Bergman: Michael one more sort of follow-up question. Because of the casualties that Russia has absorbed, is your sense that their offensive capacity is highly curtailed…Michael, when you think that to the decision that putin made ot invade, it strikes me as important to understand his objectives and what he’s trying to achieve, especially if we could wind up in a situation where Ukraine is on the ropes after being cut off.
(One of the Michaels, probably Kimmage from the content): Well, I think there are two layers to the answer, and I think we have some of the evidence from the initial invasion, the scale of it, and the kinds of ambitions that we can associate with it. We don’t have documents and very good evidence, but I think a partition of the country was what Putin was aiming for. To topple the government. I don’t think to take all of Ukrainian territory, but to roughly absorb half o Ukraine into Russia as he’s attempted to do via the Russia constitution in the south of Ukraine, so we have that as sort of data points, and I think that the hope was that he could do that very quickly and with that in some respects reconstitute Europe and make Russia one of the decisive players in the structure of Europe. Obviously Ukraine is first and foremost, but there’s a European dimension, and that’s the second layer of it. They think that we have to pay very close attention to it. It’s not as a few have alleged, a desire to take Russian troops to Poland or the Baltics or Berlin or Paris. Some Russian soldiers have written those sorts of phrases on their supplies, but that’s, I think, a fantasy that doesn’t especially interest Putin. It would be to leverage this new position in Ukraine, to insert Russia into the European security architecture and to capitalize – this is to go off what Michael said – to go…if the war were to turn very much against Ukraine, to capitalize on the loss of credibility for the United States, so NATO would mean something very different. It wouldn’t disintegrate or disappear because of a lost war in Ukraine, but it would mean something different, and I think that Russia would be eager to press any advantage in that regard and perhaps to take advantage of gray zone issues, and just to make NATO look like a paper tiger, make it look weak, make the United States look like it’s just not capable of being in a meaningful sense the guarantor of security in Europe. I think the stakes are sort of that high. Obviously the humanitarian and human stakes of the war in Ukraine, it should be on our minds first and foremost but the kind of international order stakes in Europe and also by extension sort of other theaters is something that we should think about. I think that we’ve had that sense since the beginning of the war, and yet the urgency that’s there in our societies, the kind of slowness of Europe, and the US turning Ukraine into a political football when it really should properly be a foreign policy challenge or opportunity…the lack of urgency is very odd. It has its roots, I think, in the media. It’s sort of, if Russia were to reverse the huiliation that Russia has experience dover the last couple years, it’s not as if he then sort of retreats and goes home and sort of accepts the fact that Russia has been still very isolated from the international economy and has been treated as a pariah. It concerns me a bit, and I think this is true regardless of what happens on the battlefield is that there’s very little to deter Russia from many of the gray zone, hybrid actions that you know, we were concerned about. Election interference, taking more kinetic actions against civilian infrastructure, and to add one small point there, we’ve celebrated Germany from liberating itsel ffrom its dependenc on Russian energy, in a sense we’ve celebrated ourselves for instituting, what was it, the “sanctions regime from hell” in 2022, and thereafter. I think that what we forget in this narrative is that exactly as these things are happening, Russia has liberated itself from the West. Its dependence on the West is much less than it was, so Russia’s political economy success is such as Maria was describing a moment ago, is going to underwrite a much more autonomous foreign policy and probably a much more amibitious foreig policy and obviously a much more anti-Western foreign policy in the future whether-or-not they make big against on the ground in Ukraine. It’s a factor that we have to keep in mind.
