Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 8 – Nicholas II
famously wanted “a good little war” that would bring him victory and shore up
popular support for his rule. Now, more than a century later, Vladimir Putin needs
a conflict in Ukraine for exactly the same reason, according to Maksim
Kalashnikov. The only question is just what kind of conflict he currently
prefers
The Russian security analyst draws
that conclusion on the basis of what he says are the common interests of Kyiv
and Moscow in having the conflict in Ukraine continue without a final
resolution because Putin and his Ukrainian opposite number both need a war to
address their domestic political problems (forum-msk.org/material/power/12797557.html).
In Putin’s case, he continues, “war
must become an Orwellian instrument of domestic politics,” one in which he can
exploit the patriotic enthusiasm of “Russian nationalists of all kinds as well
as Stalinists, monarchists, and supporters of ‘the Right Sector.’” What he can’t
afford is an end to the war or alternatively its expansion beyond his ability
to dose it out.
Russia’s economic crisis isn’t about
to end; sanctions aren’t going to be lifted; and the Syrian war simply has not
had the resonance among Russians that fighting in Ukraine does, Kalashnikov
says. Moreover, Russians are
increasingly aware that regardless of what happens in Syria, ISIS is not going
to go away.
And that means that Putin “needs a
new war in order to tighten the screws to the maximum, to justify economic
collapse and the incarceration of all those who are dissatisfied, to cover the
theft by ‘the elite’ of property and the corruption in the force structures,
and to justify introducing ever more taxes and walls. To prepare in short for
the presidential election.”
Football matches won’t do. Simple
calls for repression won’t work. And the only place Putin has to “begin a small
real but controlled war” is in the Donbass and in Ukraine. No other conflict, not in Afghanistan or
Libya would give “the same political technology effect,” Kalashnikov argues.
Kalashnikov says that Russia’s war
in Ukraine could proceed along one of two scenarios, each of which has for
Putin plusses and minuses. The first would involve continuing the conflict at
roughly its current level, something that he suggests might suit Kyiv just as
much as it does Moscow. Such a war would be prolonged and make permanent the
settlement of 1991.
The other would involve a massive
Russian strike designed to destroy the Ukrainian military, something that could
be done relatively quickly but that would require pulling forces back from
Syria and would resemble “a victory in the spirit of the one over the Georgian
army in 2008,” another conflict that occurred at the time of presidential
elections.
A successful blitzkrieg in Ukraine
would require the Russian side to make use of all its forces, Kalashnikov says.
“But the moment is really propitious: America has entered a time of forced
self-isolation and of the resolution of the most complicated internal problems.” And neither it nor Europe would do more than
protest any such action.
More sanctions are not really a
problem for the Kremlin either because they would be unlikely to be that harsh
or that long-lasting, Kalashnikov argues. After all, they have been and
continue to be “an outstanding occasion for the establishment in the Russian
Federation of a Latin America-style military dictatorship.
(A third scenario is offered by Igor
Strelkov, the former pro-Moscow Donbass leader, who says Putin might fail to
press Russia’s advantage. He says that
Putin must save the DNR and LNR or suffer a political catastrophe equal to the
loss of the Russian fleet at Tsushima during the Russo-Japanese war, a disaster
triggered the 1905 revolution.)
Kalashnikov says that in raising the
possibility of a massive strike, he is not suggesting a new Barbarossa operation
but rather something like the German moves into Norway in 1940 or Desert Storm
more recently. Overwhelming force could knock out the Ukrainian army, and there
would not be any need to occupy that country or fear a partisan war.
An “ideal” outcome, he says, would
be “the division of Ukraine into several [Russian] protectorates” as well as
allowing Western Ukraine to drift toward the West. But for that to happen, the calculations in the
Kremlin will have to change from seeing a continuing war as having the greatest
advantage for Putin.
Wars are won, Kalashnikov says, not
by “enthusiasts” or “internet trolls” but by national armies. If Putin or his
successor chooses to go for a real victory, that is what will be required; but
if he continues as now, the war will go on, sometimes bubbling up and sometimes
quieting down, not because of military necessity but because of domestic
political requirements.
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