putin] acting
aggressively, we are going to make sure we reassure
our NATO allies in Eastern Europe that we’re there
and Article 5 is a sacred obligation.”
Biden’s comments echo those made during his
initial visit to NATO Headquarters, on June 15 last
year. At that time, Biden sat down with NATO
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and
emphasized America’s commitment to Article 5 of
the NATO charter. “Article 5 we take as a sacred
obligation,” Biden said. “I want NATO to
know America is there.”
Biden’s view of NATO and Ukraine is drawn from
his experience as vice president under Barack Obama.
In 2015, then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Bob Work
told reporters, “As President Obama has
said, Ukraine should … be able to choose its own
future. And we reject any talk of a sphere of
influence. And speaking in Estonia this past
September, the president made it clear that our
commitment to our NATO allies in the face of Russian
aggression is unwavering. As he said it, in this
alliance there are no old members and there are no
new members. There are no junior partners and there
are no senior partners. There are just allies, pure
and simple. And we will defend the territorial
integrity of every single ally.”
Just what would this defense entail? As someone
who once trained to fight the Soviet Army, I can
attest that a war with Russia would be unlike
anything the US military has experienced – ever. The
US military is neither organized, trained, nor
equipped to fight its Russian counterparts. Nor does
it possess doctrine capable of supporting
large-scale combined arms conflict. If the US was to
be drawn into a conventional ground war with Russia,
it would find itself facing defeat on a scale
unprecedented in American military history. In
short, it would be a rout.
Don’t take my word for it. In 2016,
then-Lieutenant General H.R. McMaster, when speaking
about the results of a study – the Russia New
Generation Warfare – he had initiated in 2015 to
examine lessons learned from the fighting in eastern
Ukraine,
told an audience at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington that the
Russians have superior artillery firepower, better
combat vehicles, and have learned sophisticated use
of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for tactical
effect. “Should US forces find themselves in a
land war with Russia,” McMaster said, “they
would be in for a rude, cold awakening.”
In short, they would get their asses kicked.
America’s 20-year Middle Eastern misadventure in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria produced a military
that was no longer capable of defeating a peer-level
opponent on the battlefield. This reality was
highlighted in
a study conducted by the US Army’s 173rd
Airborne Brigade, the central American component of
NATO’s Rapid Deployment Force, in 2017. The study
found that US military forces in Europe were
underequipped, undermanned, and inadequately
organized to confront military aggression from
Russia. The lack of viable air defense and
electronic warfare capability, when combined with an
over-reliance on satellite communications and GPS
navigation systems, would result in the piecemeal
destruction of the US Army in rapid order should
they face off against a Russian military that was
organized, trained, and equipped to specifically
defeat a US/NATO threat.
The issue isn’t just qualitative, but also
quantitative – even if the US military could stand
toe-to-toe with a Russian adversary (which it
can’t), it simply lacks the size to survive in any
sustained battle or campaign. The low-intensity
conflict that the US military waged in Iraq and
Afghanistan has created an organizational ethos
built around the idea that every American life is
precious, and that all efforts will be made to
evacuate the wounded so that they can receive
life-saving medical attention in as short a
timeframe as possible. This concept may have been
viable where the US was in control of the
environment in which fights were conducted. It is,
however, pure fiction in large-scale combined arms
warfare. There won’t be medical evacuation
helicopters flying to the rescue – even if they
launched, they would be shot down. There won’t be
field ambulances – even if they arrived on the
scene, they would be destroyed in short order. There
won’t be field hospitals – even if they were
established, they would be captured by Russian
mobile forces.
What there will be is death and destruction, and
lots of it. One of the events which triggered
McMaster’s study of Russian warfare was the
destruction of a Ukrainian combined arms brigade by
Russian artillery in early 2015. This, of course,
would be the fate of any similar US combat
formation. The superiority Russia enjoys in
artillery fires is overwhelming, both in terms of
the numbers of artillery systems fielded and the
lethality of the munitions employed.
While the US Air Force may be able to mount a
fight in the airspace above any battlefield, there
will be nothing like the total air supremacy enjoyed
by the American military in its operations in Iraq
and Afghanistan. The airspace will be contested by a
very capable Russian air force, and Russian ground
troops will be operating under an air defense
umbrella the likes of which neither the US nor NATO
has ever faced. There will be no close air support
cavalry coming to the rescue of beleaguered American
troops. The forces on the ground will be on their
own.
This feeling of isolation will be furthered by
the reality that, because of Russia’s overwhelming
superiority in electronic warfare capability, the US
forces on the ground will be deaf, dumb, and blind
to what is happening around them, unable to
communicate, receive intelligence, and even operate
as radios, electronic systems, and weapons cease to
function.
Any war with Russia would find American forces
slaughtered in large numbers. Back in the 1980s, we
routinely trained to accept losses of 30-40 percent
and continue the fight, because that was the reality
of modern combat against a Soviet threat. Back then,
we were able to effectively match the Soviets in
terms of force size, structure, and capability – in
short, we could give as good, or better, than we
got.
That wouldn’t be the case in any European war
against Russia. The US will lose most of its forces
before they are able to close with any Russian
adversary, due to deep artillery fires. Even when
they close with the enemy, the advantage the US
enjoyed against Iraqi and Taliban insurgents and
ISIS terrorists is a thing of the past. Our tactics
are no longer up to par – when there is close
combat, it will be extraordinarily violent, and the
US will, more times than not, come out on the losing
side.
But even if the US manages to win the odd
tactical engagement against peer-level infantry, it
simply has no counter to the overwhelming number of
tanks and armored fighting vehicles Russia will
bring to bear. Even if the anti-tank weapons in the
possession of US ground troops were effective
against modern Russian tanks (and experience
suggests they are probably not), American troops
will simply be overwhelmed by the mass of combat
strength the Russians will confront them with.
In the 1980s, I had the opportunity to
participate in a Soviet-style attack carried out by
specially trained US Army troops – the ‘OPFOR’ – at
the National Training Center in Fort Irwin,
California, where two Soviet-style Mechanized
Infantry Regiments squared off against a US Army
Mechanized Brigade. The fight began at around two in
the morning. By 5:30am it was over, with the US
Brigade destroyed, and the Soviets having seized
their objectives. There’s something about 170
armored vehicles bearing down on your position that
makes defeat all but inevitable.
This is what a war with Russia would look like.
It would not be limited to Ukraine, but extend to
battlefields in the Baltic states, Poland, Romania,
and elsewhere. It would involve Russian strikes
against NATO airfields, depots, and ports throughout
the depth of Europe.
This is what will happen if the US and NATO seek
to attach the “sacred obligation” of
Article 5 of the NATO Charter to Ukraine. It is, in
short, a suicide pact.
Scott
Ritter is a former US Marine Corps
intelligence officer and author of 'SCORPION
KING: America's Suicidal Embrace of Nuclear
Weapons from FDR to Trump.' He served in the
Soviet Union as an inspector implementing the
INF Treaty, in General Schwarzkopf’s staff
during the Gulf War, and from 1991-1998 as a UN
weapons inspector. Follow him on Twitter @RealScottRitter
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