[someone else, I’d guess Bergman given how much he much he rambles; condensing this a great deal]: Yeah, I just want to comment on Mike’s point. I think that we often go from overestimating to underestimating Russia. We’d be better-off dealing with an embittered Russia that feels that it has been defeated than a Russia that hasn’t. I feel like some of the intensification in international conflicts might be linked to the idea that the West isn’t effectively coping with Russia. Iran’s defense industry has been doing comparatively well considering sanctions it’s been under which are much stronger than those that Russia had experienced, which suggests that Russia will be able to maintain levels of production of at least less-sophisticated weapons well. And there’s what this signals to China. Mike, I think that you’ve outlined what I think is still a fairly promising outlook for Ukraine. 2024 I think will be tough, but Russia hasn’t been able to go on offensive effectively. If Ukraine can absorb that over the next year, rebuild forces, train its troops, then 2025 is looking a lot more promising I think for Ukraine militarily. I’d like to see how you see talk about this being a long war; I’m curious how you see this playing out positive way for Ukraine.
[Someone else, probably Kofman]: I see next year as a potential turning point, and the way I look at this that there is very much a theory of success for Ukraine. If Ukraine is able to defend against Russian offensives at the peak of Russian defense spending and investment in their military such the Russian leadership concedes that despite everything they’re putting into the defense industry they’re not able to attain even their minimal aims. Secondly, Ukraine uses next year to reconstitute its forces, that talks about force quality, manpower, rotating brigades, solving training issues, the industrial capacity production of key systems and drones. Ukraine has been the beneficiary of a lot of Western assistance, but this has created a zoo of equipment of different types and in every single category and this requires a lot of maintenance and increasing the capacity to actually repair it. When you’re there, you’ll can see…you’ll be surprised by what Ukrainians can do already in terms of maintaining and repairing the equipment and making entirely new parts for it. I’ve seen this myself, and the third part of it is a strike part, which is Ukraine is increasing its indigenous capacity to build strike systems and conduct certain types of campaigns for Russian critical infrastructure, Russian basing, Russian logistics, and can still create issues or dilemmas for the Russian military. The front line will be difficult to move. There aren’t the resources for a major Ukrainian offensive of next year. Ukraine can use next year effectively to set the conditions to retake the advantage. Fundamentally, we are in the long game now; much of this war had been subject to short-termism in planning in the West, and we’ve basically been going from one six-month to another. I said, regarding the counteroffensive, with my colleague Rob Lee, that this offensive itself will not end or resolve the war. It will require a long-term plan and long-term investment. Now at least short-term thinking creates the oppoertunity to develop a long-term strategy for how you are going to sustain the war as a long-term effort, and what are the things you need to do next year to change the picture and restore the capacity for Ukraine to attain its objectives in the war come late next year or 2025. You kown I’m not known for being [illegible] or an optimist. So when I say that I do see prospects for using the next year successfully, I do see it and do believe it. I don’t know if we’re going to get there. Certainly what I’ve seen from our own Congress here in Washington DC over the last three months is not encouraging to an analyst. I don’t know that even though we have the technological innovation, the financial capital, and we have all the advantages in the west, if you just look at the balance sheet…
[someone else, maybe Bergman]: If we look at the overall balance o fmateriel availability and potential and capacity in the West versus Russia, you would think that this is almost a no-brainer, but you see the political will and making decisions at the right time and all this are the critical factors. There’s been talk of Ukraine doing its own mobilization of hundreds of thousands of additional men being called up. What do you think, would that make a difference? Is that something that you’re looking for?
[I’m having a hard time distinguishing between who is talking here. There’s discussion of mobilization, the fact that it’s harder for older men to fight as well, and that some units in Ukraine only recently got vacation and rotation off the front.]
Bergman: Maria, I want to turn to you about kind of future prospects o fthe Russian economy as we look out over the next year. I think Mike has always been a sanctions pessimist. I’ve been a sanctions optimist, and right now, Mike may be slightly winning that conversation, but it does strike me that Russia is running its economy quite hot. We’re seeing inflation start to go up, there’s labor challenges, now if Russia has to do another partial mobilization, that will put a lot of strain on the Russian economy. How do you see this sort of playing out. Let’s take the optimistic view: Ukraine is able to hold on as Russia goes on the offensive for much of this year, Russia probably doesn’t gain very much. Maybe it loses quite a lot in terms of man power and resources. Where do you think that the Russian economy will be in six months, a year or now, or what are the vulnerabilities there?
