What happens now could dictate the course of the rest of the war.
More than the offensives that retook so much land in , marks a clear decision point for Ukraine.
Russian forces are now 鈥 their priority is not to take or retake ground, but to try to hold what they have. To achieve this, they are and desperately trying to prepare barely trained conscripts for high-intensity combat. The immediate priority for Ukraine is to so as not to allow them to consolidate their positions or train and prepare those reinforcements.
We can now see with some degree of confidence where the focus of both sides will be over the next months: Crimea. Of all the areas taken from Ukraine since 2014, Crimea carries by far the most significance. In a wide-ranging and fascinating interview in September this year, Ukraine鈥檚 commander-in-chief, General Valerii Zaluzhny, stated that Crimea is Russia鈥檚 鈥溾 鈥 the key to the war.
This is certainly also the case for the Ukrainians. Their recent coups de main 鈥 such as the and the 鈥 only reinforce this. With the initiative and momentum with them, the question now is how Ukraine will deal with Crimea鈥檚 recapture. The answer will dictate the shape of the war.
Strategically vital peninsula
Crimea was transferred to Ukraine in 1954 by Soviet leader Nikita Kruschev. At this point, Ukraine was a wholly owned subsidiary of Moscow and its independence was considered an effective impossibility. Crimea had been central to Russia鈥檚 grand strategy since its capture from in 1783 from the Ottoman Khanate that ruled there. Sevastopol on the south coast contains Russia鈥檚 only significant warm-water naval base, giving it year-round access to the Mediterranean and all points beyond.
It was so vital to Russian interests that after Ukrainian independence in 1991 the naval base at Sevastopol was leased from Ukraine 鈥 an agreement that was after Russia鈥檚 2014 annexation of Crimea. There are several other significant military bases on the peninsula. For example radar has been built just outside Sebastopol, part of a much larger system which surrounds Russia.
But most importantly, it is the only major part of Russia鈥檚 occupied territories thought to have a . For centuries it has been a prime Russian summer holiday spot. Now, property prices are falling and the Ukrainian army is, if not quite at the gates, uncomfortably close.
Ukraine is all of its land. From Kyiv鈥檚 perspective, repossession of all 鈥渢emporarily occupied territories鈥 is a for negotiations to begin.
Hard nut to crack
So Crimea is crucial for both sides 鈥 and accordingly presents critical dilemmas. First, there are the military challenges. As invaders have discovered over the centuries 鈥 not least the British and French during the Crimean War, but who occupied and were then driven off in the second world war 鈥 Crimea is a very tough military nut to crack.
In the absence of a large naval and amphibious force, there is really only one entry point, , where significant and bloody battles were fought towards the end of the Russian civil war in 1920 and during the German invasion of 1941.
Secondly, an assault on Crimea is fraught with political dangers. First, unlike the rest of the occupied territories in Ukraine, most Russians agree that Crimea 鈥 with its majority Russian population 鈥 is legitimately a Russian territory. An exiled dissident friend, arrested multiple times by police in Russia for demonstrating against the regime, told me: 鈥淔ew people care too much about Donbas and Zaporizhzhe and Kherson oblasts, they are obviously Ukrainian. Everyone believes Crimea is Russian.鈥
This is an almost universally held view, even . While most Russians could tolerate the loss of Berdiansk or Mariupol on the southeastern coast of Ukraine with the same lack of enthusiasm they displayed towards Kherson, they are likely to unite around a defence of the peninsula. This carries with it the possibility (however remote) of escalation, including the use of .
Ukraine may well take another avenue and decide not to assault the peninsula at all. If we assume that they will break Russian defensive lines somewhere south of Zaporizhzhia city 鈥 something that will be than previous offensive operations (due to recent Russian reinforcement) they could decide to direct operations towards recovering Zaporizhzhia oblast and the 鈥濃 of Mariupol (so-designated due to its early in the war) in the Donetsk region.
This would restore the lines as at the February 24 invasion and would represent a clear and unambiguous strategic victory for Kyiv. It would also grant Ukraine a winning hand in any negotiations. Russia鈥檚 current main supply routes to Crimea would be cut, a task which would be completed by the final destruction of the Kerch Bridge, which is .
A leading commentator on the war, academic and former military officer , told me that: "Conducting a full-scale operation to retake Crimea might provoke a backlash in Russia, but putting it under siege while degrading Russian military assets there would put Putin under huge domestic pressure.鈥 The Ukrainians have before. This may well be the opportunity to do so again.
The US secretary of defense, Lloyd Austin, said in a that: 鈥淐rimea is an issue to be thought through and sorted out by the Ukrainian leadership.鈥 This is something of a understatement. How the Ukrainian high command resolves this issue will dictate the course, conduct and outcome of the rest of the war.
Whatever course they choose 鈥 barring a catastrophic collapse of Russian forces, which will raise some serious issues of its own, to put it mildly 鈥 the war is .
Frank Ledwidge is a Senior Fellow in Strategy Enterprise & Innovation in the Faculty of Business & Law.
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons Licence. .
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