On his first foreign visit to Belarus on Tuesday since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin explained during a joint press conference with his Belarusian counterpart Alexander Lukashenko that the time frame of the military offensive in Ukraine was determined by the intensity of hostilities and Russia would act according to its plan.
“I often get these questions, can’t we hurry it up?’ We can.
But it depends on the intensity of hostilities and, any way you put it, the
intensity of hostilities is directly related to casualties,” said the Russian
president. “Our task is to achieve the set goals while minimizing these losses.
We will act rhythmically, calmly, and according to the plan that was initially
proposed by the General Staff.”
On the fateful day of Feb. 24, in a three-pronged blitz from
the north, east and south, Russian ground forces, backed by close air support
and volleys of cruise missiles launched by Russian naval forces deployed in the
Black Sea, overran Ukraine and laid siege to the capital, Kyiv, whose impending
fall in days was predicted even by the
mainstream media.
It has become clear now the “40-mile-long Trojan Horse” of
battle tanks, armored vehicles and heavy artillery that descended from Belarus
in the north and reached the outskirts of Kyiv in the early days of the war
without encountering much resistance en route the capital was simply a decoy
astutely designed as a diversionary tactic by Russia’s military strategists in
order to deter Ukraine from sending reinforcements to Donbas in east Ukraine
where real battles for territory were actually fought and scramble to defend
the embattled country’s capital instead.
Except in the early days of the military campaign when
Russian airstrikes and long-range artillery shelling targeted military
infrastructure in the outskirts of Kyiv to degrade the combat potential of
Ukraine’s armed forces, the capital did not witness much action during the
month-long offensive. Otherwise, with the tremendous firepower at its disposal,
the world’s second most powerful military force had the demonstrable capability
to reduce the whole city down to the ashes.
Despite having immense firepower at its disposal that could
readily turn the tide in conflicts as protracted as Chechnya and Syria wars, Russian
advance in Ukraine was slower than expected according to most estimates because
the Kremlin did all it can to minimize collateral damage, particularly needless
civilian losses in the former Soviet republic whose majority population is
sympathetic to Russia.
This is precisely what Putin
explained at a press conference in Belarus Tuesday that “the time frame of
the military offensive in Ukraine is determined by the intensity of hostilities,”
but “the intensity of hostilities is directly related to the number of
casualties,” and “Russia’s task is to achieve the set goals while minimizing
the losses.”
In other words, with the tremendous firepower at the
disposal of Russian forces, it was as easy to capture Kyiv as vanquishing
entrenched jihadist militants by Russia’s air force and long-range artillery in
Aleppo in Syria or Grozny in Chechnya.
But the indiscriminate bombardment of the densely populated
Ukrainian capital and the ensuing urban warfare against heavily armed Ukrainian
militias nurtured by NATO patrons would inevitably have caused thousands of
needless civilian casualties. Therefore, the Russian peacemaker decided to
spare the rest of the embattled country and restricted the Russian military
offensive on liberating Russian-majority Donbas region in east Ukraine.
Putin reiterated that Russia’s actions in several regions of
Ukraine, implying diversionary tactics deployed by Russian forces in Kyiv and
Chernihiv in the north, were intended only “to tie down enemy forces” and carry
out missile strikes with the purpose of “destroying the Ukrainian military’s
infrastructure,” so as to “create conditions for more active operations on the territory
of Donbas.”
In a momentous announcement on March 29, Russian Deputy
Defense Minister Alexander Fomin, leading the Russian peace delegation in
Istanbul talks, told reporters: “In order to increase mutual trust and create
the necessary conditions for further negotiations and achieving the ultimate
goal of agreeing and signing an agreement, a decision was made to radically, by
a large margin, reduce military activity in the Kyiv and Chernihiv directions.”
The generous Russian offer scaling back its blitz north of
the capital and focusing instead on liberating Russian-majority Donbas region
in east Ukraine, a task that has already been accomplished in large measure,
was a major unilateral concession ending the month-long offensive in Ukraine.
Whereas the Ukrainian delegation’s “wish-list” at the
Istanbul peace negotiations, naively insisting on the EU membership in the
midst of the war and demanding security guarantees in terms similar to Article
5 of the NATO charter, the collective defense clause of the transatlantic military
alliance, was inconsequential details that could have been discussed later,
either bilaterally between Russia and Ukraine, or on international forums, such
as the UN Security Council or General Assembly.