Snegovaya: So when it comes to material factors like how much it costs for Russia to run this war [illegible] economist has estimated that Russia can pull it off forever, at the very least for within the foreseeable future, and given Putin’s international amibition that we’ve discussed here he’d probably want to have…there are other factors that are accumulating. They’re not decisive in any way at this point, but certaily some of them at some point may skyrocket. The first one is inflation in general…for the lack of external investment. Russia is only maintaining its economy by essentially some sort of Keynesian policy of investing its own resources into the economy, which always leads to inflation. Russia is no exception; the official numbers of inflation are very unreliable but it certainly…the unofficial numbers are certainly above 10%. Lots of complaining about the price of eggs and certainly some of the problems are emerging such as disappearance of eggs or other items. That is also combined with so-called regressive import substitution, where Russia is unable to get the best possible articles at the give price because fo the sanctions, so they have to find other ways to import something that’s potentially-inferior in quality and also more expensive because of all the supply chains that they have to restructure in the long term that certainly might be accumulating and contributing to the war fatigue. There is also a less-notable exchaustion of the rainy day fund that’s also happening. So, for example, the national wellbeing fund is slowly getting eroded, and it’s unclear how much more it will take until its totally gone. While the Kremlin does have the resources right now, as we have discussed, due to variable energy dynamic in the long term, especially if there is a shock…let’s imagine something happens and the oil prices dramatically fall. This is where there will be a lot of problems for the Kremlin all of a sudden, because they just don’t any longer have these resources that they accumulated. This is partly because of the sanctions, for example the freezing of the Central Bank of Russia reserves. They do contribute, because now Russia has no resources to maintain the ruble, and it keeps flucuturing to the extent that they can maintain they have to use the resources they are not accumulating…so it’s not ideal. Essentially, if there is an economic shock, it will be a problem, and it might create the chain of unforseeable events which will be problematic for the regime. Then of course, there’s labor deficit. There is unprecedented, low, low levels of unemployment, and that contributes to the limitation and furtuer overheats the economy. Last but not the least, this also created this…uh…perhaps a war economy. It’s not a really militarized economy in the Soviet sense, but it does…the economy really runs to a large extent on the military expenses, and this creates this trap for the Kremlin that it really can’t stop the war even if they wanted to, beause then there’s not any other kind of factor that will create the GDP growth, that will create this push for the economy, so essentially they trap themselves in this situation which potentially can skyrocket. None of these factors as we have discussed is catastrophic at the moment, bu tthey do have this quality of accumulating and, uh, say in Argentina, we’ve seen a decade of inflation which was really problematic for in the long term for the governments. So it does tend overall to accumulate and create problems. Having said that, probably we should not be basing our hopes on just this analysis and I want to echo Michael Kofman in his call for the importance of rethinking and actually coming up with a long-term strategy in the West. One of the problems why we’re having all of these ocnversations is the lack of long-term strategy on the side of the US and European administrations, like: how do they really see this war going? What is it that they’re trying to achieve for Ukraine? Once they have that clear goal in mind, maybe they can contribute certain resources given how important this war is. Max, I have a summing up statement for you. It’s a paraphrase of the Austrian humorist Carl Krauss, and you know you could take his words and rework thema nd say that the situation in the west is hopeless but not serious and the situation in Ukraine is serious but not hopeless, and I think that may sum up our conversation today. So if the West can become more-serious, it renders the situation in Ukraine less-hopeless.
Bergman: I think that’s a great short summary. I think that’s a really great way to encapsulated it, that in some ways continuing to support Ukraine is not…it’s not causing our price of eggs to increase. It’s having very little, almost no impact on the United States. In fact, almost all of it is going into US defense production and expanding US defense production which supports American jobs and actually expands our defense industrial production which is seen as one of the major things that have happened. Well, we’re out of time, so we’re going to have to wrap it up.
