Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 20 – The strategy and
tactics Vladimir Putin has been employing in Ukraine represent an amazingly
precise implementation of ideas outlined and published by General Valery
Gerasimov, the chief of the Russian General Staff more than a year ago, another
indication that the Kremlin leader has not been acting extemporaneously in
response to events.
That link is all the more important
because it suggests that both the
political and military leaderships of the Russian Federation have agreed upon
this strategy, something that makes it more rather than less likely that the
Kremlin will apply it elsewhere in the coming months and years.
At the end of January 2013,
Gerasimov spoke the annual general meeting of the Russian Academy of Military
Science on “The Role of the General Staff in the Organization of the Defense of
the Country in Correspondence with the New Statute about the General Staff
Confirmed by the President of the Russian Federation.”
The full text of his remarks was
published by the Academy and is available at
avnrf.ru/index.php/vse-novosti-sajta/620-rol-generalnogo-shtaba-v-organizatsii-oborony-strany-v-sootvetstvii-s-novym-polozheniem-o-generalnom-shtabe-utverzhdjonnym-prezidentom-rossijskoj-federatsii and was then
summarized by a variety of Russian military affairs publications, including
most usefully at vpk-news.ru/sites/default/files/pdf/VPK_08_476.pdf).
Presented in the form of a
discussion of the lessons of recent conflicts in the Middle East, Gerasimov’s
speech in fact outlines his view about the emergence of a new kind of war in
the 21st century, one in which the distinctions between war and
peace and between uniformed personnel and covert operatives are continuously diminishing.
This combination, especially at a
time when “wars are not declared but simply begin,” Gerasimov told his
audience, is very different than what
most military thinkers traditionally have focused on but has the potential to
transform “a completely well-off and stable country ... into an arena of the most intense armed
conflict in a matter of months or even days.”
In these new conflicts, “the very ‘rules
of war’ have been fundamentally changed. The role of non-military means to
achieve political and strategic goals has grown,” and “in a number of cases,”
this combination has proved to be “significantly more effective” in comparison with
what could have been achieved by military means alone.
In these wars of a new type,
Gerasimov says, are “mixed together” a broad range of “political, economic,
information, humanitarian and other measures,” all of which are supplemented by
covert and thus deniable military measures plus offers of peace-keeping
assistance as a means to strategic ends.
“New information technologies,” the
general continues, permit a significant reduction in the spatial, temporal, and
information gap between the forces and organs of administration.” And they also
mean that “frontal clashes of major military formations ... are gradually
receding into the past.”
All this also means, Gerasimov says,
that the customary “distinctions between strategic, operational and tactical
levels and between offensive and defensive operations are being wiped out.” That is something that Russian military
theorists and planners must take into ever greater account.
“Asymmetric methods” also have the
capacity to “level the playing field” against an opponent who may enjoy local
superiority. Such methods include but are not limited to the use of special operations
forces and the recruitment and mobilization of opposition groups on the
territory of one’s opponent to make his entire country “a front” in the conflict.
The United States, Gerasimov says,
has shown the way in this kind of new war beginning with Desert Storm in 1991,
but the Russian general suggests that Russian military theorists and planners
can draw on the record of partisan warfare during World War II, the use of
irregular forces during the Soviet war in Afghanistan, and more recent
operations in the North Caucasus.
It does not require any leap of
faith to see how what Vladimir Putin has been doing in Ukraine reflects exactly
Gerasimov’s set of assumptions about how best to conduct such wars of a new
type.
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