In any case, Russia has already accomplished its strategic
objectives in Ukraine, as the Crimean Peninsula and the Donbas region are now
de facto independent territories where Russian peacekeeping forces have been deployed
to maintain peace and stability.
Since the withdrawal of Russian forces from north Ukraine, although
NATO’s policymakers are predicting “a major new Russian offensive in east
Ukraine” in order to hype the threat, Russia now intends only to consolidate
its territorial gains achieved in the Donbas region in the month-long blitz.
On Wednesday, Russian forces triumphantly announced the
complete liberation of strategically significant port city Mariupol, the
second-largest city in the Donetsk Oblast in east Ukraine and the hub of CIA-trained
neo-Nazi militias, thus claiming a major strategic victory in the Russo-Ukraine
War.
Ukraine’s infamous Azov Battalion, widely acknowledged as a
neo-Nazi volunteer paramilitary force connected with foreign white supremacist
organizations, was initially formed as a volunteer group in May 2014 out of the
ultra-nationalist Patriots of Ukraine gang, and the neo-Nazi Social National
Assembly (SNA) group.
As a battalion, the group fought on the frontlines against
pro-Russia separatists in Donbas, the eastern region of Ukraine, and rose to
prominence after recapturing the strategic port city of Mariupol from the
Russia-backed separatists.
The militant outfit was officially integrated into the
National Guard of Ukraine on November 12, 2014, and exacted high praise from
then-President Petro Poroshenko. “These are our best warriors,” he said at an
awards ceremony in 2014. “Our best volunteers.”
In June 2015, both Canada and the United States announced
they would not support or train the Azov regiment, citing its neo-Nazi
connections. The following year, however, the US lifted the ban under pressure
from the Pentagon, and the CIA initiated the
clandestine program to nurture ultra-nationalist militias in east Ukraine
in order to mount a war of attrition against Russia.
In one of the most critical battles of the Russo-Ukraine
War, Russia’s defense ministry claimed
Wednesday 1,026 soldiers from Ukraine’s 36th Marine Brigade, including 162
officers, holed up in the Azovstal industrial district, the lynchpin dividing
Russian-held areas to the west and east of the city, had “voluntarily laid down
their arms” and surrendered the last bastion of militancy in Mariupol to
Russian forces.
Mariupol’s capture would help Russia secure a land corridor
between the Donetsk and Luhansk republics in Donbas and Crimea, which Moscow
annexed in 2014, following the Maidan coup toppling pro-Russia Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych.
The Guardian reported
Wednesday: “Military experts say local support, logistics, the terrain in
the region and the appointment by Moscow of a new senior general, Aleksandr
Dvornikov [a decorated war hero and the former commander of Russian forces in
Syria] as overall commander of Russian forces in Ukraine, could improve the
performance of a force that Britain’s defense ministry said on Wednesday had so
far been hampered by an inability to cohere and coordinate.”
Local support of the native population to the Russian forces
in the Russian-majority region is the key element here, that even the
mainstream media unwittingly acknowledged, as ethnic Russians in east Ukraine,
relentlessly persecuted for eight long years by Ukraine’s security forces and
allied neo-Nazi militias, have by and large welcomed Russian liberators in
Donbas.
To return the favor of halting Russian military campaign
north of the capital and focusing on liberating Russian-majority Donbas in east
Ukraine, practically spelling an end to Russia’s month-long offensive in the
embattled country, NATO powers have announced transferring heavy weapons,
including tanks, armored personnel carriers, artillery and even helicopters, to
Ukraine to escalate the conflict.
Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee on
April 7, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley revealed that US and
NATO countries have collectively
provided roughly 60,000 anti-tank weapons and 25,000 anti-aircraft weapons
during NATO’s “weapons for peace” program to Ukraine since Russia’s invasion on
Feb. 24.
The Biden administration announced
an additional $800 million in military assistance to Ukraine on Wednesday. The
package, which brings the total military aid since Russian forces invaded in
February to more than $2.5 billion, includes artillery systems, artillery
rounds, armored personnel carriers and unmanned coastal defense boats.
The new package includes 11 Mi-17 helicopters that had been
earmarked for Afghanistan before the US-backed government collapsed last year.
It also includes 18 155mm howitzers, along with 40,000 artillery rounds, 10
counter-artillery radars, 200 armored personnel carriers, 500 Javelin anti-tank
missiles, and 300 additional Switchblade drones.
The new military assistance package to Ukraine will be
funded using Presidential Drawdown Authority, or PDA, in which the president
can authorize the transfer of articles and services from US stocks without
congressional approval in response to an emergency.
