WE are living through a era, hopefully brief, in which saber rattling is apparently back in vogue. A big part of this comes from Obama's horrid leadership, or more specifically his lack thereof. This has allowed early tests of American Resolve to actually hit home. The answer to Russia was always an aggressive repositioning of NATO assets. Even the simple opening of discussions with Romania would have settled that goose. Now we have Factions shooting each other and promoting hate
This analysis makes Russian options in terms of actual expansion effectively counter productive. I return to my idea of a multinational boundary commission to sort it all out and to also provide protocols to protect minorities.. That forces compromise and ends win lose posturing.
The unspoken risk for Russia is what will a newly elected president do in two years. They could suddenly face NATO without any political capital in Europe to draw on. It is really too dangerous.
What Russia has gained is two enclaves that are already Russian speaking that can be supported readily from the East. A boundary commission can even suggest other obvious land shifts and swaps. These acquisitions forces us all to the table to assist Russia in resolving lingering historical issues left over from the collapse of the USSR.
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Gaming a Russian Offensive
March 9, 2015 | 09:23 GM
https://www.stratfor.com/analysis/gaming-russian-offensive
Summary
Editor's Note: As part of our analytical
methodology, Stratfor periodically conducts internal military
simulations. This series, examining the scenarios under which Russian
and Western forces might come into direct conflict in Ukraine, reflects
such an exercise. It thus differs from our regular analyses in several
ways and is not intended as a forecast. This series reflects the results
of meticulous examination of the military capabilities of both Russia
and NATO and the constraints on those forces. It is intended as a means
to measure the intersection of political intent and political will as
constrained by actual military capability. This study is not a
definitive exercise; instead it is a review of potential decision-making
by military planners. We hope readers will gain from this series a
better understanding of military options in the Ukraine crisis and how
the realities surrounding use of force could evolve if efforts to
implement a cease-fire fail and the crisis escalates.
Russia's current military position in Ukraine is very exposed and has
come at a great cost relative to its limited political gains. The
strategic bastion of Crimea is defensible as an island but is subject to
potential isolation. The position of Ukrainian separatists and their
Russian backers in eastern Ukraine is essentially a large bulge that
will require heavy military investment to secure, and it has not
necessarily helped Moscow achieve its larger imperative of creating defensible borders. This raises the question of whether Russia will take further military action to secure its interests in Ukraine.
To answer this question, Stratfor examined six basic military options
that Russia might consider in addressing its security concerns in
Ukraine, ranging from small harassment operations to an all-out invasion
of eastern Ukraine up to the Dnieper River. We then assessed the likely
time and forces required to conduct these operations in order to
determine the overall effort and costs required, and the Russian
military's ability to execute each operation. In order to get a baseline
assessment for operations under current conditions, we initially
assumed in looking at these scenarios that the only opponent would be
Ukrainian forces already involved in the conflict.
Analysis
One of the most discussed options is a Russian drive along
Ukraine's southern coast in order to link up Crimea with separatist
positions in eastern Ukraine. For this scenario, we assumed that
planners would make the front broad enough to secure Crimea's primary
water supply, sourced from the Dnieper, and that the defensive lines
would be anchored as much as possible on the river, the only defensible
terrain feature in the region. This would in effect create a land bridge
to secure supply lines into Crimea and prevent any future isolation of
the peninsula. Russia would have to drive more than 400 kilometers (250
miles) into an area encompassing 46,620 square kilometers, establish
more than 450 kilometers of new defensive lines, and subdue a population
of 2 million.
Taking this territory against the current opposition in Ukraine would
require a force of around 24,000-36,000 personnel over six to 14 days.
For defensive purposes, Russian planners would have to recognize the
risk of NATO coming to Kiev's assistance. Were that to happen, Russia
would have to expand the defensive force to 40,000-55,000 troops to hold
the territory.
Planners must also consider the force needed to deal with a potential
insurgency from the population, which becomes decidedly less pro-Russia
outside of the Donbas territories. Counterinsurgency force structure
size is generally based on the size of the population and level of
resistance expected. This naturally leads to a much wider variance in
estimates. In this scenario, a compliant populace would require a force
of only around 4,200 troops, while an extreme insurgency could spike
that number to 42,000. In this particular case, no extreme insurgency is
expected, as it would be in cities such as Dnepropetrovsk, Kharkiv or
Kiev. The defensive force could overlap with the counterinsurgency force
to some degree if there were no external threat, but if such a threat
existed the forces would have to be separate, potentially doubling the
manpower required to secure the territory.
