His professed belief is that a
little counter-attack strength will be the best deterrence to Putin at this
point. If there is no change, Putin will be able to slowly grind Ukraine down,
one of the worst possible outcomes. One thing he said that I totally agree upon,
is that we are overthinking the complications involved in the proposed transfer
of Polish Soviet-era MIG's over to Ukraine.
More broadly, we are thinking much too narrowly of
the possible range of operations of Ukrainians against Russia. Particpation
against the Putinist War and Russian assets--again within Cold War proxy warfare
rules, which I would say is the basic approach Putin has regressed upon--can be worldwide, anywhere Russian-style autocracy does not hold sway. So, his
suggestion is simply to bring Ukrainian pilots over to Poland, file all the appropriate
papers for the loan of Polish assets guaranteed by US dollars or whatever, and
have them fly the planes over the border, immediately merging with whatever
Ukrainian air assets remain and starting to make a more active air competition
over Ukraine. All legit.
Just this will make a big difference in the Russian
strategy, if I'm right, as those vulnerable Russian columns of armored troops
would become one 40-mile-long immobile target for attack. The whole top-down Russian battle plan assumes air superiority--it relies upon it. The results would be catastrophic for the plan. Think of the US
destruction of the Iraqi armor in the latter stages of Gulf War I. Putin can't
risk that, or shouldn't.
Rationally, his move would then be to move to freeze
the battle, or at least buy a little time before continuing to attack. (Remember there were two Chechen wars; the second one was the more brutal one.)
Vindman is more aggressive
than I. He says attack Russian air assets in Belarus. To me, that means
expanding the war beyond Ukraine's borders. I was thinking attack those
artillery assets firing on Kharkiv from inside Russia--that is fair game, but
that might not be quite as much a shock to the Russians as pulverizing their
invading troops.
So,again, it is creating that threat of loss of massive invasion assets which I'd advocate.
Some
other time, maybe I will go into more detail with another harebrained idea,
involving the Russians' enclave at Kaliningrad. For now, I'd just say that, as
part of the Aegean Sea blockade of Russian Navy and cargo exiting the Black Sea,
there should be some training program for Free Ukrainian Navy SEALs.
My next post
will be for the one actor in this tragic episode that I have had the pleasure of
meeting, our President Biden. He has so much on his plate, and he is doing his
best with this unforgiving, soul-destroying job, that of protecting the best
hopes of mankind, while keeping us out of war. Something wearily familiar in the
latter history of this land (Wilson FDR LBJ). At least, unlike the Ukrainians, he asked for the
job. I'm sure he'd agree, this is all Trump's fault. So would Vindman.