Russian Military Buildup Raises Tensions, Risks Of Broader Conflict Over Ukraine

The pieces for a major surge of fighting in the Donbas continue to fall into place, highlighting an escalation of tensions between Russia and Ukraine that could potentially play out on the battlefield.
Analysts are loath to predict what
will happen as Russia continues a massive military buildup near Ukraine's
borders and in Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula seized by Russian forces in 2014.
But while the more optimistic view
is that the show of force is a bluff intended to test the West's resolve in
supporting Kyiv in the face of Moscow's support for separatists in eastern
Ukraine, the moves heighten the risks that fighting that has been contained to
the Donbas since 2014 could spill over into a broader conflict.
"If it's just a 'show of strength,' Russia is
doing an awful lot to make it wholly convincing," Nigel Gould-Davies, a
senior fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the International institute for
Strategic Studies (IISS), wrote on Twitter on April 14.
Rising Numbers
In recent weeks, Russia has
unexpectedly boosted its troop presence near the conflict zone in Ukraine. As
questions about Moscow’s motives mounted, military officials eventually said
the forces were moved for exercises intended to test combat readiness in
response to long-planned NATO drills in Europe.
Thousands of Russian troops have
been transferred to a staging area south of Voronezh, located about 250
kilometers from the Ukrainian border, adding to forces already stationed there.
Analysis of open-source material
by the global intelligence company Janes has identified tanks, infantry
fighting vehicles, long-range artillery, rocket launchers, and Iskander
short-range ballistic missile systems among the materiel that has been moved to
the area since mid-March. U.S. and NATO officials have called it the largest
military buildup in the region since Russia's surprise occupation of Crimea and
the start of fighting in the Donbas, which has killed more than 13,000
combatants and civilians since April 2014.
At @JanesINTEL alongside a lot of
other Russian units moving to the Ukrainian border we've identified the
deployment of Iskander, likely from the Central Military District's 119th
Missile Brigade to Voronezh.
Janes, which specializes in
military and defense analysis, has also identified army air-defense systems
being transported to the region as well as a long-range telecommunications
system and a field hospital.
Similar activity has been seen in
the Rostov region, which borders parts of the Donbas held by Russia-backed
separatists, and on the Tavrida highway to Crimea, with eyewitnesses telling
RFE/RL that convoys includes combat vehicles and multiple-rocket launching
systems.
Ukrainian Defense Minister Andriy
Taran told the European Parliament this week that Russia would ultimately have
110,000 troops within 56 tactical battalions at its disposal in Crimea and near
Ukraine's borders, saying the built-up force could be used for “unpredictable,
escalatory actions.”
The Russian Defense Ministry,
meanwhile, announced it was sending additional naval vessels to reinforce the
Crimea-based Black Sea Fleet. Without evidence, Moscow has accused Kyiv of
planning an offensive against separatist forces in the Donbas and has warned
that it would intervene if necessary to protect Russian citizens -- an apparent
reference to residents of the separatist-held areas who have been given Russian
passports.
This all comes as a cease-fire
brokered last summer has collapsed in the Donbas, with more than 25 Ukrainian
soldiers killed in separatist-held areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions
since the start of the year, compared to 50 in all of 2020, and separatist
forces claiming that more than 20 of their fighters have been killed.
Exit Residents, Enter Russian
Journalists
Heorhiy Tuka, a former Ukrainian
deputy minister for what Kyiv calls the temporarily occupied territories, says
that families in separatist-held areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions are
leaving for Russia in anticipation of a big war.
While Tuka told Current Time on
April 14 that it was too early to say what might happen, he boiled things down
to three likely scenarios:
A show of force intended to force
a new round of negotiations regarding the conflict in the Donbas;
An escalation of fighting involving
pinpoint strikes that would not result in Russian forces crossing its border
with Ukraine and would force negotiations;
Or a full-scale invasion of
Ukraine that would attempt to establish a corridor between Russian-controlled
Crimea and separatist-held territories in the Donbas.
Tuka said he considered the second
scenario to be the most likely, with the ultimate goal being the mandatory
resumption of fresh water supplies to Crimea and direct negotiations between
Kyiv and the two Russia-backed, self-declared governments in separatist-held
areas of eastern Ukraine, demands that Moscow has been making since the war
began in 2014.
At the same time, journalist Denys
Kazanskiy, a member of the Ukrainian delegation to the trilateral contact group
on the Donbas -- which comprises Ukraine, Russia, and the OSCE -- said that
Russian pro-government media were entering the conflict zone.
Kazanskiy described this as an
"alarming" sign, saying that "when such people appear, their
arrival is usually marked with some kind of aggravation" that is blamed on
Ukraine.
Despite the Russian military
buildup and being told that Ukraine is preparing to invade, Kazanskiy said, he
said he does not believe the people in the separatist-held areas are panicking,
because they have seen this before.
"It's like The Boy Who Cried Wolf,"
Kazanskiy said, noting that residents were told recently that the invasion
would take place on March 15. "They shout all the time that Ukraine will
attack, and advance, and that aggravates tensions."
No Comparison
Should major hostilities break out
again in the Donbas, the situation will have changed a lot since 2014,
according to experts. Both the Ukrainian and Russian militaries are seen as
better prepared.
Kyiv has significantly boosted
defense spending since 2014, has U.S.-supplied Javelin anti-tank missiles in
its arsenal, and boasts troop numbers of nearly 250,000 compared to 168,000 in
2013.
When fighting broke out in eastern
Ukraine, the country estimated that it had only 5,000 combat-ready troops and
had to call on volunteer militias to help in the war effort, and Russian forces
no longer benefit from the element of surprise.
As for Russia, "the situation
is fundamentally different," according to military expert Yuriy Butusov,
editor in chief of the Ukrainian website Censor.net.
"A military reform has been
taking place in Russia since 2015," Butusov told RFE/RL's Russian Service.
"It is aimed at strengthening the quality component of the armed forces,
specifically for the conditions of a local war, military operations against
Ukraine."
Rather than maintaining
understaffed units, he said, "the Russian Army has moved on to maintaining
a large number of full-fledged, ready-for-immediate-action units that are in a
higher degree of combat readiness."
Ultimately, however, Butusov said
that the lack of structural reforms in the Ukrainian military would make it
difficult for it in a mobile war with Russia.
"We are inferior to the
Russian Army in weapons and military equipment," he said. "On the
other han , the Ukrainian Army surpasses the enemy in motivation."
Former Ukrainian deputy minister
Tuka gave a similarly dour assessment of Ukraine's chances in a war with
Russia, saying, among other things, that Ukraine’s air-defense system is in
"a deplorable state."
"You have to speak objectively and
honestly," he told Current Time, the Russian-language network led by
RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA. "The fact is that if assets of the Russian
armed forces are used -- such as aviation, missile forces, or long-range
artillery -- then I have grave doubts ."
Another factor in the tension over
the Russian military buildup is Moscow’s severely strained relations with the
West.
The announcement of new U.S.
sanctions on Russia on April 15 may make the Kremlin more cautious about
actions that would further aggravate those ties, Aleksandr Baunov, an analyst
at the Carnegie Moscow Center, wrote on Twitter.
8/10 The U.S. move along the path of sanctions could mean that Russia will tread more carefully along the path of escalation. It could decide against some future tough actions