Russian President Vladimir Putin held his strongest strategic hand on February 23 2022, the day before his ill-judged and catastrophic invasion of Ukraine.
He stood on the edge of extracting concessions from Ukraine and the West and, if he had turned his troops around, would have convinced the world that US and British intelligence were crying wolf. He squandered this chance.
Since then, he has lost a significant portion of his military forces, called Russian martial prowess into question, and become a pariah (at least in the West). His partial (and stealth) mobilisations and crackdowns on dissent have set what remained of Russian civil society back years. Ukraine never posed a danger to Russia, and Putin’s invasion was predicated on his own imperial ambitions and distorted view of history. Every day the war drags on sees more Russians dead and costs tens of millions of dollars.
So why won’t he cut his losses?
There have been many calls, including a non-binding United Nations resolution, for Putin to turn his forces around and leave Ukraine. There may have been a time for that, perhaps when his initial conquest of Kyiv failed to materialise. He could have used his domestic propaganda machine to convince his subjects that his “special military operation” had brushed back NATO, put Ukraine’s alleged Nazis on notice, and disabled their ability to harm Russia. Other states have accomplished this: for instance, China abandoned its punitive invasion of Vietnam in 1979 after just under four weeks after taking thousands of losses, but nevertheless declared victory.
But now, a year later, Putin cannot escape a self-made trap. He faces a situation like scores of world leaders before him, from imperial Japan to the United States in Iraq, whose aggressive wars had not gone to plan and whose initial casus belli had evaporated, necessitating both new troops and that a new justification for war be offered, especially in the face of increasing costs of the war. The sunk-cost fallacy — the human tendency to rationalise commitment in the face of failure, rather than cutting losses — applies powerfully to war.
From the start, Putin’s claims for the war were incoherent. But they have become even wilder and more confused as the conflict drags on. Putin and his mouthpieces have offered various justifications, including ridding Ukraine of Nazis and fascists, that Ukraine is a part of Russia, and complaints about the West’s “satanism” in trying to destroy Russia.
In Putin’s world, the West is the aggressor and Russia the victim: “I want to underscore again that their insatiability and determination to preserve their unfettered dominance are the real causes of the hybrid war that the collective West is waging against Russia.” As Putin argues the case, the war is thus existential for Russia: “They do not want us to be free; they want us to be a colony … They want to loot. They do not want to see us a free society, but a mass of soulless slaves.”
Pride goes before a fall
While Putin’s paranoid distortions are easy to identify as falsehoods in the West, his efforts to find new and urgent rationales for an ill-considered invasion are part of a broader pattern that is not alien in the West. Almost all leaders grasp at such rhetorical straws when the going gets tough. For instance, Bush administration officials offered shifting rationales for the war in Iraq once it became clear that Saddam Hussein didn’t have weapons of mass destruction and the initial purpose of the invasion had evaporated like water in a desert. Likewise, the Taliban was toppled by the end of 2001, but US troops still remained in Afghanistan for the following two decades in a futile nation-building exercise before an ignominious withdrawal that saw the Taliban return to power and to harbouring al-Qaeda terrorists.
Even in the face of defeat, meaning must be found by both governments and the governed. While governments set policies that may lead to military debacle or foreign-policy failure, the wider public is asked (or ordered) to bear the dreadful costs. From the impossible Austro-Hungarian demands placed on Serbia after the 1914 assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand to the US troop “surges” in Iraq and Afghanistan, the idea that shed blood demands further commitment is an enduring one.
Haemorrhaging blood and treasure and then having nothing to show for it at the end is a disaster for any leader. What’s worse is ending in a less favourable position than at the outset of hostilities, as Putin almost assuredly will be. He probably knows this and continues to double down with the understanding that if he loses he will be blamed, and that rebuke would not take the tolerable form of electoral defeat. Like most dictators, he fears his own people most. As goes the Ukraine war, so goes Putin.
While dictators suffer from the occupational hazard of an insecure retirement, all leaders are susceptible to the terrible logic of war — not unlike a ruinously high-stakes poker game — that demands riskier sacrifices to redeem the previous losses. The losses of the major combatants in both world wars come to mind, as does Hussein’s own ruinous 1980 invasion of Iran, and the US misadventures in Vietnam, the second Gulf War, and Afghanistan. Like a casino, the house of war pays out just often enough to entice strategic gamblers to put their chips down, thinking this time fortune may favour them.
The sunk-cost fallacy of war is to commit ever more troops and resources in a vain attempt to make the previous losses mean something or take on a larger purpose. Leaders locked in armed struggle must convince their citizens that those sacrifices are part of a journey that ultimately leads to a better outcome. This logic isn’t limited to democracies or autocracies. It is better to continue fighting at even greater cost than to admit to the people that the previous sacrifices were in vain and no further blood should be spilled. Ares’s grisly merry-go-round spins ever faster: the more casualties, the more important securing a victory (or least improving on your initial position) becomes.
Finding meaning in shed blood
This is the tragic circle of loss that all sides felt in World War I, when too many soldiers had died to simply return to the previous status quo. Something had to be achieved for the unthinkable losses not to have been meaningless. Sometimes that’s true. Reflecting on the horrific butcher’s bill at the 1863 Battle at Gettysburg, US president Abraham Lincoln told his audience that they must “highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain” and he urged that the work of a free and united country should continue after the ultimate sacrifice of those who gave their last full measure of devotion on the field of battle.
But when the war was futile in the first place, the attempts to find meaning in bloodshed — like the Japanese who extolled their own wartime dead as shattered gems and fallen cherry blossoms — are grotesque. And it is in these times of national crisis when governments take the harshest measures to crush dissent. In Orwellian fashion, Putin has made it illegal to call his war a war, and just a century ago the Sedition Act of 1918 made it illegal for US citizens to use “any language that was disloyal to the government, the constitution, the military, or the flag” as a measure to combat diminishing morale and public approval of the US campaign in World War I.
From a strategic perspective, the aggressors’ freedom of action becomes severely constrained once the die is cast, as the Germans learnt in 1914 once the French stopped their tightly choreographed Schlieffen plan. Then, once in the vice, the answer is often to go all in for victory, even if that means the loss at the end would jeopardise the very state itself.
For instance, once it became clear that their opening gambit of 1914 failed, in 1917 the Germans recommenced unrestricted submarine warfare, knowing that it would likely bring the Americans into the war. Their only hope was to win quickly by starving the French and British, because otherwise a slow loss would surely follow. With each wriggle, the noose becomes tighter until the aggressor perishes at the end of a rope of their own making.
It has been claimed that Putin became obsessed with watching gruesome videos of the final moments of Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi’s life, tortured by his own people. Captured by the sunk-cost fallacy of war, badly constrained by his failed initial invasion, and with his future on the line, Putin will feed the bonfire until he either runs out of fuel or it consumes him.
As he struggles to find both resources and rationales to continue his war, eventually Putin’s meaningless war will, like so many before, come to have national meaning in Russia as his false motives send tens of thousands of Russians to their real graves.
Unfortunately Putin has dismissed numerous off-ramp options and crossed his own Rubicon in search of a decisive outcome. His determination to grind on until the bitter end has dashed hopes that he will rise above the sunk-cost fallacy of war and cease his costly and senseless aggression.
Now he has come too far. Like his terrified conscripts being mercilessly ordered to advance as cannon fodder against Ukrainian defensive positions, Putin’s only way is forward, to meet his fate.
Putin has placed himself in a very 1984 situation where, to justify his dictatorship, there has to be constant war. In the foreseeable future this will take the form of bloody stalemates not far inside Ukraine’s borders. It is hard to see an endgame except as a result of total Russian economic collapse.
You describe the amerikan model “…there has to be constant war” to keep its industry turning over – attacking 50+ countries just since the Russians defeated Germany and won WWII for the West.
Correct. The US requires constant war, and manufacture confrontations to suit. It amazes me that so many pundits, and CRIKEY themselves appear not to recognise this simple proven fact.
Your argument is nonsense. Putin had no choice. US and NATO encroachment are intentionally provoking his response. 26 million dead in WW2, is a stark reminder of what the Russians might expect. Ukraine is a US puppet, and Europe are going along. The US could stop the deaths in an instant…pull back from Ukraine.
The US could stop the Russian deaths in an instant…………….
………….adopt the Trump plan and let them have Ukraine.
Simples…………
……….or at least, simple-minded.
I don’t have the knowledge to agree with what is presented here or contest it. I just have a broad question.
Putin seems to be able to control what most Russians think about its invasion of Ukraine and its ongoing war against Ukraine. So, surely he could manufacture a media/PR strategy to explain to Russians (over a period of time) that he has achieved his objectives and it’s time to pull out of Ukraine?
Wouldn’t his mega wealthy backers prefer that too considering the way their wings are being clipped through sanctions? Surely even Prigozhin has plenty of other options to make money through Wagner?
It’s not as though he will be worried about an invasion of Russia by NATO. Putin will be well aware that ordinary Europeans and Americans won’t want a war so their politicians won’t be risking starting one with him.
It is impossible to give a full answer, because ultimately we don’t know what they are thinking.
But if we can guess and assume broad rationality, if there is risk tha withdrawal now could lead to a regime change, then they would hold off on that decision. Even with the substantial losses to oligarchs, they remain far above the common folk in living standards terms.
I wouldn’t agree that the average Russian is being brainwashed, it is more the unfortunate case that the every day person keeps their dissent to themselves. It is sadly a necessary survival mechanism, as Russian governments of various flavours have committed the most atrocious crimes to their own people (and neighbours) over the last century.
Thanks Bizzy.
One explanation Woke is that Putin has given extraordinary powers to an inner circle (Kadyrov, Prigozhin, Medvedev, etc), and these people are now circling. He can’t rope them in, and anyone can be killed at any time.
You may have seen there have been dozens of strange deaths of senior business people, heads of organisations etc. Not all of these will have been ordered by Putin – some will have been ordered by his rivals.
Add to this the fact that war is a great opportunity for certain Russians to make money, and you’ll see why Putin is not trying to stop now.
Thanks Robert
Robert displays a gobsmacking ignorance of the real culprits in the war. The US provoked it, and can stop it just as easily by a pullback from Ukraine. The US are experts at waging proxy war…sacrificing locals in advancing the US interests. Its simple to deduce if you have the inquisitive intelligence required to research historically.
Exactly Woke. If Putin had the good sense to offer Ukraine something of substance, he could split the West and manufacture a “Victorious Peace!” with a Ukrainian province or three as booty. But he’s boxed himself into his historic fantasies and can’t back out. As Lavrov is supposed to have said last year when the invasion began, his advisors are Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great and Catherine the Great.
Putin has made repeated overtures to the “West” both before and after the war started. His approaches were met by the US with an unwillingness to talk at all. Do some independent research.
The first paragraph is exactly what I said immediately after the invasion………………
…………Putin had an unbeatable hand (even though it was a bluff, as has been demonstrated) immediately prior to the invasion, when he insisted to all comers that he was merely “Manoeuvring and training troops” and had thge opportunity to make Biden look like a donkey.
To paraphrase an old advert “When you’ve got a good threat, stick with it”.
He had them all on the run using the (imaginary) Russian military superiority.
Then he blew his feet off by breaching the FIRST rule of business……….. Never Believe Your Own Advertising.
Turned a perfectly credible threat into a farce by following through.
Even the execution was laughable.
Remember the sixty-mile parking lot of Russian equipment? Any cadet would be thrown out of military college for recommending a donkey move like that – advancing in a single line, without any way of bringing up food or fuel or moving back the wounded – while his wildly expensive armour was at the mercy of the locals with 5-bobs worth of Molotov cocktail.
If you want an idea of what REAL planning looks like and what is actually involved, read Len Deighton’s “Blizkreig” – Manstein and Guderian knew what they were doing even if Hitler didn’t.
You can tell he is getting desperate now with his media machine running programs depicting Ukrainians as drug-crazed Satan-worshippers.
So if you are getting your arse kicked by drug-crazed Satan-worshippers, what exactly does that say about your prospects against a REAL enemy.
Same reason you always praise your opposition even in business…………………
Like most dictators, these aren’t ‘his’ losses – they’re the nation’s.
… “They” are everywhere?
The call for Russia to pull ‘out of Ukraine ‘ is too simplistic. I can imagine Putin to cut his losses and return to the pre-invasion situation (while pretending it to be a success), but he is not going to give up Crimea and much of the Donbas. These should be seen as disputed territories and negotiations to resolve this should be insisted upon by the UN and the EU to stop the bloodshed and destruction.
’Disputed’ only because Putin has been funding a militant separatist movement in the Donbas for many years, as he’s doing in Moldova currently as well.
And also because the Donbas had been shelled mercilessly by an anti-Russian government installed by a US-funded coup against a more neutral, democratically-elected (although corrupt, like they all are in Ukraine) government.
Give it a rest Peter, these are the standard Russian talking points, and can be shown to be false.
The “coup” was the overthrow of a pro-Russian wannabe dictator, during which over 100 people died (with 1000s hospitalised) mostly at the hand of the then authorities. That said dictator is now living in Russia! – proof enough he was not of the Ukrainian people.
https://johnmenadue.com/the-ninth-anniversary-of-the-ukraine-war/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WV9J6sxCs5k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WV9J6sxCs5k
The pathetic Madbot has stopped the second reference.
BS resurrecting with selective editing a Kremlin talking point from the Maidan demonstrations years ago, while implicitly suggesting Ukraine’s have no free will nor ability to act on their own via civil society, while UKraine does not exist in Putin’s mind.
Where is the BS, Drew? Are you saying this phone call did not take place in 2014? Are you saying it’s just Russian actors pretending to be senior US administration officials (one of them from VP Biden’s office) orchestrating ‘their’ men into power in Ukraine, regardless of what its allies like the EU think (let alone what the Ukrainians think)? Are you saying these behind-the-scenes US geopolitical machinations are unlikely because the US has never done it before? Are you saying the US would never sacrifice a smaller ‘ally’ in the service of its geopolitical self-interest (like it’s doing now with Australia in the US’s futile attempt to stop the economic rise of China)?
Time to pull your head out of the sand and face facts. Putin is not the only cause of this terrible war.
Supporting Putin’s invasion by making unsupported claims about Ukraine, ignoring the region, to blame the US (by linking to past events), hence, abrogating the aggressive actions of an autocrat like Putin, of any responsibility?
Then spraying loaded questions at commenters, you are avoiding inconvenient truths including, free thinking & actions of Ukrainians, how the majority in Ukraine (inc. ethnic Russians) support their nation, civil society, look westwards to the EU and have support from neighbours, except Hungarian leadership (popular with Oz ‘conservatives’, but a bit coy nowadays?).
Does not explain how or why do Russian elites, working age and youth emigrate to &/or prefer to be in the ‘west’ whether EU, UK or US, if these places are the enemy or being nasty to Russia? I think they know a bit more than you…and far more rational vs. undying love for Putin from Anglo far right and faux anti-imperialists of the left?
Absolutely correct. The rush to join the baying lynch mob of anti-russian hysteria conveniently forgets US aggression and provocation since WW2. Peter, at least 2 of us can see through the misinformation fog. The US are pathological liars. Proven fact.
The US are pathological liars.
…………and Putin ISN’T?
BTW, did anyone view Sarah Fergusons so-called interview of the Russian ambassador (or Consul, missed the introduction, Dr Somebody) on 7.30 Report this Monday 20 March 2023?
As an example of the worst, most bigoted, misinformative confection of sheer bigotry, it is a kind of world record. CNN would have been proud. I’ve never seen more embarrassing, maudlin msm pseudo journalism. With no reasonable balanced references of any sort or balanced supporting argument, she essentially purported to aggressively cross-examine him in an abrupt, abusive tone, not allow him to respond properly to ridiculous a priori assertions and finally cut him him off and basically threw him off the set. I’ve never seen a more insulting (as
viewer) worse travesty of an interview, ever.
This dross is the highlight of the ABC’ s expensive (tax payer paid) 7.30 Report? Dear God!
Agreed, the interview was appalling.
What will the baying mob do when all the US propaganda is proven to be a pack of lies, as it usually is?
It would be fair to say that David’s position is clearly in lockstep with the U.S. government and Defense department. Perhaps it is worth reading Vasily Grossman’s A Writer at War, and remember it was the Russians who defeated Nazi Germany (at enormous human cost).
Rewriting what happened in Libya, expunging foreign interference and actors, especially the vision and celebration of his torture and execution by these same actors, won’t wash.
It might also be cogent to consider that the Russian victory over the Germans was achieved by two things. Firstly superior logistics, the Germans inexplicably having failed to account for the break of gauge between the Central and Eastern European railway networks and the subsequent transhipping slowed down their logistics just enough to render their operation over an extended supply line untenable. Secondly the Russians were fighting an existential battle for their own survival. The weather didn’t help the aggressor much either.
This time round it’s the Russians who have the logistic deficit, the Ukrainians have been specifically and methodically taking out Russian logistic nodes, and it’s also the Ukraininans who are fighting the battle for national survival. In very much the same part of the world. And this time the Russians seem to be the army lacking good cold weather gear (ignore the manoeuvre element that defeated the Germans in the Russian winter, modern mechanised warfare is better fought in the winter in this part of the world). Russia cannot win without total collapse of Ukrainian forces, there is no sign of this happening any time soon, and the time may come where it’s the Russian army that collapes. Just like the Germans did in 1942-43.
Agree, something Ukraine has as opposed to Russia which has nobbled, shut down & intimidated, is civil society that has allowed them to organise at a grassroots level; ditto Hungary & Poland helping refugees not the state, due to draconian refugee laws as a political tactic, but civil society including motivated individuals and NGOs.
It wasn’t the Russians who conquered Berlin, it was the Soviet Union. The enormous cost was borne by Ukrainians, Belarusians, Russians and the rest of the Soviet peoples, in that order. Do get your history right.
Not even the Soviet Union………………..
………it was the weather that defeated the Germans, exactly as it had defeated Napoleon.
So the otherwise brisk Wehrmacht just kinda-sorta sat around waiting to crushed by General Winter?
Nothing to do with having been stopped in their tanks tracks by…what’s the word, patriots.
Thanks for clarifying that, silly me thought that the tens of millions of dead had something to do with it.
Look at how many Germans froze to death compared to being wounded………………..
………..they simply were not prepared for it.
Yes, the locals mounted a scorched earth campaign, but it was the weather that froze (and cracked) the tanks engines, inflicted massive frost-bite and on and on. The Soviet game plan was to draw the Germans further and further away from their source of supply, while the weather did the killing.
The Soviets never stopped the German army until Stalingrad, by which time they were buggered.
That is when the Soviets went on the offensive against an essentially defeated enemy, driving them back until they could chew them up at leisure.
Yes, Harry. And you have to laugh at the final sentence in his bio: – ‘His analysis does not necessarily reflect any position of the US government or Defense Department.’ Crikey may as well regurgitate articles from the Kremlin. At least that could be justified as balance.
Defeating Nazis doesn’t automatically issue a country with a license to become Nazis.,
Eventually, revising history?…. first Molotov-Rippentrop pact in 1939 between Stalin and Hitler dividing up and invading Poland, then Germany forces invaded USSR (not Russia), taking Stalin by surprise (in paralysis for days at his Dacha fearing arrest), then the USSR military, including Ukrainians and other nationalities, fought the Nazi invasion.
Eventually, revising history?…. first Molotov-Rippentrop pact in 1939 between Stalin and Hitler dividing up and invading Poland, then Germany forces invaded USSR (not Russia), taking Stalin by surprise (in paralysis for days at his Dacha fearing arrest), then the USSR military, including Ukrainians and other nationalities, fought the Wermacht’s invasion.