The fighting is in Ukraine, but risk of World War
III is real
Conflict could easily escalate into a direct
confrontation between Russia and the West, officials and analysts warn.
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN
March 4,
2022 5:49 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/fight-ukraine-russia-world-war-risk-real/
CHIȘINĂU,
Moldova — So far, it is still Russia’s war against Ukraine. But World War III
has never been closer.
As Russian
forces pummel Kyiv and other cities, Western powers have maneuvered extremely
carefully to avoid direct conflict with President Vladimir Putin, the man who
controls the world’s largest nuclear arsenal and has shown no qualms in
boasting about it.
Ukraine’s
Western allies are supplying weapons and other materiel, but have ruled out the
idea of imposing a no-fly zone. EU countries are providing air defense systems,
but have balked at Ukraine’s request for fighter jets. No country has offered
to send troops.
And yet,
senior Western government officials, diplomats and military analysts
acknowledge that there is now a grave danger that the United States and other
NATO allies could be drawn into the war — at virtually any moment, as the
result of any number of scenarios.
“One is a
mistake,” said a Washington-based analyst whose work is partly financed by the
U.S. government. “They lob a missile into Poland. That is not impossible and
then it very quickly escalates. But we have to respond. We can’t not respond.”
“Or the
outcry against the crimes against humanity is so strong that we feel compelled
to take what we think is a limited and judicious action,” the analyst said,
speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.
“The
enforcement of a no-fly zone means killing Russians,” the analyst said.
“Anything that we do that results in killing Russians puts us into World War
III.”
The
shelling and a fire at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in the early hours
of Friday morning provided yet another frightening example of the type of
emergency scenario that could ensnare a broader international coalition in
Putin’s war: to urgently prevent a global catastrophe.
But other
more mundane scenarios abound. Already, on Wednesday Russian planes violated
Swedish air space multiple times. An Estonian cargo ship sunk off the coast of
Odesa, apparently after hitting a mine. Any such incident could easily
escalate.
U.S.
President Joe Biden has been adamant about American forces not getting involved
in the fighting. In his State of the Union speech this week, Biden described
the war as Ukraine’s fight and said Washington would do what it could to help.
“We’ll
continue to aid the Ukrainian people as they defend their country and help ease
their suffering,” he said. “But let me be clear: Our forces are not engaged and
will not engage in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine. Our forces are not
going to Europe to fight [in] Ukraine but to defend our NATO allies in the
event that Putin decides to keep moving west.”
One
European official privy to intelligence briefings provided to U.S. allies said
analysts in Washington had reached a terrifying conclusion: “Russia is ready to
use a thermonuclear bomb in Ukraine,” the official said.
The
official said the war in Ukraine was far more dangerous than anything Europe
has seen since the end of World War II, including the Balkan wars of the 1990s.
“As
horrible as that was,” the official said, “this is worse, with the potential of
getting a real European war, or a world war very quickly. This is just getting
deeper and deeper, every day.”
On Friday,
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg reiterated the alliance’s wish to avoid
conflict and unwillingness to impose a no-fly zone. “The only way to implement
a no-fly zone is to send NATO planes — fighter planes — into Ukrainian
airspace, and then impose that no-fly zone by shooting down Russian planes,” Stoltenberg
said following a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels. “If we did
that, we’ll end up with something that could end in a full-fledged war in
Europe involving many more countries and causing much more human suffering.”
On a visit
to Chişinău, the Moldovan capital which has been swamped by Ukrainian refugees,
the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, said he recognized the whole
world has a stake in what’s happening in Ukraine.
“Today the
problem is not only Donbas, the problem is not only Ukraine — what is at stake
is the stability in Europe and the whole international order,” he said.
But asked
if he would back a no-fly zone enforced by NATO allies, 21 of whom are EU
members, Borrell said that was not a decision for him or the EU to take.
Proxy war
Officials
and diplomats who are experts on Russia say the effort to portray the conflict
as Ukraine’s war misses the key point: Putin has attacked Ukraine precisely
because it chose a path toward the EU and NATO. Fighting Ukraine, they say, is
a proxy for fighting the West.
Some
believe the conflict can only be resolved if Putin’s complaints about the U.S.
and NATO are resolved. Until then, he will continue the war, seeking to conquer
or destroy the country, and making the peace negotiations with Ukrainian
officials of little significance.
