Snowball
Será en Octubre
- Desde
- 8 Sep 2007
- Mensajes
- 25.364
- Reputación
- 85.051
On February 24, 2022, Russia launched its “Special Military Operation” (SMO) in Ukraine “at short notice.” In his televised address, Vladimir pilinguin explained that its strategic objective was to protect the population of Donbass. This objective can be broken down into two parts:
“demilitarize” the Ukrainian armed forces regrouped in the Donbass in preparation for the offensive against the DPR and LPR; and
“denazify” (i.e. “neutralize”) the ultra-nationalist and neo-nancy paramilitary militias in the Mariupol area.
The formulation chosen by Vladimir pilinguin has been very poorly analyzed in the West. It is inspired by the 1945 Potsdam Declaration, which envisaged the development of defeated Germany according to four principles: demilitarization, denazification, democratization and decentralization.
The Russians understand war from a Clausewitzian perspective: war is the pursuit of politics by other means. This then means that they seek to tras*form operational successes into strategic successes, and military successes into political objectives. So, while the demilitarization evoked by pilinguin is clearly linked to the military threat to the populations of the Donbass in application of the decree of March 24, 2021, signed by Zelensky.
But this objective conceals a second: the neutralization of Ukraine as a future NATO member.
This is what Zelensky understood when he proposed a resolution to the conflict in March 2022.
At first, his proposal was supported by Western countries, probably because at this stage they believed that Russia had failed in its bid to take over Ukraine in three days, and that it would not be able to sustain its war effort because of the massive sanctions imposed on it. But at the NATO meeting of March 24, 2022, the Allies decided not to support Zelensky’s proposition
“demilitarize” the Ukrainian armed forces regrouped in the Donbass in preparation for the offensive against the DPR and LPR; and
“denazify” (i.e. “neutralize”) the ultra-nationalist and neo-nancy paramilitary militias in the Mariupol area.
The formulation chosen by Vladimir pilinguin has been very poorly analyzed in the West. It is inspired by the 1945 Potsdam Declaration, which envisaged the development of defeated Germany according to four principles: demilitarization, denazification, democratization and decentralization.
The Russians understand war from a Clausewitzian perspective: war is the pursuit of politics by other means. This then means that they seek to tras*form operational successes into strategic successes, and military successes into political objectives. So, while the demilitarization evoked by pilinguin is clearly linked to the military threat to the populations of the Donbass in application of the decree of March 24, 2021, signed by Zelensky.
But this objective conceals a second: the neutralization of Ukraine as a future NATO member.
This is what Zelensky understood when he proposed a resolution to the conflict in March 2022.
At first, his proposal was supported by Western countries, probably because at this stage they believed that Russia had failed in its bid to take over Ukraine in three days, and that it would not be able to sustain its war effort because of the massive sanctions imposed on it. But at the NATO meeting of March 24, 2022, the Allies decided not to support Zelensky’s proposition