A no-fly zone means Nato shooting down Russian
jets. We must not do that
Daniel
Davis
Nato must remain resolute and sober. If we let our
emotions get the best of us, we may suffer far more harm than anything that has
yet befallen Ukraine
The west must resolutely refuse to be drawn into the
war through the Ukrainian leader’s emotional appeal
Tue 8 Mar
2022 11.18 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/mar/08/ukraine-no-fly-zone-nato-russia-war
With every
passing day, with every image and video that shows how Russia is destroying
Ukrainian cities and killing civilians, the calls for punitive measures against
Moscow rise. While the sentiment is understandable, we need a strong dose of
reality to curb some of the more emotional impulses which, taken too far, could
not only fail to make our country safer – but result in the US stumbling into a
catastrophic war that can be avoided.
The war
between Russia and Ukraine started horribly and has only intensified since.
Kharkiv has been devastated by heavy Russian bombardment. The port city of
Mariupol could fall to Russian forces any moment, and vicious street fighting
gets closer to the heart of Kyiv by the day. Accurate casualty figures are as
yet unknown, but they are significant for the Ukrainian civil population. The
reaction from the western world against Moscow has been immediate and severe.
Russia has
seen the most punitive and comprehensive set of sanctions levied against
another country since the second world war. Moscow has been almost entirely cut
off from the Swift banking system. News organizations around the world have
ceased operations there and curtailed Russian media outlets in the west.
Businesses the world over have suspended operations in the country. All of the
measures have taken a serious toll on the Russian population.
To date, however,
none of it has had any discernable impact on Putin’s prosecution of the war, as
his military machine continues its march through Ukraine. That apparent lack of
success has many in the west contemplating the imposition of even harsher
measures to punish Moscow with the eventual hope of forcing Putin to end the
war and withdraw his troops.
While it is
entirely reasonable and appropriate to impose a serious cost on Russia for
their grossly unnecessary war of choice, the west must stop to consider the ramifications
of its policies before taking further action. If we let emotion have too much
sway in our next steps, we could perversely worsen, materially, the West’s
collective security.
Some of the
options under consideration from various quarters include not just sending Kyiv
more arms and ammunition, but increasingly sophisticated weapons such as air
defense systems, modern fighter jets, and more advanced missile systems. The
governments of some European countries, such as Sweden and the UK, have not prevented
their citizens and military veterans from going to Ukraine to fight the
Russians. But the most dangerous idea being given increasing consideration is
the establishment of a no-fly zone over Kyiv.
No less
than three retired four-star American generals, all former Nato supreme allied
commanders, have given some degree of support to the idea of a no-fly zone in
Ukraine. One of them, General Philip Breedlove, proposed a no-fly zone for
humanitarian purposes, suggesting it might be tolerable to Moscow if the US
says “we are not going to fire on you unless you fire on us”.
Such
distinctions are obviously pointless: if we enforce the zone, then by
definition we have to shoot down anything that flies into it, whether it
attacks our planes or not. And if anyone had any doubts about what Russia’s
response would be to one of its jets being destroyed in a no-fly zone, Putin
put them to rest on Friday when he said he would consider any attack in Russian
aviation to be an attack on his country and respond in kind.
President
Zelenskiy has been outspoken in urging Nato to ignore this danger and impose a
no-fly zone regardless of Putin’s comments. On Friday, he tried to shame Nato
into the move by saying the alliance leaders would be responsible for Ukrainian
deaths if they didn’t intervene on his behalf. “All the people who will die
from this day will die because of you,” Zelensky said, accusing the alliance of
“weakness” and “disunity.”
The west must resolutely refuse to be drawn into the
war through the Ukrainian leader’s emotional appeal
While
Zelensky’s desire is understandable – his nation is under vicious attack – the
west must resolutely refuse to be drawn into the war through the Ukrainian
leader’s emotional appeal. As bad as it is that millions are suffering in
Ukraine, western leaders have obligations, first and foremost, to safeguard
their populations. Fighting Russia on behalf of Zelensky would expose the
populations of the entire alliance to potential attack by Moscow, which could
escalate to nuclear warfare.
It is
crucial the west does not overreact to the war, as bad as it is. The sanctions
currently in place are unprecedented in their severity and will impose a
penalty on Putin that it could take upwards of a decade from which to fully
recover. Moreover, regardless of how the war ends, Putin’s military is going to
be severely weakened in the aftermath. Because of the strong sanctions, it
would likely take Putin over a decade to rebuild Russia’s military strength to
its pre-war position – which has been exposed as being far weaker than most
imagined – much less to be capable of invading a Nato country.
Meanwhile,
because Putin has shown he is willing to use force, virtually every European
country is now going to significantly increase its defense spending and put
real emphasis on modernizing their own self-defense capacity, as evidenced by
Berlin’s $113bn investment in its defense budget.
The bottom
line is that if Nato remains resolute and sober in its response to Putin’s
invasion of Ukraine, refuses to get drawn into a no-win war, western security
for the foreseeable future will be strengthened. Let our emotions get the best
of us, however, and risk widening the war, and we may suffer far more harm than
anything that has yet befallen Ukraine.
Daniel L Davis
is a Senior Fellow for Defense Priorities and a former lieutenant colonel in
the US army who deployed into combat zones four times. He is the author of The
Eleventh Hour in 2020 America. Follow him @DanielLDavis1
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