Putin is banking on a failure of political will
in the west before Russia runs out of firepower
Timothy
Garton Ash
Democratic leaders need to prepare their citizens for
a long struggle over Ukraine – and a hard winter
Fri 5 Aug
2022 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/aug/05/ukraine-war-west-vladimir-putin-russia
The
Russo-Ukrainian war is coming down to a race between the weakening political
will of western democracies and the deteriorating military means of Vladimir
Putin’s dictatorship. But this race will be a marathon, not a sprint.
Sustaining that political will requires the kind of farsighted leadership which
most democracies are missing. It calls for a recognition that our own countries
are also, in some important sense, at war – and a corresponding politics of the
long haul.
Is this
what you hear when you turn on your television in the United States (where I am
now), Germany, Italy, Britain or France? Is this a leading topic in the
Conservative party contest to decide Britain’s next prime minister, or the
run-up to the Italian election on 25 September, or the campaign for the US
midterm elections on 8 November? No, no and no. “We are at war,” I heard
someone say recently on the radio; but he was an energy analyst, not a
politician.
The fact
that Ukrainian forces are preparing for a big counter-offensive to recapture
the strategically vital city of Kherson shows what a combination of western
arms and Ukrainian courage could achieve. US-supplied High Mobility Artillery
Rocket System (Himars) – long-range multiple-launch rocket systems – have
enabled the Ukrainians to hit artillery depots, bridges and command posts far
behind Russian lines. Russian forces have been redeployed from Donbas to defend
against the expected offensive, thus further slowing the Russian advance in the
east. Richard Moore, the head of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service (MI6),
observed recently that Russia might be “about to run out of steam” in Ukraine
because of shortages of material and adequately trained troops. So Ukraine has
a good chance of winning an important battle this autumn; but it’s still a long
way from winning the war.
In his
campaign to defeat not only Ukraine but also the west, Putin is counting on
Russia’s two traditional wartime allies: Field Marshal Time and General Winter.
The Russian leader is weaponising energy, reducing gas flows through the
Nordstream 1 pipeline so Germany can’t fully replenish its gas storage before
the weather turns cold. Then he will have the option of turning off the gas
entirely, plunging Germany and other dependent European countries into a
desperate winter. High energy prices as a result of the war continue to
turbocharge inflation in the west while keeping Putin’s own war chest filled
with the billions of euros Germany and others are still paying for Russian gas
and oil. Although a few grain ships are now leaving Odesa, his blockade of
Ukrainian ports has caused a food price crisis across parts of the Middle East
and Africa, resulting in much human misery and potentially in refugee flows and
political chaos. Those, too, are Putin’s friends. Better still: the global
south seems to blame this at least as much on the west as on Russia.
Putin’s
cultural and political analysis of the west leads him to believe that time is
on his side. In his view, the west is decadent, weakened by multiculturalism, immigration,
the post-nationalism of the EU, LGBTQ+ rights, atheism, pacifism and democracy.
No match, therefore, for carnivorous, martial great powers which still cleave
to the old trinity of God, family and nation.
There are people in the west who agree with him,
subverting western and European unity from within. Just read Viktor Orbán’s
scandalous recent speech to an ethnic Hungarian audience in Romania, with its
insistence that Hungarians should not become “mixed race”, its sweeping
critique of the west’s policy on Ukraine and its conclusion that “Hungary needs
to make a new agreement with the Russians”.
Although the party likely to emerge victorious from
next month’s Italian elections, the Fratelli d’Italia, is the indirect
successor of a neo-fascist party founded in 1946, it does at least support the
western position on the war in Ukraine. But the leaders of the Fratelli’s
probable coalition partners, the Lega’s Matteo Salvini and Forza Italia’s
Silvio Berlusconi have a pro-Putin past and cannot be relied on to stand firm
on Ukraine, as the current Italian prime minister, Mario Draghi, has done. In
Germany, a plurality of those asked in a recent opinion poll (47%) said Ukraine
should give up its eastern territories in return for “peace”. European voices
calling on Ukraine to “settle” along those lines will only get louder as the
war grinds on. (Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn recently joined them,
although his intervention won’t affect the strong cross-party consensus in
Britain on support for Ukraine.)
Most important are the midterm elections in the US. If
Donald Trump announces his presidential candidacy off the back of midterm
election successes for his partisans, this could spell big trouble for what has
so far been rare bipartisan consensus in the US on large-scale economic and
military support for Ukraine. Notoriously reluctant to criticise Putin, Trump
has told his supporters that “the Democrats are sending another $40bn to
Ukraine, yet America’s parents are struggling to even feed their children”.
What would
it take to prove the Russian leader wrong about the intrinsic weakness of
western democracies? Rather a lot. The two largest armies in Europe are going
to be slogging it out in Ukraine for months and quite probably years to come.
Neither side is giving up; neither has a clear path to victory. All the current
peace scenarios are unrealistic. When you can’t begin to see how something is
going to end, it’s unlikely to end soon.
To sustain
Ukraine’s resistance and enable its army to recover lost territory requires
weapon supplies on a scale that is large even for America’s military-industrial
complex. For example, the US has reportedly already sent one-third of its
entire stock of Javelin anti-tank missiles. According to a former deputy
governor of the National Bank of Ukraine, the country needs a further $5bn a
month in macroeconomic support just to ensure that its economy does not
collapse – close to double what it is currently getting. That’s before you even
get to the challenge of postwar reconstruction, which may cost as much as $1tn.
If we stay
the course, at scale, then Field Marshal Time will be on Ukraine’s side.
Putin’s stocks of his most modern weapons and best trained troops have already
been depleted. Keep up the pressure and – military experts tell us – he will be
reaching back to 40-year-old tanks, and raw recruits. Western sanctions are
hitting the hi-tech parts of his economy, needed for resupply. Could he
compensate for the loss of skilled troops by a general mobilisation? Will China
come to his aid with modern weapons supplies? Can he escalate? These questions
have to be asked, of course, but the pressure would be back on him.
In
democracies, leaders must justify and explain to voters this kind of
large-scale, strategic commitment, otherwise they will not support it in the
long run. Putin would then be proved right in his diagnosis of the weakness of
democracy. Estonia’s Kaja Kallas is giving an example of such leadership, but
then her people know all too much about Russia already. At the moment I don’t
see any leader of a major western democracy doing the same, except perhaps for
Mario Draghi – and he’s leaving.
Timothy
Garton Ash is a historian, political writer and Guardian columnist

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