As the Russian army struggles in Ukraine, the West braces for what Putin might do next - Action News
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As the Russian army struggles in Ukraine, the West braces for what Putin might do next

Russia has a grim, well-established playbook for fighting itswars that it departs from seldom. It isn't working in Ukraine. That has allied military officials and diplomats braced for what an increasingly desperate Vladimir Putin might do next.

The war has not gone according to the Kremlin's plan. There could be escalation ahead.

An explosion is seen in an apartment building after a Russian army tank fires in Mariupol, Ukraine, Friday, March 11, 2022. (Evgeniy Maloletka/The Associated Press)

Russia has a grim, well-established playbook for fighting itswars.

Every country has one, but Moscow is notoriously iron-fistedin the way it wages its military campaigns. Just ask the Georgians and the Chechens.

From the use of massed artillery to turn cities into dust to the indiscriminate bombing of hospitals and apartment blocks to terrorize civilians and break their will, Russia's military tactics have stayed roughly the same for decades,with the occasional modification for new technologies.

Western leaders and military experts who make it their business to study how Russia fights all agree on one thing the war in Ukraine has not gone the way Moscow anticipated. And thatraises the spectre of brutal escalation.

The question they're all asking themselves now is what comes next?

That question formed an anxious, often unspoken subtext tothe talk of sanctions and allied unity this week during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's European tour.

Canada's top military commanderand his western counterpartshave been taking copious notes on the failures and limitations of the Russian Army's campaign in Ukraine the first time they've seen their adversary fight a major war in decades.

To say Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Wayne Eyre was startled by what he's seen would be an understatement given the size of Russia's invading force, its heavy armour, artillery and airpower,and the reputation the Russians brought into the field.

"Yeah, very surprised," Eyre told CBC News in an exclusive interview this week.

After experiencing a humiliating series of setbacks in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin might move to escalate, experts warn. (Mikhail Klimentyev/Sputnik/Kremlin Pool/The Associated Press)

"What we were seeing before the war was an over-estimation of Russia capabilities and willingness to fight, and perhaps an under-estimation of the resistance the Ukrainians forces would put up."

The apparent inability of the invading army's infantry, engineers, tanks, big guns and fighter jets to work together ("combined arms" in military jargon)was one ofthe biggest surprises, Eyresaid.

Most people have seen by now the drone footage of tank columns caught in the open being blown away, the social media video of Ukrainian farmers capturing mobile guns. Stories of logistics trucks running out of fuel and ill-fed Russian soldierstell western commanders a lot about the adversary they might have to fight.

A Ukrainian soldier directs a Russian tank that Ukrainians captured after fighting with Russian troops outside Brovary, near Kyiv, Ukraine, March 10, 2022. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

Russia's problems include poor militarylogistics and lax equipment maintenance, said Eyre. He was quick to add thatthe valiant defence put up by Ukrainian troops even when surrounded, as they are in Mariupol has been the biggest factor frustrating theRussian advance.

"We knew the Ukrainians would fight, but boy are they ever. You can see their willingness to defend their homeland," he said. "On the Russian side, a lot of questions about what they are doing."

Western intelligence estimates that up to5,000 Russian troops are dead, with an unknown numberwounded. The Kremlin, which rarely talks about casualties in military operations, surprised many observers recently by acknowledging almost 600 dead. (Defence analysts like to saythat wheneverMoscow issues a casualty estimate, the real number is usually about ten times higher.)

WATCH | What happened this week in Russia's attack on Ukraine:

What happened in Week 3 of Russias assault in Ukraine: Mariupol hospital bombed, Kyiv tensions rise, refugees flee

3 years ago
Duration 7:31
WARNING: This video contains graphic images at 6:19. A Russian airstrike devastated a maternity hospital in Mariupol, and millions flee as Russia closes in on the capital. Heres a look at what happened in Ukraine between March 7 and 11.

And Russia has lost significant numbers of tanks, armoured vehicles, helicopters and fast attack jets equipment that won't be easy to replace or fixdue towestern sanctions and embargoes.

