Western politicians, military leaders and diplomats are convening with one goal at the top of their agenda: Russian defeat. This year’s edition of the Munich Security Conference comes almost a year since the Kremlin unleashed its Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, flaring an open war on the European continent that has claimed tens of thousands of lives, displaced millions, devastated Ukrainian cities and wrought billions of dollars in damage. The war has galvanized the geopolitical West and led to an emboldened and soon-to-be enlarged NATO.
U.S. and European officials are publicly bullish. On Saturday in Munich, Vice President Harris is expected to give an address that will “convey the continuing U.S. commitment to Ukraine,” my colleagues reported, and assure Kyiv that the vital U.S. support and coordination that has sustained Ukraine’s efforts to repulse Russia’s invasion will endure. In his speech, French President Emmanuel Macron plans to discuss how to “ensure Russian defeat” and how the West can bolster Kyiv in the months to come.
Russia has lost ‘strategically, operationally and tactically,’ top US general says
At meetings this week with NATO defense ministers in Brussels, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said a possible Ukrainian spring counteroffensive has “a real good chance of making a pretty significant difference on the battlefield and establishing the initiative.” On the sidelines of the same session, Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, declared that an impoverished, isolated Russia had already failed.
“Russia is now a global pariah and the world remains inspired by Ukrainian bravery and resilience,” Milley said. “In short, Russia has lost; they’ve lost strategically, operationally and tactically.”
The Massacre of a Russian armoured column | Military Mind | TVP World
U.S. warns Ukraine it faces a pivotal moment in war
There’s no doubt that the war waged by Russian President Vladimir Putin has been a disaster for his country. Estimates of Russian casualties on the battlefields in just the space of a year range as high as 200,000. A mass mobilization of some 300,000 troops appears to have been more or less fully deployed to Ukraine’s battlefields and, at best, may have only blunted some Ukrainian advances to reclaim territory lost to Russia. In recent weeks, the Kremlin’s losses may have been particularly acute and demoralizing.
A rumored new Russian offensive may prove even bloodier. “If current casualty rates are any indication, the coming attack could result in unprecedented loss of life and spark a complete collapse in morale among Russia’s already demoralized mobilized troops,” noted Peter Dickinson of the Atlantic Council. “This would make life very difficult for the Russian army in Ukraine, which would find itself confronted by a breakdown in discipline that would severely limit its ability to stage offensive operations.”
Moreover, the Russian military has seen its arsenal severely depleted. It has lost nearly half its main battle tanks, according to an estimate published this week by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and is dipping into inventories of older-era (and sometimes Soviet) weaponry. Russia’s ammunition stockpile is rapidly dwindling (though Ukraine’s is, too).
The war and popular mobilization triggered an astonishing exodus of people — perhaps as high as nearly a million emigres — desperate to leave Russia. Activists and independent journalists left, but so, too, did 10 percent of the nation’s IT workforce. “This exodus is a terrible blow for Russia,” Tamara Eidelman, a Russian historian who moved to Portugal after the invasion, said to my colleagues. “The layer that could have changed something in the country has now been washed away.”
The dead, wounded are left, with no one to take them - “Wagner" soldiers’ losses in Ukraine soaring
Russians abandon wartime Russia in historic exodus
Western sanctions on Russia have contracted its economy, impacted the country’s industrial capacity in some sectors, and brought an era of Russian integration into Europe to a shuttering halt. But while the measures have exacted a painful toll on Russia, they have not forced Putin to reconsider his war of neo-imperialist revanchism.
“Instead of growth, we have a decline. But saying all of that, it’s definitely not a collapse, it’s not a disaster,” Sergey Aleksashenko, former first deputy chairman of Russia’s central bank, said at a panel discussion in Washington last month. “We may not say that the Russian economy is in tatters, that it is destroyed, that Putin lacks funds to continue his war. No, it’s not true.”
Part of the reason for that is the significant amount of revenue still generated by European imports of Russian gas and oil. No matter their avowed desire to wean themselves off Russian energy dependence, most European countries could not go cold turkey on Russian energy even as Putin’s war machine pummeled Ukraine. But the new geopolitical faultlines created by the invasion may accelerate Europe’s transition to decarbonized economies and further diminish Russia’s leverage over the continent.
“The results already speak for themselves; for the first time ever last year, wind and solar combined for a higher share of electrical generation in Europe than oil and gas,” wrote Brent Peabody in Foreign Policy. “And this says nothing of other decarbonization efforts such as subsidies for heat pumps in the EU, incentives for clean energy in the United States, and higher electric vehicle uptake everywhere.”
Kyiv Blows Up Bridge Near Bakhmut, Russia Shells Kherson 38 Times, Kyiv To Get Seized Iranian Arms?
As Russians inch forward near Bakhmut, Ukrainians dig fallback defenses
For all the certainty of Russian failure, the war still looks nowhere close to ending. Analysts put this down in part to the personal determination — and delusions — of the Russian leader himself.
“Since February 2022, the world has learned that Putin wants to create a new version of the Russian empire based on his Soviet-era preoccupations and his interpretations of history,” wrote Fiona Hill and Angela Stent in Foreign Affairs. “The launching of the invasion itself has shown that his views of past events can provoke him to cause massive human suffering. It has become clear that there is little other states and actors can do to deter Putin from prosecuting a war if he is determined to do so and that the Russian president will adapt old narratives as well as adopt new ones to suit his purposes.”
They cite a former Finnish diplomat who thinks fondly of the days of the Soviet Politburo, since, in Putin’s Russia, there appears to be “no political organization in Russia that has the power to hold the president and commander in chief accountable.”