A similar scenario that has been considered is the seizing of the
entire southern coast of Ukraine in order to connect Russia and its
security forces in the Moldovan breakaway region of Transdniestria to Crimea.
The logic goes that this would cripple Kiev by cutting off access to
the Black Sea and would secure all of Russia's interests in the region
in a continual arc. In terms of effort required, Russia essentially
would be doubling the land bridge option. It would require an attacking
force of 40,000-60,000 troops driving almost 645 kilometers to seize
territory encompassing 103,600 square kilometers over 23-28 days. The
required defensive force would number 80,000-112,000. This would also
add a complicated and dangerous bridging operation over a large river.
Moreover, the population in this region is approximately 6 million,
necessitating 13,200-120,000 counterinsurgency troops.
These first two scenarios have a serious flaw in that they involve
extremely exposed positions. Extended positions over relatively flat
terrain — bisected by a river in one scenario — are costly to hold, if
they can be defended at all against a concerted attack by a modern
military force. Supply lines would also be very long throughout the area
and, in the scenario that extends beyond the Dnieper River, rely on
bridging operations across a major river.
A third scenario would involve Russia taking all of eastern Ukraine
up to the Dnieper and using the river as a defensive front line. When it
comes to defending the captured territory, this scenario makes the most
sense. The Dnieper is very wide in most places, with few crossings and
few sites suitable for tactical bridging operations, meaning defending
forces can focus on certain chokepoints. This is the most sensible
option for Russia if it wants to take military action and prepare a
defensive position anchored on solid terrain.
However, this operation would be a massive military undertaking. The
force required to seize this area — approximately 222,740 square
kilometers — and defeat the opposition there would need to number
91,000-135,000 troops and advance as much as 402 kilometers. Since the
river could bolster defensive capabilities, the defensive force could
remain roughly the same size as the attacking force. However, with a
population of 13 million in the area, the additional troops that might
be required for the counterinsurgency force could range from
28,000-260,000. Russia has approximately 280,000 ground troops, meaning
that the initial drive would tie down a substantial part of the Russian
military and that an intense insurgency could threaten Russia's ability
to occupy the area even if it deployed all of its ground forces within
Ukraine.
One positive aspect would be that this operation would take only
11-14 days to execute, even though it involves seizing a large area,
because Russia could advance along multiple routes. On the other hand,
the operation would require such a vast mobilization effort and
retasking of Russian security forces that Moscow's intent would be
detectable and would alarm Europe and the United States early on.
Two remaining options that we examined were variations on previous
themes in an effort to see if Russia could launch more limited
operations, using fewer resources, to address similar security
imperatives. For example, we considered Russia taking only the southern
half of eastern Ukraine in an effort to use decidedly less combat power,
but this left the Russians with an exposed flank and removed the
security of the Dnieper. Similarly, a small expansion of current
separatist lines to the north to incorporate the remainder of the
Donetsk and Luhansk regions to make the territory more self-sustaining
was considered. Both operations are quite executable but gain little in
the grand scheme.
The final scenario we considered was the most limited. It involved
Russia conducting small temporary incursions along the entirety of its
border with Ukraine in an effort to threaten various key objectives in
the region and thus spread Ukraine's combat power as thin as possible.
This would be efficient and effective for the Russian military in terms
of the effort required. It could accomplish some small political and
security objectives, such as drawing Ukrainian forces away from the
current line of contact, generally distracting Kiev, or increasing the
sense of emergency there, making the Ukrainians believe Russia would
launch a full invasion if Kiev did not comply.
For all of the scenarios considered, the findings were consistent:
All are technically possible for the Russian military, but all have
serious drawbacks. Not one of these options can meet security or
political objectives through limited or reasonable means. This
conclusion does not preclude these scenarios for Russian decision
makers, but it does illuminate the broader cost-benefit analysis leaders
undertake when weighing future actions. No theoretical modeling can
accurately predict the outcome of a war, but it can give leaders an idea
of what action to take or whether to take action at all.
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