[continued from parent]
Bergman: Michael one more sort of follow-up question. Because of the casualties that Russia has absorbed, is your sense that their offensive capacity is highly curtailed…Michael, when you think that to the decision that putin made ot invade, it strikes me as important to understand his objectives and what he’s trying to achieve, especially if we could wind up in a situation where Ukraine is on the ropes after being cut off.
(One of the Michaels, probably Kimmage from the content): Well, I think there are two layers to the answer, and I think we have some of the evidence from the initial invasion, the scale of it, and the kinds of ambitions that we can associate with it. We don’t have documents and very good evidence, but I think a partition of the country was what Putin was aiming for. To topple the government. I don’t think to take all of Ukrainian territory, but to roughly absorb half o Ukraine into Russia as he’s attempted to do via the Russia constitution in the south of Ukraine, so we have that as sort of data points, and I think that the hope was that he could do that very quickly and with that in some respects reconstitute Europe and make Russia one of the decisive players in the structure of Europe. Obviously Ukraine is first and foremost, but there’s a European dimension, and that’s the second layer of it. They think that we have to pay very close attention to it. It’s not as a few have alleged, a desire to take Russian troops to Poland or the Baltics or Berlin or Paris. Some Russian soldiers have written those sorts of phrases on their supplies, but that’s, I think, a fantasy that doesn’t especially interest Putin. It would be to leverage this new position in Ukraine, to insert Russia into the European security architecture and to capitalize – this is to go off what Michael said – to go…if the war were to turn very much against Ukraine, to capitalize on the loss of credibility for the United States, so NATO would mean something very different. It wouldn’t disintegrate or disappear because of a lost war in Ukraine, but it would mean something different, and I think that Russia would be eager to press any advantage in that regard and perhaps to take advantage of gray zone issues, and just to make NATO look like a paper tiger, make it look weak, make the United States look like it’s just not capable of being in a meaningful sense the guarantor of security in Europe. I think the stakes are sort of that high. Obviously the humanitarian and human stakes of the war in Ukraine, it should be on our minds first and foremost but the kind of international order stakes in Europe and also by extension sort of other theaters is something that we should think about. I think that we’ve had that sense since the beginning of the war, and yet the urgency that’s there in our societies, the kind of slowness of Europe, and the US turning Ukraine into a political football when it really should properly be a foreign policy challenge or opportunity…the lack of urgency is very odd. It has its roots, I think, in the media. It’s sort of, if Russia were to reverse the huiliation that Russia has experience dover the last couple years, it’s not as if he then sort of retreats and goes home and sort of accepts the fact that Russia has been still very isolated from the international economy and has been treated as a pariah. It concerns me a bit, and I think this is true regardless of what happens on the battlefield is that there’s very little to deter Russia from many of the gray zone, hybrid actions that you know, we were concerned about. Election interference, taking more kinetic actions against civilian infrastructure, and to add one small point there, we’ve celebrated Germany from liberating itsel ffrom its dependenc on Russian energy, in a sense we’ve celebrated ourselves for instituting, what was it, the “sanctions regime from hell” in 2022, and thereafter. I think that what we forget in this narrative is that exactly as these things are happening, Russia has liberated itself from the West. Its dependence on the West is much less than it was, so Russia’s political economy success is such as Maria was describing a moment ago, is going to underwrite a much more autonomous foreign policy and probably a much more amibitious foreig policy and obviously a much more anti-Western foreign policy in the future whether-or-not they make big against on the ground in Ukraine. It’s a factor that we have to keep in mind.