In the face of an opaque, implacable adversary, strategists in Washington are keen to avoid a prolonged war. Milley himself gestured to the need for realism on both sides of the conflict. “It will be almost impossible for the Russians to achieve their political objectives by military means. It is unlikely that Russia is going to overrun Ukraine. It’s just not going to happen,” he told the Financial Times. “It is also very, very difficult for Ukraine this year to kick the Russians out of every inch of Russian-occupied Ukraine. It’s not to say that it can’t happen … But it’s extraordinarily difficult. And it would require essentially the collapse of the Russian military.”
As my colleagues reported earlier this week, while the Biden administration is adamant about its continued support to Kyiv, it is also making clear to Ukrainian authorities that the current level of security and economic assistance may be difficult to sustain, especially with the current Republican-led House. “We will continue to try to impress upon them that we can’t do anything and everything forever,” one senior administration official told my colleagues, referring to Ukraine’s leaders.
Ukraine briefing: NATO talks focus on weapons production; U.S. general says Russia ‘lost’
BRUSSELS — NATO countries and Western allies on Wednesday announced more weapons and ammunition for Ukraine, moving to boost Kyiv’s military capabilities as Russia escalated attacks in the east. The alliance’s defense chiefs had gathered in Brussels to coordinate a long-term response to the Russian invasion, which has united NATO but also depleted ammunition stocks in allied countries.
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“Even as we rush to support Ukraine in the critical months ahead, we must all replenish our stockpiles to strengthen our deterrence and defense for the long term," Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Wednesday as the meetings concluded.
Despite Austin’s assurances, a new poll found that support among Americans for providing weapons to Ukraine has dropped, from 60 percent last spring to 48 percent in January.
CNN Video: Ukraine strikes devastating Russian weapon
Here’s the latest on the war and its ripple effects across the globe.
Khodorkovsky warns West of war with China if Russia wins in Ukraine
Key developments
1 Western nations pledged 48 Leopard 2 tanks for Ukraine while the Netherlands plans to send 20,000 rounds of tank ammunition, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said. Sweden also promised Archer artillery cannons, infantry fighting vehicles and anti-tank weapons for Ukrainian forces. Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said that the arms package would “make a significant contribution to Ukraine’s combat power,” the Associated Press reported.
2 Ukraine shot down several small Russian balloons over Kyiv on Wednesday, the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense said in a statement posted to Telegram. The balloons appeared to be decoy targets meant to divert attention and waste ammunition, the statement said.
3 Russia has “lost strategically, operationally and tactically,” Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said after meetings in Brussels with defense chiefs from countries supporting Kyiv.
4 The head of Russia’s Wagner Group said that “for a long time” he ran the internet troll farm that faced U.S. sanctions over charges of meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Yevgeniy Prigozhin, whose mercenary forces are fighting alongside Russia in Ukraine, said on Telegram that he created and managed the Internet Research Agency to “protect the Russian information space from the boorish aggressive propaganda of anti-Russian assertions from the West.”
Battleground updates
1 Ukraine’s armed forces said heavy fighting is raging around Bakhmut. Russian artillery pounded districts in the besieged city as Ukrainian troops fought to repel attacks, the military said early Wednesday. Russian forces have ramped up their attacks in recent weeks on the city in the eastern Donetsk region.
2 Russian forces did not cause Ukrainian troops to retreat from their positions in Luhansk in eastern Ukraine, the region’s governor said on Telegram Wednesday. Russia’s Defense Ministry said earlier in the day that its forces had breached Ukrainian defensive lines in the region, and that the troops had fled 3 kilometers (1.8 miles) from their positions.
Britain is “delivering for Ukraine the effects they need on the battlefield,” rather than fighter jets, which require months of training, British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said Wednesday. He said Ukraine’s backers can help faster by providing weapons such as antiaircraft missiles after Kyiv recently renewed calls for Western allies to send fighter jets.
'Russia has lost war and has been defeated,' says General Mark Milley
Global impact
1 The European Union’s latest sanctions package against Russia also targets Iran, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said Wednesday in a statement. The move seeks to stop Iran from providing drones for Russia’s war in Ukraine, she said. The package, which requires approval from the 27 E.U. nations, includes export bans worth 11 billion euros ($11.7 billion dollars) on critical technology and goods such as electronics, specialized vehicles and spare parts for trucks and jet engines.
2 Most Americans still think the United States should play at least some role in the war effort, but support for specific U.S. interventions — such as providing weapons to Ukraine or imposing economic sanctions against Russia — has declined, according to a new AP-NORC poll.
3 The United Nations said Wednesday it was appealing for $5.6 billion to help millions of people in Ukraine and countries that have taken in refugees by providing food, health care and other aid needs.
4 China is trying to “have it both ways” by offering to mediate talks to end the war while also committing to its “no limits partnership” with Russia, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said Wednesday. “We are concerned about this growing relationship, just as we are concerned about Iran’s growing relationship with Russia,” Sherman said at an event at the Brookings Institution.
From our correspondentsUkraine’s allies rush to send more equipment, risking logjams: Senior U.S. officials say time is growing short for Ukraine’s backers to dispatch vast quantities of new equipment that its forces are awaiting to launch a spring counteroffensive, Karen DeYoung and Emily Rauhala report.
“There was a palpable sense of urgency as top military and defense officials gathered here for the latest meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group,” they write from Brussels.
920 Russian soldiers killed in past day - Russia's death toll in Ukraine reaches 130,000
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