Zombie War: Plan B for Ukraine
Jim Kavanagh
Something’s Gotta Give
Voices on all sides—U.S., Ukraine, Russia—assure us that a
major break in the military situation in Ukraine is imminent. Even as the
Russian forces (RF) advance steadily in the area of Bakhmut and Avdivka, the
Ukraine army (UA) is said to be poised for a last-ditch major offensive, driving
toward Crimea on the southern front, which it must launch and must win.
It’s impossible to know what’s true and what’s feint about
all this, and one can never be certain of the outcome once armies start blowing
each other up, but I feel comfortable saying that: 1) There will be a Ukrainian
offensive. The Ukrainians will throw everything they have into it and will make
immediate territorial advances. 2) It is very unlikely that Ukraine will
advance far enough to seriously threaten to re-take Crimea, and impossible that
it will drive Russia to capitulate. 3) It is likely that the UA will exhaust
itself, that enormous, irreplaceable, quantities of its manpower and materiel
will be destroyed, and that the massive Russian force that has been held back
until now will begin its own offensive that will be able to advance at will. It
will be evident and undeniable that there is no longer any military impediment
to the RF moving as far west in Ukraine as it wants.
I understand that surprises can come from many directions—incompetence of key commanders, political pressure from citizens in various countries, immediate NATO intervention, etc.—but I think it’s important to address the predicament that last outcome—a decisive military defeat of Ukraine—will create. That outcome will be an urgent crisis for the US/NATO/Kiev, requiring immediate decision and action. It’s also the outcome they expect and fear, and for which they are already considering their choices.