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How Wars End... And Why Ukraine's May Drag On
Bannon reacted to President Trump's tasking of his Special Envoy for Russia and Ukraine, retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, with ending the Ukraine war in 100 days ... 99 days later than candidate trump had bragged. To Bannon, that's an ominous delay that will only heighten the risk of the US being pulled deeper into a war he believes is unwinnable and isn't in America's national interest.
I agree. Failure to act swiftly on a ceasefire, and failure to make a clean break with the neocon Ukraine/Russia strategy candidate Trump promised brings back into play the tired old peace-through-strength fantasies and magical sanctions (“ruble to rubble”) of the Biden administration; strategies that failed for Johnson in Vietnam with the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, for George W Bush with the January 2007 surge in US forces in Iraq, and for Barack Obama with the 2010 surge in Afghanistan.
The Pentagon's fashionable catchphrase is“escalate to de-escalate.” The trouble is that de-escalation never comes. You can't fine-tune war. You can't“game” it the way military game theorist Herman Kahn thought, and Vietnam War-era Defense Secretary Robert McNamara found out the hard way. The monster will overwhelm you.
How do wars end? In particular, how will this war end? Prussian general and military theorist Carl von Clausewitz sees war as an instrument of policy and identifies mainly three ways it ends:
1. One or both sides abandon their policy objectives.
In the case of the Ukraine war, President Trump might well have achieved the goal of candidate Trump of silencing the guns in a day if he had clearly and credibly stated to Vladimir Putin and the world that the United States and its NATO partners abandon eastward NATO expansion and will never make Ukraine a NATO member. The shoe would
then have been on the other foot, making Putin the guilty party for any continued hostilities.
2. One or both sides reach the culmination point in their ability to carry out successful attacks and a stalemate ensues, leading to ceasefire negotiations.
3. One side loses the will or ability to fight as a result of the collapse in public and/or military morale.
An instance in which a war ended based on the second scenario was the Korean War. It began on June 25, 1950, when North Korean troops crossed the 38th parallel at which Korea had been divided after World War II. As early as March 1951, after massive shifts of the front lines in the intervening period, a stalemate had developed at the 38th parallel where it all started.
Both sides had reached culmination points on the proviso that no nuclear weapons were to be used. Armistice talks commenced in July 1951, but it took another two years and intermittent fighting before an armistice was concluded on July 27, 1953.
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