A new book by Gen. Sir Richard Shirreff,
NATO's deputy supreme allied commander for Europe from 2011 to 2014,
evokes a potential scenario that leads to a devastating future war with Russia.
The book, "2017 War with Russia," is clearly labeled as a work of fiction.
But it portrays a fairly convincing manufactured incident that the
fictional president of Russia uses as a causus belli for a clash with
NATO.
In his account, Russia rapidly expands its war aims by invading the Baltic states, which are NATO members, and world war ensues. Perhaps more worryingly, the author has since told BBC Radio 4's Today program that such a conflict is "entirely plausible."
Fact versus fiction
I do not want to give any more away about the book (it is a good and
authentic, if gloomy, read). But the general's underlying political
message — clearly articulated in the book's preface —
is that the hollowing out of defense capabilities across the West and
its reluctance and inability to stand up to Russia is making war ever
more likely. Is this an accurate assessment of the real world?
The novel is reminiscent of Tom Clancy's "The Hunt for Red October" and the excellent "The Third World War: August 1985" by
Gen. John Hackett. "The Third World War," written at the height of the
Cold War, was conceived as a "future history," supposedly looking back
at the outbreak and subsequent unfolding of a full-blown NATO-versus-Warsaw Pact war.
Shirreff's book, however, is a far more overtly political piece, and
it is deeply critical of the West's reduced defense spending and its
unwillingness — and inability — to stand up to the Russian threat. At
first sight this appears a persuasive case — but on reflection is
perhaps slightly less so.
Shirreff's scenario assumes either that the Russian president had no
other option to achieve his political goals than through the use of
military force, or "hard power," or
that he is what might be termed "an irrational actor" in the mold of
North Korea's Kim Jong Un. Neither strikes me as convincing.
Russia has undoubtedly suffered economically from the global downturn in energy prices and from economic sanctions following the annexation of the Crimea, but the degree of dependence, in particular energy dependence, that Western Europe has on Russia is highly significant.
The security of codependence
For example, the Nord Stream pipeline laid in international waters along the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany, supplies a significant — according to European Union figures, 38.7% —
proportion of Western Europe's gas needs. In turn, Russia desperately
needs the foreign earnings this generates. Consequently, the two sides
of this hypothetical war are heavily economically interdependent.
Put another way, Russia rationally could bring much more significant,
and cheaper, political pressure to bear by turning off the gas supply:
Why resort to the chancier option of war?
But is the
real President Vladimir Putin irrational? A real-life analysis of the
Russian president's actions would suggest that he is being entirely
rational and that his actions are those of an arch-realist who places the
needs of his country first. Putin, it seems, is looking to play the
long game.
Looked at, from the viewpoint of Russia, and especially European
Russia, it is being hemmed in by its opponents with more and more of
its neighbors coming under the sway of the US, the West … and NATO.
Turkey, on Russia's southern border, joined the military alliance in
1952, and since the end of the Cold War many of Russia's former Warsaw
Pact allies, including Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania,
Bulgaria, and the Baltic States, have signed up too. Many in Russia want their leader to kick back against this.
Russia has, moreover, always respected a strong leader, and the
present incumbent of the Kremlin enjoys levels of popularity — at least
80% — that Western politicians can only dream of.
Saber rattling is all part of this strongman image, but why risk it all
by undertaking that most risky of maneuvers in international politics:
war?
It's certainly in Putin's interests that the West cut defense spending and has a diminished appetite for brinkmanship, and
it is perhaps understandable that a recently retired general should
push for this to be reversed. But does that really make a war any more
likely? Probably not, though there is always that niggling possibility.
World War III
But if there were to be war with Russia, what might it look like? The
Cold War scenario of vast armies fighting a large-scale conventional
war dominated by tanks and aircraft directly supporting the battlefield
is as outdated a concept as it is unlikely.
REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev
Both sides have considerable resources at their disposal, but NATO is
significantly larger than Russia in simple numbers: NATO has 3.6
million personnel in uniform compared with Russia's 800,000; NATO has
7,500 tanks to Russia's 2,750; and NATO has 5,900 combat aircraft to
Russia's 1,571.
These bald figures do not tell the whole story, however, as NATO's
forces are deployed globally to a far greater extent than Russia's, and
even acknowledging that Russia could achieve a temporary military
advantage in, say, the Baltic, for how long and at what price?
Nevertheless, today’s armies are smaller and more reliant on technology
than they were during much of the 20th century and the likelihood of a Kursk-style pitched battle between heavy armor is highly unlikely.
That said, the ever-greater reach of missiles and artillery, the
accuracy and potency of modern precision-guided munitions, the extensive
use of surveillance systems (from space, via drones, and through highly
sophisticated electronic eavesdropping) would make a contemporary
battlefield highly dangerous and highly destructive, as pictures from
even relatively small-scale recent conflicts from Grozny to Aleppo show.
Consequently,
while the armies and individual battles might be smaller than those in
World War II, the death toll, the loss of war-making material and both
sides' ability to reduce everything in their paths to rubble would make a
large-scale conflict far more wide-reaching and, in terms of recovery,
longer-lasting than anything we have seen before.
In such a conflict, the very term “battlefield” would itself be
highly misleading: such a war, employing ships, submarines and aircraft
with truly global reach, would indeed be a world war and would pay scant
attention to the difference between military and civilian targets: this
would truly be a war among the peoples.
And not just an earth-bound war: outer space would be a highly contested arena as would cyberspace,
with both sides seeking to disrupt all aspects of normal life as the
war was taken into the realms of politics, infrastructure, information
and commerce, too.
Despite Shirreff’s warnings, the nightmare scenario of nuclear war is
highly unlikely as neither side ultimately would wish to unleash
destruction on that scale. Likewise, chemical and biological weapons
would, if employed at all, be used at a very local level, and sparingly.
That is not to say that the scale of the destruction would not be
significant, however. This would be total war, waged on every imaginable
front, from the internet and the stock market to outer space.
The general has, then, written an excellent and compelling novel. But
while there might be some argument in favor of a more robust foreign
policy and greater defence spending, to dismiss the Russian leadership
purely as aggressively irrational is both naive and shortsighted.
Ultimately, when it comes to a new world war, both sides now have far
too much to lose.
http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-what-would-happen-if-nato-went-to-war-with-russia-2016-5
No comments:
Post a Comment