Europe’s big question: What a diminished
Russia will do next
Nick Paton Walsh
Analysis by Nick Paton Walsh, International
Security Editor, CNN
Updated 6:33 PM EST, Sun
January 1, 2023
—
Russia’s war in Ukraine has proven almost every
assumption wrong, with Europe now wondering what left is safe to assume.
Its invasion in February managed to startle in
every way. To those who thought Moscow was sane enough to not attempt
such a massive and foolhardy undertaking. To those who felt the Russian
military would waltz across a land of 40 million people and switch to clean-up
operations within 10 days. And to those who felt they had the technical and
intelligence prowess to do more than just randomly bombard civilian areas with
ageing artillery; that the Kremlin’s military had evolved from the 90s
levelling of Grozny in Chechnya.
And finally, to those who felt nuclear saber-rattling
was an oxymoron in 2022 – that you could not casually threaten people with
nukes as the destruction they brought was complete, for everyone on the planet.
Still, as 2022 closes, Europe is left dealing with a set of
known unknowns, unimaginable as recently as in January. To recap: a military
once considered the world’s third most formidable has invaded its smaller
neighbor, which a year ago excelled mostly in IT and agriculture.
Russia spent billions of dollars
apparently modernizing its military, but it turns out that it was, to a large
extent, a sham. It has discovered its supply chains don’t function a few dozen
miles from its own borders; that its assessment of Ukraine as desperate to be freed from its
own “Nazism” is the distorted product of nodding yes-men, feeding a president –
Vladimir Putin – what he wanted to hear in the isolation of the pandemic.
Russia has also met a West that, far
from being divided and reticent, was instead happy to send some of its
munitions to its eastern border. Western officials might also be surprised that
Russia’s red lines appear to shift
constantly, as Moscow realizes how limited its non-nuclear
options are. None of this was supposed to happen. So, what does Europe do and prepare for, now that it
has?
Key is just how unexpectedly unified the West has
been. Despite being split over Iraq, fractured over Syria, and partially
unwilling to spend the 2% of GDP on security the United States long demanded of
NATO members, Europe and the US have been speaking from the same script on
Ukraine. At times, Washington may have seemed warier, and there
have been autocratic outliers like Hungary. But the shift is towards unity,
not disparity. That’s quite a surprise.
Declarations that Russia has already lost the war remain
premature. There are variables which could still lead to a stalemate in its
favor, or even a reversal of fortune. NATO could lose patience or nerve over
weapons shipments, and seek economic expediency over long-term security,
pushing for a peace unfavorable to Kyiv. But that does, at this moment, seem
unlikely.
Russia is digging in on the eastern side
of the Dnipro River in southern Ukraine, and has the advantage that the Donetsk and Luhansk frontlines in Ukraine’s east are nearer its border. Yet
its challenges are immense: poorly trained, forcibly conscripted personnel make
up 77,000 of its frontline troops – and that’s according to the glossy
assessment voiced by Putin. It is struggling for munitions, and seeing regular
open, internal criticism of its winter supply chain.
Ukraine is on home territory, with morale
still high, and Western weapons still arriving. Since the collapse of Moscow’s patchwork of forces around the
northeastern city of Kharkiv in September – where their supply
lines were cut by a smarter Ukrainian force – the dynamic has all been against Moscow.
The prospect of a Russian defeat is in the broader
picture: that it did not win quickly against an inferior adversary. Mouthpieces
on state TV talked about the need to “take the gloves off” after Kharkiv, as if
they would not be exposing a fist that had already withered. Revealed almost as
a paper-tiger, the Russian military will struggle for decades to regain even a
semblance of peer status with NATO. That is perhaps the wider damage for the
Kremlin: the years of effort spent rebuilding Moscow’s reputation as a smart,
asymmetrical foe with conventional forces to back it up have evaporated in
about six months of mismanagement.
The question of nuclear force lingers still,
chiefly because Putin likes regularly to invoke it. But even here Russia’s menace has been diminished. Firstly,
NATO has been sending unequivocal signals of the conventional devastation its
forces would mete out were any form of nuclear device used. Secondly, Russia’s fairweather allies, India and China, have quickly assessed its losing
streak and publicly admonished Moscow’s nuclear rhetoric. (Their
private messaging has likely been fiercer.)
And finally, Moscow is left with a question nobody
ever wants to learn the answer to: if its supply chains for diesel fuel for
tanks 40 miles from its border do not function, then how can they be sure The
Button will work, if Putin reaches madly to press it? There is no greater
danger for a nuclear power than to reveal its strategic missiles and
retaliatory capability do not function.
Despite this palpable Russian decline, Europe is not welcoming in an era of
greater security. Calls for greater defense spending are louder, and heeded,
even if they come at a time when Russia, for decades the defining issue
of European security, is revealing itself to be less threatening.
Europe is realizing it cannot depend on
the United States – and its wild swings between
political poles – solely for its security.
Meanwhile thousands of innocent Ukrainians have
died in Putin’s egotistical and misguided bid to revive a Tsarist empire. More
broadly, authoritarianism has been exposed as a disastrous system with which to
wage wars of choice.
Yet some good has come from this debacle. Europe knows it must get off its
dependence on Russian gas immediately, and hydrocarbons in general in the
longer term, as economic dependence on the fossil fuels of dictators cannot
bring longer-term stability.
So, how does the West deal with a Russia that has experienced this
colossal loss of face in Ukraine and is slowly withering
economically because of sanctions? Is a weak Russia something to fear, or just weak?
This is the known unknown the West must wrestle with. But it is no longer such
a terrifying question.
For over 70 years, the Russians and West held the
world in the grip of mutually assured destruction. It was a peace based on fear.
But fear of Moscow should be ebbing slowly, and with
that comes the risk of miscalculation. It also raises a less chilling prospect:
that Russia – like many autocracies before it
– may be fading, undermined by its own clumsy dependence on fear domestically.
Europe’s challenge now is to deal with Russia in a state of chaotic denial,
while hoping it evolves into a state of managed decline. One abiding comfort
may be that, after underestimating Moscow’s potential for malice, the risk
for Europe would be to overstate its
potential as a threat.
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