With the most combat-ready elements of the Russian Army bogged down and being chewed up by fighting on the snow-sweptfields and slushy roads of Ukraine, western leaders have a host of questions to consider along with some nightmare scenarios.

Ukraine could be in for a long fight

Eyre said we could "quite possibly" be in for a long war, depending on the West's ability to keep the Ukrainians suppliedand whether the Russians choose to escalate with even more horrific weapons.

"Warfare is constant adaption," he said."So, what's coming next? What are the Russians learning? What are they going to change?"

In the short-term, Eyre said, the threat of Moscow launchingtanks over the border into the NATO nations of eastern Europe has diminished but that doesn't mean there isno danger to the Baltic states, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania.

"We have to rememberwe're dealing with a nuclear-armed power here. We have to be very, very careful [about] drawing too many lessons," Eyre said.

"Russia is very committed in Ukraine. That's where its focus is. In terms of a short-term threat, it's diminished. What the mid-to-long term brings is anybody's question. In terms of ground combat power, that threat has gone down. The threat of air attack, the threat of missile attack perhaps not."

Disinformation and war crimes

Many observers have warned that Russia might betrying to lay the groundwork for deploying chemical weapons in Ukraine through an online disinformation campaign conducted with the help of the Chinese thatclaims the U.S. and Ukraine are secretly developing biological weapons.

Officials at the Pentagon pushed back on that disinformation effort Thursday, telling a U.S. defence publication that the Kyivbiochemical labs in questionmanufacture diagnostics, therapeutic treatments and vaccines not bio-weapons, which are banned by a five decade-old treaty.

Russian Ambassador to the United Nations Vasily Nebenzya holds up copies of photos while speaking during a Security Council meeting on March 11, 2022 at UN headquarters. The Russian request for the Security Council meeting followed a U.S. rejection of Russian accusations that Ukraine is operating chemical and biological labs with U.S. support. (AP)

Trudeau was asked twice during his overseas trip whether the use of chemical weapons or tactical nuclear devicesby Russia in Ukraine would constitute a red line for the West. He avoided giving a direct answer.

"From the moment Russia violated international law by invading Ukraine, they crossed a red line," he said. "And the responseof the world, the response of NATO, the response of western allieswas immediate and unequivocal, with crushing, punitive sanctions on Vladimir Putinand those who enable him, creating devastation for the Russia economy.

WATCH | Kyiv mayor on the 'nightmare' his city is facing as Russian forces approach:

Kyiv's mayor on the 'nightmare' of Russia's invasion of Ukraine

3 years ago
Duration 4:19
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko sits down with The National co-host Adrienne Arsenault to talk about the 'nightmare' of living through Russia' invasion of Ukraine.

"What we have said is that we will continue to deliver military support and to do what is necessary to meet this challenge. As Russia commits further and further atrocities, we will continue to look at ways to do more, to stand stronger and to prevent this illegal, unjust war from continuing or escalating."

Polish President Andrzej Duda was equally reluctant to engage the question.

When Canadian reporters in Warsawasked what the West should doif Russia goes in that direction, Duda shrugged uncomfortably. "This is an allied decision," he said.

Separately, NATO Sec.Gen.Jens Stoltenberg was reluctant to discuss what top western military commanders thought of the Russian campaign and where it might be going.

"We are learning every day and we will study and assess very closely the lessons to be learned from the military operations and an invasion of Ukraine, but I think this is not the time to conclude on those lessons learned," Stoltenberg told CBC News in Latvia.

"Now is the time to provide support to Ukraine, impose heavy sanctions and to increase NATO's military presence in the eastern part of the alliance to make sure that there's no attack against NATO allied countries."

Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and Russian President Vladimir Putin talk during a meeting at the Beijing Olympics. (The Associated Press)

For Canada's defence chief, the wild card is China.Eyre said he has been asking himself many questions about Russia'sinternational partner.

"What is China's reaction? How does China play in all of this?" he said. "What lessons is it garnering from what's going on? What happens to Russia long-term? Does it become even more of a vassal [state] to China?

"These are things we need to be watching."