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ID188456
Title ProperRussia’s War Against Ukraine
Other Title Information Military Scenarios and Outcomes
LanguageENG
AuthorNorberg, Johan ;  Jonsson, Michael
Summary / Abstract (Note)After Vladimir Putin declared a partial Russian mobilisation in late September 2022 and annexed four additional Ukrainian regions, there was little to suggest that a negotiated settlement would be possible while he remained in power. This article instead explores three possible military outcomes of the war – an outright Ukrainian or Russian military victory, and a war of attrition. As of November 2022, a Ukrainian victory, so unlikely at the outset of Russia’s invasion, is a distinct possibility, provided the West offers sufficient military materiel and training swiftly enough. Russian forces have suffered heavy casualties and are low on precision-guided munitions, with their logistics under fire and having lost much of what air dominance they had. Hence, Moscow’s battlefield fortunes hinge on whether mobilised, poorly trained and equipped forces will be able to hold defensive lines over the winter to buy time to build new, more capable units, with troop morale ever more crucial, but also brittle. A key unknown, however, is the state of Ukrainian forces. Importantly, the scale and intensity of the war, the vital interests at stake and international involvement on both sides all gravitate towards a more drawn-out war over the winter and beyond.
`In' analytical NoteSurvival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 64, No.6; Dec 2022 - Jan 2023; p. 91-122
Journal SourceSurvival : the IISS Quarterly Vol: 64 No 6
Key WordsNATO ;  Vladimir Putin ;  Russia–Ukraine War ;  Armed Forces of Ukraine ;  Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS) ;  Kherson ;  Kerch Bridge ;  Russian Military Capability


 
 
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