The longer the war with Russia lasts the more
likely it becomes that the damage to Ukraine
will be irreparable.
By Douglas Macgregor
August
29, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "AC"
- In an open letter entitled “U.S.
must arm Ukraine now, before it’s too late”
20 notable American advocates for the war
against Russia in Ukraine argue that the
conflict has reached a decisive moment. To win,
the authors insist, Ukrainian forces need an
abundance of new equipment, including the
constant resupply of ammunition and spare parts
for artillery platforms, short- and medium-range
air defense systems to counter Russian air and
missile strikes, and ATACMS munitions fired by
HIMARS with the 300km range necessary to strike
Russian military targets anywhere in Ukraine or
Crimea.
Meanwhile, the initial flood of equipment and
ammunition from Washington’s European Allies
into Ukraine has been reduced to a trickle.
Daniel Fiott,
a European defense analyst at the Vrije
Universiteit Brussel, complained, “Ukraine needs
hardware, not hot air.” Equally important,
refugee fatigue is setting in across Europe.
Germans and Hungarians lost their patience
with the unrelenting influx of refugees into
Europe some time ago, but now the Poles are
reaching the saturation point. Polish households
confront
serious economic headwinds. Poland has one
of Europe’s highest inflation rates—15.6 percent
in July—caused in part by the war in Ukraine. As
conditions worsen in the fall and winter, it is
not hard to imagine enormous public pressure on
Berlin, Warsaw, Prague, Paris, and Rome to end
the war in Ukraine.
The hard truth is the introduction of new
weapon systems won’t change the strategic
outcome in Ukraine. Even if NATO’s European
members, together with Washington, D.C.,
provided Ukrainian troops with a new avalanche
of weapons, and it arrived at the front instead
of disappearing into the
black hole of Ukrainian corruption, the
training and tactical leadership required to
conduct complex offensive operations does not
exist inside Ukraine’s 700,000-man army.
In addition, there is an acute failure
to recognize that Moscow would react to such a
development by escalating the conflict. Unlike
Ukraine, Russia is not currently mobilized for a
larger war, but it could do so quickly.
American military and civilian leaders
routinely ignore the historical record and its
lessons. Most importantly, they ignored the
criticality of human capital in uniform that
frequently constitutes the margin of victory in
war.
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On June 22, 1941, the German Wehrmacht
launched its invasion of Russia with more horses
than tanks. For the most part, the German ground
forces were composed of Great War-style infantry
divisions
dependent on horse-draw logistics and artillery.
The German soldiers were indisputably excellent,
but only a minority were equipped with the
firepower, mobility, and armored protection
needed for warfare in Eastern Europe.
Of the millions of German soldiers who
marched into Russia, roughly 450,000 to 500,000
were assigned to Germany’s mobile armored force,
the offensive striking power that rapidly
crushed its Polish, British, Dutch, Belgian, and
French opponents. These soldiers were the best
of the best with the lion’s share of the modern
equipment.
It took four years, from 1939 to 1943, to
wear down this core element to the point where
large-scale German offensives were no longer
possible. The critical data point to remember is
that
55,000 German officers had been killed in action
by October.
These German officers were among the best and
most experienced officers in the army. They
performed the brilliant maneuvers that brought
the ill-equipped Wehrmacht to the gates of
Moscow in a war on three fronts—Western Europe,
the Mediterranean, and Eastern Europe. They led
it through the offensives that culminated in the
battles of Kursk and El Alamein.
A similar
problem plagued the Luftwaffe. German
industry could provide modern jet fighters, but
the Luftwaffe could no more replace the losses
of its best pilots than the German Army could
replace its best officers.
Meanwhile, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto
understood the importance of human capital in
uniform better than anyone. Yamamoto not only
wanted to strike and annihilate the U.S. fleet
at Pearl Harbor but also wanted to seize the
Hawaiian Islands, declaring,
“To defeat the U.S. Navy we must kill its
officers.” Yamamoto understood how long it
took to train and prepare officers for the Navy.
Ultimately, Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor
allowed U.S. forces to kill off the best the
Imperial Japanese armed forces had in the air
and at sea.
In war and peace, human capital is
everything. Sadly, Washington places almost no
value on it, eagerly
lowering standards of admission for soldiers
and officers. If this attitude persists, and it
probably will,
relaxed standards will catch up with
America’s military when our forces finally
confront a capable opposing force in battle.
John Adams, second president of the United
States, observed, “Facts are
stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes,
our inclinations, or the dictates of our
passion, they cannot alter the state of facts
and evidence.” Adams is still
right.
Ukraine’s war with Russia is at a
decisive point.
It is time to end it. Instead, the
authors of the letter seek to reinforce
failure. They are demanding a deeply
flawed strategy for Ukraine that will
lead in the best case to Ukraine’s
reduction to a shrunken, land-locked
state between the Dnieper River and the
Polish border. These are results of
misguided policies originating in the
1990s under the Clinton administration,
which drove Russia into political
isolation from Europe and forged
Moscow’s alliance with Beijing.
Expanding NATO to Russia’s borders was
never necessary and has become
disastrous for Europe. The longer the
war with Russia lasts the more likely it
becomes that the damage to Ukrainian
society and its army will be
irreparable. Neutrality on the Austrian
model for Ukraine is still possible. If
Washington insists on perpetuating
Ukraine’s war with Russia, the
neutrality option will vanish, NATO’s
fragile “coalition of the willing”
will collapse, and Ukraine will become
the new “sick
man of Europe” and remain a catalyst
for future conflict.
Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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