As news of the latest security assistance came out,
executives from the top US weapons-makers met with Pentagon officials to
expedite NATO’s “weapons for peace” program in Ukraine. These included executives
from BAE Systems, General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, Huntington Ingalls
Industries, Harris Technologies, Boeing, Raytheon Technologies and Northrop
Grumman.
But in a significantly escalatory move, virtually scuttling
the Russian peace initiative to Ukraine announced at the Istanbul talks on
March 29 and the subsequent withdrawal of Russian forces from the embattled
country, Ukraine's Operational Command South announced
Thursday that it hit a Russian warship with a “Ukrainian-made Neptune
anti-ship missile” off the coast of Odesa in southeast Ukraine and that it had
started to sink.
“In the Black Sea operational zone, Neptune anti-ship cruise
missiles hit the cruiser Moskva, the flagship of the Russian Black Sea Fleet—it
received significant damage,” the Ukrainian statement said. “A fire broke out.
Other units of the ship’s group tried to help, but a storm and a powerful
explosion of ammunition overturned the cruiser and it began to sink.”
Russia's defense ministry claimed the “accidental fire” on
the Soviet-era guided-missile cruiser Moskva had been contained, but left the
ship badly damaged, though it “remains afloat” and measures were being taken to
tow it to port. The ministry said the crew had been safely evacuated to other
Black Sea Fleet ships in the area.
Russian news agencies said the 611-foot-long (186 meters)
Moskva, with a crew of almost 500, was commissioned in 1983 and refurbished in
1998. The Moskva was armed with a range of anti-ship and anti-aircraft missiles
as well as torpedoes and naval guns and close-in missile defense systems,
including 16 anti-ship Vulkan cruise missiles with a range of at least 700 km
(440 miles).
Although Ukraine claimed the Russian warship was struck by a
“Ukrainian-made Neptune anti-ship missile,” developed domestically based on the
Soviet KH-35 cruise missile that became operational in the Ukrainian naval
forces just last year, Politico
reported on March 16 that Kyiv had specifically demanded “long-range
anti-ship missiles” from Washington, and the Russian guided-missile cruiser was
most likely destroyed by long-range anti-ship missiles provided to Ukraine by
the United States.
“A Western diplomat familiar with Ukraine’s requests said Kyiv
specifically has asked the US and allies for more Stingers and Starstreak
man-portable air-defense systems, Javelins and other anti-tank weapons,
ground-based mobile air-defense systems, armed drones, long-range anti-ship
missiles, off-the-shelf electronic warfare capabilities, and satellite
navigation and communications jamming equipment.”
In response to escalation of hostilities by Ukraine and its
international backers, despite the Russian peace initiative announced at the
Istanbul talks on March 29, Russian Ministry of Defense spokesperson Maj. Gen.
Igor Konashenkov warned in a
statement:
“We see attempts of sabotage and strikes by Ukrainian troops
on objects on the territory of the Russian Federation. If such cases continue,
the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation will strike at decision-making
centers, including in Kyiv, from which the Russian army has thus far refrained.”
During the course of the war, Russia has struck military
targets in regions as far away as cities in west Ukraine bordering Poland. On March
13, Russian forces launched
a missile attack at Yavoriv Combat Training Center in the western most part
of the country.
The military facility, less than 25 km from the Polish
border, is one of Ukraine's biggest and the largest in the western part of the
country. Since 2015, US Green Berets and National Guard troops had been
training Ukrainian forces at the Yavoriv center before they were evacuated
alongside diplomatic staff in mid-February.
The training center was hit by a barrage of 30 cruise missiles,
killing at least 35 people, though Russia's defense ministry claimed up to 180
foreign mercenaries and large caches of weapons were destroyed at the
training center.
Russia obviously has the cutting-edge military technology,
including Kinzhal hypersonic missiles and Kalibr cruise missiles, to easily
eliminate not only the top brass of Ukraine’s largely conscript military but
also the perfidious political class, claiming to represent Ukraine’s masses
while taking dictates from NATO’s puppet masters.
But taking mercy on the powerless stooges, Putin spared the lives of comic actor-turned-politician Zelensky and his duplicitous associates, because he wanted to resolve the Ukraine conflict politically and diplomatically instead of using brute military force. But it seems Ukraine’s myopic leadership and its devious international backers are leaving Russia no other choice than to go for the jugular.
No comments:
Post a Comment