U.S. Warms to Helping Ukraine Target Crimea
For years, the United States has insisted that Crimea is
still part of Ukraine. Yet the Biden administration has held to a hard line
since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, refusing to provide Kyiv with the weapons
it needs to target the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia has been using as a base
for launching devastating strikes.
Now that line is starting to soften.
After months of discussions with Ukrainian officials, the
Biden administration is finally starting to concede that Kyiv may need the
power to strike the Russian sanctuary, even if such a move increases the risk
of escalation, according to several U.S. officials who spoke on condition of
anonymity to discuss the sensitive debate. Crimea, between the Black Sea and
the Sea of Azov, is home to tens of thousands of dug-in Russian troops and
numerous Russian military bases.
White House officials insist there is no change in position.
Crimea, they say, belongs to Ukraine.
“We have said throughout the war that Crimea is Ukraine, and
Ukraine has the right to defend themselves and their sovereign territory in
their internationally recognized borders,” said Adrienne Watson, a spokeswoman
for the National Security Council.
Privately, military and administration officials had
questioned the utility of Ukraine focusing attacks on Crimea, arguing Kyiv’s
military had better targets elsewhere on the battlefield.
But the Biden administration has come to believe that if the
Ukrainian military can show Russia that its control of Crimea can be
threatened, that would strengthen Kyiv’s position in any future negotiations.
In addition, fears that the Kremlin would retaliate using a tactical nuclear
weapon have dimmed, U.S. officials and experts said — though they cautioned
that the risk remained.
The new thinking on Crimea — annexed illegally by Russia in
2014 — shows how far Biden administration officials have come from the start of
the war, when they were wary of even acknowledging publicly that the United
States was providing Stinger antiaircraft missiles for Ukrainian troops.
But over the course of the conflict, the United States and
its NATO allies have been steadily loosening the handcuffs they put on
themselves, moving from providing Javelins and Stingers to advanced missile
systems, Patriot air defense systems, armored fighting vehicles and even some
Western tanks to give Ukraine the capacity to strike against Russia’s
onslaught.
Now, the Biden administration is considering what would be
one of its boldest moves yet, helping Ukraine to attack the peninsula that
President Vladimir V. Putin views as an integral part of his quest to restore
past Russian glory.
American officials are discussing with their Ukrainian
counterparts the use of American-supplied weapons, from HIMARS rocket systems
to Bradley fighting vehicles, to possibly target Mr. Putin’s hard-fought
control over a land bridge that functions as a critical supply route connecting
Crimea to Russia via the Russian-occupied cities of Melitopol and Mariupol.
However, President Biden is not yet ready to give Ukraine
the long-range missile systems that Kyiv would need to attack Russian
installations on the peninsula.
Ukrainian officials have long insisted that Crimea is an
important target for their attacks, and that continuing military pressure on
Russian bases there is a significant part of their strategy. Ukrainian military
officials have also discussed with American officials the importance of
increasing pressure on Russia’s rear echelon in Crimea, which supports military
operations elsewhere in Ukraine.
With the Black Sea fleet, a major Russian air base, command
posts and logistics hubs supporting Russian operations in southern Ukraine, the
peninsula represents a major focus in Kyiv’s battle plans.
In deciding to give the Bradleys to Ukraine, the Biden administration
moved closer to providing Kyiv with something for which senior Ukrainian
officials have been imploring the United States for months: direct American
help for Ukraine to go on the offense — including targeting Crimea.
The Bradleys are armored personnel carriers mounted with
powerful 25-millimeter guns and guided missiles that can take on Russian tanks.
Frederick B. Hodges, a retired lieutenant general and former
top U.S. Army commander in Europe, said that in the coming months the Bradleys
could be used by Ukrainian troops to help sever the land bridge.
Being able to rely on military bases in Crimea for staging
was the primary reason Russian forces were able to seize land in southern
Ukraine last year, a U.S. official said. Making those forces less capable is a
key battlefield goal of the Ukrainians.
“Ukraine could use Bradleys to move forces down major roads,
such as the M14, which connects Kherson, Melitopol and Mariupol,” added Seth G.
Jones, a senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies. “Any Ukrainian infantry advancing through these areas would face
significant fire from Russian positions, and Bradleys offer helpful firepower
and protection for troops.”
The Bradleys, along with British tanks and the armored
combat vehicles that France and Germany have agreed to send, could be the
vanguard of an armored force that Ukraine could employ in a counteroffensive
this winter or spring, government and independent analysts say.
