AMERICAN
PURPOSE
Preparing for Defeat
Francis
Fukuyama
10 Mar
2022, 4:03 pm
https://www.americanpurpose.com/articles/preparing-for-defeat/
I’m writing
this from Skopje, North Macedonia, where I’ve been for the last week teaching
one of our Leadership Academy for Development courses. Following the Ukraine
war is no different here in terms of available information, except that I’m in
an adjacent time zone, and the fact that there is more support for Putin in the
Balkans than in other parts of Europe. A lot of the latter is due to Serbia,
and Serbia's hosting of Sputnik.
I’ll stick
my neck out and make several prognostications:
Russia is
heading for an outright defeat in Ukraine. Russian planning was incompetent,
based on a flawed assumption that Ukrainians were favorable to Russia and that
their military would collapse immediately following an invasion. Russian
soldiers were evidently carrying dress uniforms for their victory parade in
Kyiv rather than extra ammo and rations. Putin at this point has committed the
bulk of his entire military to this operation—there are no vast reserves of
forces he can call up to add to the battle. Russian troops are stuck outside
various Ukrainian cities where they face huge supply problems and constant
Ukrainian attacks.
The
collapse of their position could be sudden and catastrophic, rather than
happening slowly through a war of attrition. The army in the field will reach a
point where it can neither be supplied nor withdrawn, and morale will vaporize.
This is at least true in the north; the Russians are doing better in the south,
but those positions would be hard to maintain if the north collapses.
There is no
diplomatic solution to the war possible prior to this happening. There is no
conceivable compromise that would be acceptable to both Russia and Ukraine
given the losses they have taken at this point.
The United
Nations Security Council has proven once again to be useless. The only helpful
thing was the General Assembly vote, which helps to identify the world’s bad or
prevaricating actors.
The Biden
administration’s decisions not to declare a no-fly zone or help transfer Polish
MiGs were both good ones; they've kept their heads during a very emotional
time. It is much better to have the Ukrainians defeat the Russians on their
own, depriving Moscow of the excuse that NATO attacked them, as well as
avoiding all the obvious escalatory possibilities. The Polish MiGs in
particular would not add much to Ukrainian capabilities. Much more important is
a continuing supply of Javelins, Stingers, TB2s, medical supplies, comms
equipment, and intel sharing. I assume that Ukrainian forces are already being
vectored by NATO intelligence operating from outside Ukraine.
The cost
that Ukraine is paying is enormous, of course. But the greatest damage is being
done by rockets and artillery, which neither MiGs nor a no-fly zone can do much
about. The only thing that will stop the slaughter is defeat of the Russian
army on the ground.
Putin will
not survive the defeat of his army. He gets support because he is perceived to
be a strongman; what does he have to offer once he demonstrates incompetence
and is stripped of his coercive power?
The
invasion has already done huge damage to populists all over the world, who
prior to the attack uniformly expressed sympathy for Putin. That includes
Matteo Salvini, Jair Bolsonaro, Éric Zemmour, Marine Le Pen, Viktor Orbán, and
of course Donald Trump. The politics of the war has exposed their openly
authoritarian leanings.
The war to
this point has been a good lesson for China. Like Russia, China has built up
seemingly high-tech military forces in the past decade, but they have no combat
experience. The miserable performance of the Russian air force would likely be
replicated by the People’s Liberation Army Air Force, which similarly has no
experience managing complex air operations. We may hope that the Chinese
leadership will not delude itself as to its own capabilities the way the
Russians did when contemplating a future move against Taiwan.
Hopefully
Taiwan itself will wake up as to the need to prepare to fight as the Ukrainians
have done, and restore conscription. Let’s not be prematurely defeatist.
Turkish
drones will become bestsellers.
A Russian
defeat will make possible a “new birth of freedom,” and get us out of our funk
about the declining state of global democracy. The spirit of 1989 will live on,
thanks to a bunch of brave Ukrainians.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário