Home News Ukraine in Russia’s sights: How will Putin play out the invasion?

Ukraine in Russia’s sights: How will Putin play out the invasion?

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Blaming the West and what he sees as its Kyiv proxies, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday announced what amounts to a war of regime change, aimed at destroying Ukraine’s military potential and changing its geopolitical alignment. But he claimed his goal is not to permanently occupy the country.

The assault began in the early hours of Thursday, with air and missile attacks against Ukrainian command and communications centers, defense installations, and transport hubs. Russian airborne troops were seen on the outskirts of Kyiv Thursday evening, and incursions were reported near Ukraine’s second largest city, Kharkiv, just 25 miles from the border.

Why We Wrote This

Russia has launched its invasion of Ukraine. The Kremlin’s true intentions will likely determine what happens next – and whether the Russian public is willing to support the effort.

Russian military objectives seem clear, but longer-term political goals are murkier. Analysts say Russia has learned a lot watching U.S. wars of regime change, including how to use swift and overwhelming force to overcome the enemy’s capacity to resist with minimal direct contact between opposing armies.

Mr. Putin’s ambitions are a hot topic of debate, in Russia as well as the West. “He is a neo-imperialist,” says Nikolai Petrov, an expert with Chatham House in London. “He wants to establish a controlling stake in neighboring countries rather than the old-fashioned idea of grabbing land.”

Moscow

Blaming the West and what he sees as its Kyiv proxies, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday announced what amounts to a war of regime change, aimed at destroying Ukraine’s military potential and changing its geopolitical alignment but, he insisted, not permanently occupying the country.

Very few Russian security analysts were picking up their phones Thursday. It seems many have been blindsided by the speed with which Mr. Putin has acted after spelling out his grievances in a lengthy speech officially recognizing two east Ukrainian rebel republics barely three days earlier.

But those who did claimed that the operation – which none will call an “invasion” – was going well, that Russia has established dominance in the air, that much of Ukraine’s military and command-and-control infrastructure had already been greatly reduced, the Ukrainian army in the Donbass region surrounded, and many strategic points seized by Russian special forces.

Why We Wrote This

Russia has launched its invasion of Ukraine. The Kremlin’s true intentions will likely determine what happens next – and whether the Russian public is willing to support the effort.

“Our first impression is that Ukrainian forces have very few chances” to repel the Russian onslaught, says Vladimir Evseev, a military expert with the Kremlin-funded Institute of the Commonwealth of Independent States in Moscow.

The assault began in the early hours of Thursday, with air and missile attacks against Ukrainian military airfields, command and communications centers, air defense installations, transport hubs, and supply depots. Russian armored formations dashed across the border from Belarus in the north and Crimea in the south, and Russian airborne troops were reportedly on the outskirts of Kyiv by evening.

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