“We think now is the right time to intensify our support for
Ukraine,” Britain’s foreign secretary, James Cleverly, said Tuesday while on a
visit to Washington. “We can’t allow this to drag on and become a kind of First
World War attritional-type stalemate.”
The British Defense Ministry said in a Twitter message last
week that in recent weeks, Russia had bolstered defensive fortifications in
central Zaporizhzhia, a province in southern Ukraine near the land bridge, and
where Russia maintains a large force.
If Ukraine does focus on reclaiming Zaporizhzhia, then
preliminary attacks could include hitting targets in nearby Crimea. “A major
Ukrainian breakthrough in Zaporizhzhia would seriously challenge the viability
of Russia’s ‘land bridge,’” the British assessment said.
Ukraine also has American-provided HIMARS, long-range rocket
systems. With the reclaiming last year of Kherson in the south, Ukrainian
forward lines can now use them to hit the main supply routes coming out of
Crimea, one American military official said in an interview.
This week, top U.S. and Ukrainian commanders will hold a
high-level planning meeting in Germany to game out the offensive planning,
another senior U.S. official said. The drill, the official said, is meant to
align Ukraine’s battle plans with the kinds of weapons and supplies NATO allies
are contributing.
Ukrainian officials fear their country cannot survive years
of a stalemated conflict while Russia continues to pound cities and towns. So
they see little choice but to target Crimea and put it in jeopardy, a senior
U.S. official said, noting that the issue has come up at recent high-level
meetings at the White House.
Still, despite the additional weaponry, the Biden
administration does not think that Ukraine can take Crimea militarily — and
indeed, there are still worries that such a move could drive Mr. Putin to
retaliate with an escalatory response. But, officials said, their assessment
now is that Russia needs to believe that Crimea is at risk, in part to
strengthen Ukraine’s position in any future negotiations.
By demonstrating an ability to strike in Crimea, American
officials say, Ukraine could show that Russian control is not established. The
Biden administration also increasingly believes that hitting Russia’s rear
lines coming out of Crimea could severely damage Moscow’s ability to push its
front lines further, officials say.
“Without Crimea, the whole thing falls apart,” said Evelyn
Farkas, the top Pentagon official for Ukraine during the Obama administration.
Contributing to the shifting thinking is a dampening of
fears that targeting Crimea would drive Mr. Putin to use a tactical nuclear
weapon, officials say. “It feels to me like increasingly, the administration is
recognizing that the threat of Russian escalation is perhaps not what they
thought it was earlier,” General Hodges said.
While Ukrainian strikes inside Russia proper still bring
escalatory concerns from U.S. officials, Moscow’s reaction to periodic
Ukrainian special operations or covert attacks in Crimea, including against
Russian air bases, command posts and ships in the Black Sea fleet, has been
tempered.
“There is more clarity on their tolerance for damage and
attacks,” said Dara Massicot, a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation.
“Crimea has already been hit many times without a massive escalation from the
Kremlin.”
Still, Mr. Putin and the Russian public view Crimea as part
of Russia, so strikes there could solidify Russian support for the war.
For their part, U.S. officials say they do not know how Mr.
Putin will react if Ukraine attacks Crimea using American-supplied weapons.
Ms. Massicot said none of Ukraine’s handful of attacks on
Crimea so far have threatened Russia’s ability to maintain its claim on the
peninsula. “So they may not be an accurate test of Russia’s resolve on this
point,” she said.
Last month, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken reiterated
standing American policy on Ukraine — that the Biden administration was seeking
to help the country take back territory seized during and after the Russian
invasion last year.
“Our focus is on continuing to do what we’ve been doing,
which is to make sure that Ukraine has in its hands what it needs to defend
itself, what it needs to push back against the Russian aggression, to take back
territory that’s been seized from it since Feb. 24,” Mr. Blinken told the Wall
Street Journal CEO Council summit. By Mr. Blinken’s definition, that territory
does not include Crimea.
That position, critics say, has largely given the Russian
military an untouchable sanctuary from which to attack Ukraine.
“We have in essence put limits on Ukraine, saying this war
is going to be fought on your soil and not on Russian soil,” said Philip Breedlove,
a retired four-star Air Force general who was NATO’s supreme allied commander
for Europe when Russia invaded Crimea in 2014. “To give Russia sanctuary from
which to fight, without fear of reproach, is absolutely absurd. It makes no
military sense.”