In February, the Russia-Ukraine war will reach its third anniversary. Russia has announced a more flexible policy regarding the possible use of nuclear weapons, creating global concern. Yet this is testimony to the undeniable weakness of this aggressor nation.
President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine remains as energetic and committed as ever, including travel to the U.S. and elsewhere to generate support. Time magazine named him “Person of the Year” for good reasons.
The war in Ukraine proceeds with devastating, perhaps irreparable damage to the influence and reputation of Vladimir Putin, and also the military of Russia. Rightly, the Red Army of the Soviet Union was greatly respected, and greatly feared by the nations occupied by that enormous force.
After all, this was the military that fought and ultimately destroyed the bulk of the enormous war machine of Nazi Germany. The vast majority of the mechanized units of the Wehrmacht were deployed on the Eastern Front, a theatre where the war was literally a fight to the collective death, without the restraints present in combat involving American, British and other militaries in the West.
Clearly, Putin and associates miscalculated how easily Russia’s military would be able to occupy Ukraine and take control, in Cold War fashion. As in armed conflicts throughout history, the determination and courage of the people of Ukraine have been a vital factor.
But Russian forces have also proven extraordinarily deficient. Mechanized weapons and equipment have broken down to a striking degree, many units proved ineffective and general disorganization has accompanied the large but clumsy invasion. Clear by now is that the end of the Soviet Union also has opened the door to corruption and decay, undeniably and extraordinarily widespread.
In a particularly shocking development, dead Russian soldiers have simply been left where they lie on the battlefield by retreating comrades. Not abandoning comrades, alive or dead, is a traditional tenet of military culture.
The Biden administration’s provision of Patriot missile defense and other systems to Ukraine is important. The Patriot is part of a great revolution in military technologies over the 20th and 21st centuries.
In World War II, various changes created a much more fluid battle environment. The tank and other motorized vehicles, long-range heavily armed aircraft, modern electronic communications and other innovations drastically altered the characteristics of fighting.
One important invention was the Tube-launched Optically tracked Wire-guided missile, or TOW, a relatively portable lethal anti-tank weapon. The German V-1 rocket of World War II was a very early example of a guidance system within a missile. Related technologies have evolved to an extraordinary degree since that time.
In the spring of 1972, North Vietnam launched a massive armored invasion of South Vietnam. TOW missiles, usually launched from helicopters, completely devastated large numbers of Soviet-supplied tanks along with other targets.
This offensive was decisively defeated.
Other Precision-Guided Munitions (PGMs) include the Stinger anti-aircraft missile. This weapon proved important in defeating the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, over a decade starting in 1979.
From 1973, the Pentagon began a satellite network for Earth navigation. The Global Positioning System (GPS) solved the fundamental problem in the war of accurately locating the enemy, plus your own position.
Precision munitions along with advanced weaponry in general, massive logistical and supply capabilities, and skilled professionals were vital to the remarkable Allied liberation of Kuwait from the Iraq occupation in 1991.
But Russia continues to press the war. Once inaugurated, President Donald Trump should press for peace.
Arthur I. Cyr is author of “After the Cold War – American Foreign Policy, Europe and Asia” (NYU and Palgrave/Macmillan). Contact acyr@carthage.edu