[Feffer, no doubt, is to be counted as a very knowledgeable and perceptive
commentator.

<<Ukraine is certainly concerned that a drawn-out conflict will not be to
its advantage. That’s why Zelensky has been trying to get as many arms—the
more sophisticated the better—as soon as possible. Much hinges on a second
Ukrainian counter-offensive, slated for some time in the spring after the
mud has dried up. If Ukrainian forces can drive a wedge between the Donbas
and Crimea, it can isolate the latter and create an aura of inevitability
around its efforts to expel Russian occupiers.

Call this the Croatian scenario, after the successful 1995 campaign by the
Croatian army to push Serbian forces out of positions they occupied inside
Croatia. Ultimately, Operation Storm led to a peace agreement that ended
the Yugoslav wars and contributed to undermining Serbian support for
strong-arm leader Slobodan Milosevic, who lost elections five years later.

The other scenario is the Korean one. As in the Korean War, the first year
of the Ukrainian conflict has featured dramatic reversals of territorial
control. What comes next might resemble the last two years of the Korean
War, in which the two sides battled to a virtual stalemate around the
original line of demarcation. If Ukraine and Russia battle to a similar
stand-off, they might also agree to a reluctant armistice.

It’s hard to know which of these scenarios will transpire. If there is one
salient take-away from the first year of the war in Ukraine it’s the
unpredictability of the course of events.

Russia surprised nearly everyone by actually invading Ukraine. Kyiv then
surprised almost everyone by successfully repelling the attack, followed by
a surprise counter-offensive that pushed even more Russian troops from
Ukrainian territory. Meanwhile, despite many predictions of collapse,
Russia hasn’t backed down.

Perhaps this second year will see the biggest surprise of all: an end to
the war that is just, with the aggressor punished and the victim
vindicated. That kind of peace is certainly worth fighting for.>>]

https://fpif.org/ukraines-future-like-the-korean-war-or-the-yugoslav-war

UKRAINE’S FUTURE: LIKE KOREA OR YUGOSLAVIA?
Will the war turn into a stalemate or the crushing defeat of an imperial
power?

By John Feffer | March 8, 2023
Originally published in Hankyoreh.

On February 24, the first anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine, Russian
President Vladimir Putin failed to commemorate the occasion with a speech.

There wasn’t much for Putin to celebrate. The invasion had failed to
dislodge the government of Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv or incorporate all of
Ukrainian territory into greater Russia.

Over the last year, the Russian military has suffered 60-70,000 fatalities
plus nearly 200,000 injuries. It has lost half of its fleet of tanks, and
monthly it continues to lose approximate 150 tanks while only managing to
replace 20 of them from the country’s only tank factory.

The call-up of new recruits for the army in the fall generated significant
pushback throughout the country. The new soldiers, many of them well into
middle age, are poorly trained and equipped. Russians speak of the
Ukrainian front as a “meat grinder” because the Russian army has been
throwing wave after wave of these unprepared recruits into the line of fire.

The much-anticipated Russian winter offensive to retake territory in the
Donbas region has either not materialized or failed to make any mark beyond
some negligible gains around the battered city of Bakhmut. Western
intelligence estimates that nearly all of Russia’s forces are now deployed
to Ukraine, and all of these soldiers still haven’t been able to turn the
tide in Russia’s favor.

The Russian economy hasn’t collapsed under the weight of international
sanctions, but it isn’t doing well. Russian GDP shrank by around 2 percent
last year. Hundreds of foreign companies have pulled out or suspended
operations. The Putin government has kept the economy afloat—and its war
effort funded—by increasing exports of raw materials, especially fossil
fuels. But this is not a sustainable strategy.

Somewhere between 500,000 and a million of Russians have left the country,
either in protest of Putin’s policies or to avoid serving in the military.
Although this exodus has reduced the ranks of Putin’s opposition, it has
also robbed the country of its most creative professionals. Combined with
the failure to diversify the economy away from raw materials, this “brain
drain” means that Russia is mortgaging its future in order to wage war in
Ukraine.

On the foreign policy front, Putin’s determination to expand the “Russian
world” has served only to expand the coalition of forces equally determined
to halt his advance. Sweden and Finland, despite decades of ambivalence,
have signed up to join NATO. In Finland, public support for NATO
membership, which stood at 17 percent in 2018, rose to 78 percent in fall
2022. Justifiably angry at NATO’s eastward creep, Putin has nonetheless
provided the Western alliance with the motivation to add to its ranks,
increase its military spending, and accelerate its coordination with
non-members like Ukraine.

Meanwhile, after the invasion, Putin lost nearly all of his support within
European far-right parties. Even his non-European allies are wavering. Only
seven countries voted against the UN resolution condemning Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine. Although China and India, among other countries,
continue to buy Russian energy, often at a significant discount, they are
not happy with the war and have pushed for a peace settlement.

Despite all of these failures, Putin remains committed to the war. At the
very least, he wants to control all of the Donbas—the provinces of Luhansk
and Donetsk—as well as the land in southern Ukraine that connects the
Russian mainland to the Crimean Peninsula, which the Kremlin seized in
2014. The Russian president believes that he can win a war of attrition,
given that Russia has a demographic edge over Ukraine. Even though Russia
has lost upwards of a million people to emigration post-invasion, far more
have left Ukraine: around 8 million, around 20 percent of the population.

Putin also thinks that support in the West for Ukraine will decline and the
military assistance will dry up. Polls in the United States and in Europe
indeed confirm that support for unabated military assistance has ebbed.
This hasn’t yet affected deliveries of weapons. But it could.

Ukraine is certainly concerned that a drawn-out conflict will not be to its
advantage. That’s why Zelensky has been trying to get as many arms—the more
sophisticated the better—as soon as possible. Much hinges on a second
Ukrainian counter-offensive, slated for some time in the spring after the
mud has dried up. If Ukrainian forces can drive a wedge between the Donbas
and Crimea, it can isolate the latter and create an aura of inevitability
around its efforts to expel Russian occupiers.

Call this the Croatian scenario, after the successful 1995 campaign by the
Croatian army to push Serbian forces out of positions they occupied inside
Croatia. Ultimately, Operation Storm led to a peace agreement that ended
the Yugoslav wars and contributed to undermining Serbian support for
strong-arm leader Slobodan Milosevic, who lost elections five years later.

The other scenario is the Korean one. As in the Korean War, the first year
of the Ukrainian conflict has featured dramatic reversals of territorial
control. What comes next might resemble the last two years of the Korean
War, in which the two sides battled to a virtual stalemate around the
original line of demarcation. If Ukraine and Russia battle to a similar
stand-off, they might also agree to a reluctant armistice.

It’s hard to know which of these scenarios will transpire. If there is one
salient take-away from the first year of the war in Ukraine it’s the
unpredictability of the course of events.

Russia surprised nearly everyone by actually invading Ukraine. Kyiv then
surprised almost everyone by successfully repelling the attack, followed by
a surprise counter-offensive that pushed even more Russian troops from
Ukrainian territory. Meanwhile, despite many predictions of collapse,
Russia hasn’t backed down.

Perhaps this second year will see the biggest surprise of all: an end to
the war that is just, with the aggressor punished and the victim
vindicated. That kind of peace is certainly worth fighting for.

John Feffer
John Feffer is the director of Foreign Policy In Focus. His latest book is
Right Across the World: The Global Networking of the Far-Right and the Left
Response.

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