In other
words, the West will end up even more directly involved, politically and
perhaps militarily, than it is already. The precise nature of that greater role
is a matter of debate but many believe it is coming, one way or another — and
some argue that the sooner it happens, the quicker the war will end. That
calculation, of course, presumes Putin choose self-preservation over nuclear
Armageddon.
But all
signs suggest the situation in Ukraine will get far worse in the coming days, a
point French President Emmanuel Macron warned about on Thursday.
As Putin
realizes that fury among the Ukrainian population means he will lose
politically, no matter the military outcome, there is a heightened risk he will
simply seek to destroy Ukraine, flattening its cities and towns just as Russian
forces obliterated the Chechen capital of Grozny.
And the
devastating barrage of severe sanctions that are punishing the Russian economy
will almost certainly remain in place, giving Putin little incentive to back
away from his goal of conquering Ukraine and toppling its government. Putin
chose war fully knowing there would be severe economic consequences — a
calculation he made previously with the invasion and annexation of Crimea,
which led to sanctions and steep absorption costs.
One senior
EU official said that Ukrainians would pay a terrible price as a result of the
West insisting it is not in the fight, and delaying its direct involvement.
“They will try to pretend for a while longer, and many more Ukrainians will
have to die,” the senior official said, adding that there was a need for the
West to recognize that it was Putin’s primary target.
“Even if
they would [impose] the damn no-fly zone, that wouldn’t change the dynamics,”
the senior official added. “It’s still taken as somebody else’s war.”
A second
senior EU official said that EU member countries had taken care to be sure that
the weapons and other aid they are supplying to Ukraine were in accordance with
Article 51 of the United Nations Charter, regarding a country’s right to
self-defense, and that it should not be seen in any way by Moscow or anyone
else as EU states directly entering the conflict with Russia.
“The Union
is not at war with Russia,” the second official said. “We are in line with the
U.N. Charter.” The second official added: “But we need to help Ukraine because
Ukraine is being attacked and has the right to self-defense.”
Molly
McKew, an independent security analyst based in Washington who publishes a
newsletter called Great Power, said by denying their centrality in the dispute,
Western powers were failing to seize on an opportunity to unite the three
Slavic nations that Putin often talks about — Ukraine, Russia and Belarus — but
against the Russian autocrat, in support of democracy.
“It’s like
we’re not understanding that we’re a participant in this war already — not
because we put ourselves there, not because we were looking for this war, not
because of any decision that NATO made or any individual bilateral partners of
Ukraine made, but because Vladimir Putin is fighting a war against us,” McKew
said. “And if we show up to the war, it will end sooner and faster with less
people dead, and that’s really the decision we have to make now.”
She said
that there was a chance Putin would decide to broaden the conflict even as
Western countries continued to try to walk a legal tightrope. “I think right
now there’s extremely cautious legal microanalysis happening — Is a fighter jet
too much? Is that NATO participating in a war? Is the drones too much? Is that
NATO arming Ukraine in the war? — You know what? Vladimir Putin doesn’t care
about your 40-page legal microanalysis that you just sent to the National
Security Council.”
Putin’s
‘Gaddafi mindset’
Increasing
talk about the need to kill or depose Putin could also transform the fight in
Ukraine into a world war, experts say, as the Russian leader concludes that he
is not only engaged in regime preservation but literally in self-preservation.
Many
Western officials and diplomats aren’t whispering these days when they express
hopes that a Russian oligarch or someone else close to Putin will kill him.
U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham on Thursday publicly suggested Putin should be
assassinated, saying: “Is there a Brutus in Russia? Is there a more successful
Colonel Stauffenberg in the Russian military?” Graham was referring in the
first instance to the Roman politician who was among the assassins of Julius Caesar,
and in the second to the German army officer who failed to assassinate Adolf
Hitler.
Putin is
known to harbor deep anger over the death of the Libyan leader, Muammar
Gaddafi, who was taken prisoner, humiliated, beaten and killed while begging
his captors for mercy. The scenes were filmed on a mobile phone.
The
Washington-based analyst said the Russian president would go to any lengths to
avoid Gaddafi’s fate, and that suggestions Putin should be tried as a war
criminal could trigger him.
“Even
scarier” than other scenarios that would draw NATO into the conflict “is the
talk about trying him before the International Criminal Court,” the analyst
said. “That’s kind of Gaddafi territory. You have to be real careful about
putting a dictator who still has his finger on a nuclear button in a Gaddafi
mindset.”
Overall,
the analyst said, Western officials including Biden were not recognizing the
acute danger of a world war. “Everybody is doing what they have done all along,
except something fundamental has changed,” the analyst said.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário