Riho Terras, Commander-in-Chief of the Estonian Defence Forces, in the Times (£):

You may have forgotten, but a war is raging in Europe. Since the signing of the Minsk-2 ceasefire a year ago, more than 380 Ukrainian soldiers have died in combat and nearly 1,700 have been wounded. During the first three weeks of this year, 22 were killed in action — one dead Ukrainian soldier for every day. That is not an armistice, let alone peace. That is war.

And it’s a war that Ukraine neither started nor wanted. It was Russia, which invaded and annexed Crimea and then unleashed a war in eastern Ukraine. Local separatists are now commanded by Russian officers and come under the Southern Military District of the Russian Federation. So parts of Ukraine are under de facto military occupation by Russia.

As Lithuania’s foreign minister quipped: “Putin is the best peacekeeper — he breaks down the country and keeps the pieces.”

Ukraine is not “a faraway country about which we know nothing”. It is in the middle of Europe and has a common border with four Nato states (Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania).

As a signal of intent, Russia has re-created its 1st Tank Army. This comprises a tank division, tank brigade, mechanised infantry division and artillery brigade. This formation has more main battle tanks than the German Bundeswehr or British Army and is designed for offensive, not defensive, operations.

At the same time, the Kremlin has installed long-range missile systems in Crimea and in the vicinity of the Baltic states. Combined with Iskander-M ballistic missiles and air-launched cruise missiles, these are designed to deter any Nato response in times of crisis — or when member states are attacked. Mr Putin formally declared Nato a “security threat” to Russia six weeks ago.

He certainly isn’t trying to bring peace to Syria. He simply wants to vanquish Bashar al-Assad’s enemies and keep the president in power. His strategy is simple: just as in Chechnya, he is using overwhelming force — indiscriminate artillery strikes, bombing raids, forced removals of population and extrajudicial killings — until the opposition is no more.

As a Nato soldier I was always taught that our alliance is based on values: respect for human life and human rights, rule of law, and governments elected freely and fairly. I’m sure they are shared by all members of Nato. But if that is the case, how can we stand by when a regime breaks countries into pieces and then keeps those pieces? And kills thousands of civilians in the process?

A reasonable question.

When you have a power vacuum – as we have now, with Obama as man-of-peace – then this is what happens. The bullies step in.

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2 responses to “A war is raging in Europe”

  1. Gene Avatar
    Gene

    “How can we stand by when a regime breaks countries into pieces and then keeps those pieces? And kills thousands of civilians in the process?”
    I’m sorry to say that vast numbers of Americans are happily prepared to “stand by” for just about anything from now on.

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  2. RY Avatar
    RY

    Bernie Sanders has now said he wants Russia to join Nato.
    It is breathtaking.

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