I am not a foreign policy expert.
Many are. I am not.
Nor am I an 'expert' who has found evidence to back up a pre-established point of view, formed in an armchair in front of a screen during the COVID-19 pandemic.
I am someone who reads and who listens. I have spent the last ten years reading and listening to the views of experts, throwing them all together in a melting pot and forming my own opinion. Below is that opinion - the potential outcomes of Russia's invasion into Ukraine. Neither of them, I'm afraid to say, end well for Putin and all of them will see further suffering.
Putin's Ukraine campaign has gone badly. By no metric has he succeeded: Ukraine and other Russian-bordering nations have accelerated campaigns to join NATO/EU, a seemingly divided 'West' has come together to impose harsh sanctions on Russia and its economy and Ukraine and its elected governments stand firm. Even the conflict's hotly contested number of military casualties suggest that the Russian campaign is struggling, while images of Ukrainian farmers capturing Russian tanks continue to circulate online. At home, too, Putin's actions are under scrutiny. News channels in the UK are full of news of arrests on the streets of Russia - citizens who disagree with the war, whether morally or because they (eventually...) cannot get a McDonald's. This leads to the first potential outcome of the campaign.
Vlad-ios
Putin's control of the Russian people is two-fold. The influence he has in the media, and the church, and those who his regime has allowed to become rich. Two factors that combine to suppress free speech and free thought. However, as Western sanctions take hold, the latter such influence will begin to wane. Putin - and the type of regime he runs - is of benefit to oligarchs and wealthy Russians only insofar as their wealth is allowed to build. It will not take long until the link between Putin's actions and a loss of wealth is made clear - Western sanctions.
For this, the EU/US/uk/all who issue sanctions deserve credit. Yes, the withdrawal of Coca-Cola and greatly reduced amounts of Russian oil/gas entering nations reduces the state - and thus the military's - war chest, but its real benefit lies in the pressure it places on the bank accounts of those who have propped up Putin for more than two decades.
Ordinary Russians are affected by Putin's campaign too. Even those who are unable to understand or even believe what is going on (I recommend this BBC News article - as fascinating as it is scary) are feeling the strain of sanctions and closures. Even if one ignores the fact that many have a sense of right and wrong or are worried about losing their family to war, not being able to stream Netflix or buy a Big Mac will have an impact on many.
And so, eventually, maybe six months from now, Putin will find himself in trouble. Whether there is an attempt on his life supported by society at large or a coup, Putin's days would be numbered. An army that ought to be furious about how their lives are being wasted is unlikely to want to fight for Putin, while the oligarchs no longer have anything to gain by protecting him from the Russians who have moral concerns over the war.
Off the ramp(age)
The American media, with the help of military and security services have coined a delightfully irritating term: 'off-ramp.' In case you are not sure what this means, it is intended to mean a face-saving route out of the war. Putin's campaign has three possible outcomes:
- Victory - read below for why this is impossible.
- Cliff-edge - he surrenders and is left a failure, having nothing to sell to his nation as a 'compromise'. This would most certainly see the end of Putin's tenure in Russia.
- Off-ramp - Putin loses, but is given an 'off-ramp.' Would allow him to call off the war and address the Russian people with words to the effect of: 'the war may be over but it was not without gains. I have managed to secure...'