[someone else, I’d guess Bergman given how much he much he rambles; condensing this a great deal]: Yeah, I just want to comment on Mike’s point. I think that we often go from overestimating to underestimating Russia. We’d be better-off dealing with an embittered Russia that feels that it has been defeated than a Russia that hasn’t. I feel like some of the intensification in international conflicts might be linked to the idea that the West isn’t effectively coping with Russia. Iran’s defense industry has been doing comparatively well considering sanctions it’s been under which are much stronger than those that Russia had experienced, which suggests that Russia will be able to maintain levels of production of at least less-sophisticated weapons well. And there’s what this signals to China. Mike, I think that you’ve outlined what I think is still a fairly promising outlook for Ukraine. 2024 I think will be tough, but Russia hasn’t been able to go on offensive effectively. If Ukraine can absorb that over the next year, rebuild forces, train its troops, then 2025 is looking a lot more promising I think for Ukraine militarily. I’d like to see how you see talk about this being a long war; I’m curious how you see this playing out positive way for Ukraine.
[Someone else, probably Kofman]: I see next year as a potential turning point, and the way I look at this that there is very much a theory of success for Ukraine. If Ukraine is able to defend against Russian offensives at the peak of Russian defense spending and investment in their military such the Russian leadership concedes that despite everything they’re putting into the defense industry they’re not able to attain even their minimal aims. Secondly, Ukraine uses next year to reconstitute its forces, that talks about force quality, manpower, rotating brigades, solving training issues, the industrial capacity production of key systems and drones. Ukraine has been the beneficiary of a lot of Western assistance, but this has created a zoo of equipment of different types and in every single category and this requires a lot of maintenance and increasing the capacity to actually repair it. When you’re there, you’ll can see…you’ll be surprised by what Ukrainians can do already in terms of maintaining and repairing the equipment and making entirely new parts for it. I’ve seen this myself, and the third part of it is a strike part, which is Ukraine is increasing its indigenous capacity to build strike systems and conduct certain types of campaigns for Russian critical infrastructure, Russian basing, Russian logistics, and can still create issues or dilemmas for the Russian military. The front line will be difficult to move. There aren’t the resources for a major Ukrainian offensive of next year. Ukraine can use next year effectively to set the conditions to retake the advantage. Fundamentally, we are in the long game now; much of this war had been subject to short-termism in planning in the West, and we’ve basically been going from one six-month to another. I said, regarding the counteroffensive, with my colleague Rob Lee, that this offensive itself will not end or resolve the war. It will require a long-term plan and long-term investment. Now at least short-term thinking creates the oppoertunity to develop a long-term strategy for how you are going to sustain the war as a long-term effort, and what are the things you need to do next year to change the picture and restore the capacity for Ukraine to attain its objectives in the war come late next year or 2025. You kown I’m not known for being [illegible] or an optimist. So when I say that I do see prospects for using the next year successfully, I do see it and do believe it. I don’t know if we’re going to get there. Certainly what I’ve seen from our own Congress here in Washington DC over the last three months is not encouraging to an analyst. I don’t know that even though we have the technological innovation, the financial capital, and we have all the advantages in the west, if you just look at the balance sheet…
[someone else, maybe Bergman]: If we look at the overall balance o fmateriel availability and potential and capacity in the West versus Russia, you would think that this is almost a no-brainer, but you see the political will and making decisions at the right time and all this are the critical factors. There’s been talk of Ukraine doing its own mobilization of hundreds of thousands of additional men being called up. What do you think, would that make a difference? Is that something that you’re looking for?
[I’m having a hard time distinguishing between who is talking here. There’s discussion of mobilization, the fact that it’s harder for older men to fight as well, and that some units in Ukraine only recently got vacation and rotation off the front.]
[continued in child]
[continued from parent]
Bergman: Maria, I want to turn to you about kind of future prospects o fthe Russian economy as we look out over the next year. I think Mike has always been a sanctions pessimist. I’ve been a sanctions optimist, and right now, Mike may be slightly winning that conversation, but it does strike me that Russia is running its economy quite hot. We’re seeing inflation start to go up, there’s labor challenges, now if Russia has to do another partial mobilization, that will put a lot of strain on the Russian economy. How do you see this sort of playing out. Let’s take the optimistic view: Ukraine is able to hold on as Russia goes on the offensive for much of this year, Russia probably doesn’t gain very much. Maybe it loses quite a lot in terms of man power and resources. Where do you think that the Russian economy will be in six months, a year or now, or what are the vulnerabilities there?
Snegovaya: So when it comes to material factors like how much it costs for Russia to run this war [illegible] economist has estimated that Russia can pull it off forever, at the very least for within the foreseeable future, and given Putin’s international amibition that we’ve discussed here he’d probably want to have…there are other factors that are accumulating. They’re not decisive in any way at this point, but certaily some of them at some point may skyrocket. The first one is inflation in general…for the lack of external investment. Russia is only maintaining its economy by essentially some sort of Keynesian policy of investing its own resources into the economy, which always leads to inflation. Russia is no exception; the official numbers of inflation are very unreliable but it certainly…the unofficial numbers are certainly above 10%. Lots of complaining about the price of eggs and certainly some of the problems are emerging such as disappearance of eggs or other items. That is also combined with so-called regressive import substitution, where Russia is unable to get the best possible articles at the give price because fo the sanctions, so they have to find other ways to import something that’s potentially-inferior in quality and also more expensive because of all the supply chains that they have to restructure in the long term that certainly might be accumulating and contributing to the war fatigue. There is also a less-notable exchaustion of the rainy day fund that’s also happening. So, for example, the national wellbeing fund is slowly getting eroded, and it’s unclear how much more it will take until its totally gone. While the Kremlin does have the resources right now, as we have discussed, due to variable energy dynamic in the long term, especially if there is a shock…let’s imagine something happens and the oil prices dramatically fall. This is where there will be a lot of problems for the Kremlin all of a sudden, because they just don’t any longer have these resources that they accumulated. This is partly because of the sanctions, for example the freezing of the Central Bank of Russia reserves. They do contribute, because now Russia has no resources to maintain the ruble, and it keeps flucuturing to the extent that they can maintain they have to use the resources they are not accumulating…so it’s not ideal. Essentially, if there is an economic shock, it will be a problem, and it might create the chain of unforseeable events which will be problematic for the regime. Then of course, there’s labor deficit. There is unprecedented, low, low levels of unemployment, and that contributes to the limitation and furtuer overheats the economy. Last but not the least, this also created this…uh…perhaps a war economy. It’s not a really militarized economy in the Soviet sense, but it does…the economy really runs to a large extent on the military expenses, and this creates this trap for the Kremlin that it really can’t stop the war even if they wanted to, beause then there’s not any other kind of factor that will create the GDP growth, that will create this push for the economy, so essentially they trap themselves in this situation which potentially can skyrocket. None of these factors as we have discussed is catastrophic at the moment, bu tthey do have this quality of accumulating and, uh, say in Argentina, we’ve seen a decade of inflation which was really problematic for in the long term for the governments. So it does tend overall to accumulate and create problems. Having said that, probably we should not be basing our hopes on just this analysis and I want to echo Michael Kofman in his call for the importance of rethinking and actually coming up with a long-term strategy in the West. One of the problems why we’re having all of these ocnversations is the lack of long-term strategy on the side of the US and European administrations, like: how do they really see this war going? What is it that they’re trying to achieve for Ukraine? Once they have that clear goal in mind, maybe they can contribute certain resources given how important this war is. Max, I have a summing up statement for you. It’s a paraphrase of the Austrian humorist Carl Krauss, and you know you could take his words and rework thema nd say that the situation in the west is hopeless but not serious and the situation in Ukraine is serious but not hopeless, and I think that may sum up our conversation today. So if the West can become more-serious, it renders the situation in Ukraine less-hopeless.
Bergman: I think that’s a great short summary. I think that’s a really great way to encapsulated it, that in some ways continuing to support Ukraine is not…it’s not causing our price of eggs to increase. It’s having very little, almost no impact on the United States. In fact, almost all of it is going into US defense production and expanding US defense production which supports American jobs and actually expands our defense industrial production which is seen as one of the major things that have happened. Well, we’re out of time, so we’re going to have to wrap it up.