Paul Goble
Staunton,
July 12 – Colonel Riho Uhtegi the commander of Estonia’s special forces, told a
Western outlet this week that any Russian invasion of Estonia might reach
Tallinn in two days but that it would “die” in the Estonian capital because
Estonian special forces and the united Estonian people would cut its supply
lines and make a further advance impossible.
He
told Politico’s Molly K. McKew Estonians
are constantly talking about what a Russian invasion would be like. People say,
“yeah, the Russian can get to Tallinn in two days … Maybe” as it is only 125
miles from the Russian border. “But they can’t get all of Estonia in two days”
(politico.com/magazine/story/2018/07/10/they-will-die-in-tallinn-estonia-girds-for-war-with-russia-218965).
Russian
invaders may get to the Estonian capital in two days, he acknowledges. “But
they will die in Tallinn. And they know this” because the entire Estonian
people will rise against them, destroying their lines of communication and
supply and forcing the Russian forces first to stop and then retreat.
Uhtegi sees the Georgian case in
2008 as instructive: “You know why the Russians didn’t take Tbilisi in 2008?
They were just up the road, 50 kilometers of so, and nothing was stopping them.”
But they stopped because the “Georgians are crazy and they would fight. The
idea of this unwinnable asymmetric fight in Tbilisi was not so appealing to the
Russians.”
Estonia’s defensive doctrine rests on
General Order No. 1 that Aleksandr Einseln, the Estonian-American who served in
the US military before returning to his homeland in the 1990s to take command
of the Estonian Defense Forces. That order specifies that in the event of an
invasion, the country’s military is to resist the invader without waiting for
orders.
More than that, Estonian citizens
both those organized in the Kaitseliit guard as well as ordinary Estonians are
to fight as well. They will focus on defending their local communities against
both hybrid and direct threats. Such defense, Uhtegi says, “is very local … This village. This town. This bridge. This river. This piece of land. It’s theirs to defend.”
But in defending these parts, they defend
the whole and would make it impossible for Russia to sustain any invasion – by raising
the price for Moscow to a point that Russian leaders would find unsustainable. “I
don’t know what it would be like if the Russians really start to fight … Just
that every Estonian will fight” back.
Not surprisingly, Russian officials
are having none of this. Vladimir
Shamanov, head of the Duma defense committee, for example, calls Uhtegi’s
remarks “the words of a mad man” and says his place should not be “in the armed
forces or some other structure but in a mental hospital” (stoletie.ru/lenta/estonija_predrekla_rossijskoj_armii_gibel_v_talline_430.htm).
Konstantin
Sivkov, vice president of the Russian Academy of Rocket and Artillery Science,
says that “the very idea of ‘the seizure of Estonia by Russia’ is a fantasy.” Any military conflict with NATO would “instantly”
escalate into a nuclear war “in the course of which Estonia would simply disappear”
(vz.ru/politics/2018/7/11/556525.html).
If by some miracle the conflict didn’t
go nuclear, Sivkov continues, Russian forces are sufficient to achieve its
primary goal: creating a land corridor to the exclave of Kaliningrad. If these
forces were directed to take Tallinn as part of that, the Estonian capital “would
be seized not in two days but in one. Estonia doesn’t have any army to speak of.”
The Estonian military numbers 6400 effectives
in the regular forces, he says In addition, there are 15,800 members of the regional
defense forces or Kaitseliit. Uhtegi’s suggestion that they and the population
could cut Russian supply lines in the event of an invasion is simply “unserious.”
The only real obstacle to a potential Russian advance,
the Moscow analyst says, is the presence of NATO forces. Without them, a single Russian division would
be sufficient to occupy Estonia; with them, a far larger force would be
required. And it would need “two weeks or more” to complete the job.
Yury Melkonov of Latvia’s military
historical journal Baltfort agrees, arguing that Russia could use its
superiority in the air and on the sea to ensure that it could continue any
advance its forces were ordered to make. Tallinn could be taken but it is not the
primary target for Russia which would be concerned about security ports and
coastline.
Uhtegi’s declaration, he argues, is “the
ordinary rhetoric of military personnel,” adding that any Estonian officer who
makes such claims does himself and his country no honor. Russia isn’t planning to
invade Estonia, and Estonians and their friends should know that. Russians will
come as visitors not invaders, he says.
As for the timing of Uhtegi’s
remarks, Konstantin Zatulin of the Duma’s CIS committee suggests that this is
all about sending a message to the Trump-Putin summit that will take place in
Helsinki less than 100 kilometers from the Estonian capital and that nothing
more should be read into the declaration.
Three things are interesting about
the Russian response. First, it verges on the hysterical. Second, it shows that
Moscow has enormous confidence that NATO will defend Estonia and other member
states. And third, it shows that despite that confidence, the Russian military
has developed plans for seizing Estonia if so ordered.
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