Pope's 'secret' peace plan underscores NATO's lack of a political strategy on Ukraine - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:26 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PoliticsAnalysis

Pope's 'secret' peace plan underscores NATO's lack of a political strategy on Ukraine

The Pope is getting involved in widespread efforts to bring Russia and Ukraine to the negotiating table. People on all sides of the conflict wantpeace.But many Ukrainians, and some of their supporters in the West, regard the timing of such pleas for negotiations with deep suspicion.

As Ukraine prepares a spring counteroffensive, the experts say it's time to start pushing Russia to negotiate

Ukraine's Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, left, meets with Pope Francis at the Vatican on April 27, 2023.
Ukraine's Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, left, meets with Pope Francis at the Vatican on April 27, 2023. (Vatican Media via Associated Press)

As Ukraine prepares tounleash its long-anticipated counter-offensive, an important (some mightsay divine)voice is floating the notion of peace talks to end the war with Russia.

The Vatican revealed last weekend that it'spushing behind the scenes for negotiations an initiative that follows on China's somewhat vaguebut high-profile bid last winter to nudge the brutal, 14-month-old conflict towardnegotiations.

On Sunday, following a visit to Hungary and a meeting with Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Pope Francis spoke of a secret peace "mission" involving Russia's war on Ukraine.

Francis offered no details but told journalists travelling with him that he's "available to do anything" to bring about a negotiated settlement.

People on all sides of the conflict wantpeace.But many Ukrainians, and some of their supporters in the West, regard the timing of such pleas for negotiations just as Ukraine moves up tonine newwestern-equipped combat brigades into position to retake land seized in the early days of the 2022 invasion with deep suspicion.

Forthem, the impulse to dismissthe current round of peace overtures to treatthem as playing into Moscow'sstrategy of dividing the West and forcing negotiations to consolidateMoscow's hold onoccupied territory is strong.

Putin's plan is to drag it out, says diplomat

But one of Canada's former top diplomats says this country does havea role to play in getting Moscow to the negotiating table on Ukraine's terms.

Kerry Buck, who served as Canada's ambassador to NATO, recently told a House of Commons committee that Russian President Vladimir Putin "has more people to throw at the war in Ukraineand less to lose" whichcould make for a very long war.

A wounded soldier lies on a hospital bed as a medical professional leans over him.
Military medics give first aid to a wounded soldier at a medical stabilization point near Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine on Thursday, April 27, 2023. (Libkos/The Associated Press)

"A long, grinding war of attrition is in Russia's interests and, in fact, may be their strategy," Buck told the Commons defence committee last month. "They've said as much publicly, hoping to see support from the West start to crumble."

She said Canada has a role to play in pursuing peace bothinside and outside of NATO. She said Ottawa could be reaching out to Russia's allies countries that may hold sway with Putin even though "we may find their positioning less palatable."

Countries such as China and India could be "useful interlocutors with Russia," said Buck who also noted more broadly that the capacityandinstitutional expertise of Canada's diplomatic corps needs to be rebuilt at the same time.

"We have to talk to some of the countries that have leverage with Russia, and that is going to be key to bringing about some kind of peace settlement at some point when President [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy calls for a peace settlement," she said.

Kerry Buck, Canada's ambassador to NATO, addresses a news conference at the Halifax International Security Forum in Halifax on Friday, Nov. 17, 2017.
Kerry Buck, Canada's former ambassador to NATO, says Russia is counting on a long, grisly war of attrition in Ukraine. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Buck said Global Affairs Canada needs China experts and people "who are close to India who can help apply some pressure to Russia and other places." She said it will take a "full-court press to convince President Putin that it's time to down arms and come to a table."

What NATO lacks at the moment, said one international expert in land warfare, is a "coherent political strategy" to match its effective military strategy in eastern Europe.

Jack Watling, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London, told the same Commons defence committee that Ukraine can win the shooting war that it can achieve allits military objectives on the ground in the upcoming counteroffensive and push Russian forces out of the country.

Beating Russia may not be enough

But simply beating Russia on the battlefieldwon'tensure peace, said Watling. A defeated Moscow could still use its navy to blockadeUkraine'scoastline. It could continue tofire missiles at Ukrainian cities as it did this past weekend on a semi-regular basis.

"It could still keep Ukrainian airspace closed, essentially denying Ukraine's ability to have an economy," he said. "And so, unless we have a political strategy that forces the Russian government to believe that it will gain more by negotiating in earnest ...there isn't an easy end to this problem set."

A damaged building is shown in the foreground as fire and smoke fill the sky in the background
A firefighter works at the site of storage facilities hit by a Russian missile strike in Dnipro, Ukraine on April 28, 2023. (Serhii Lysak/Governor of Dnipropetrovsk/Reuters)

The biggest obstacle to achieving a clear allied vision of the post-war peace, saidWatling, is the fact that "a number of different countries in [NATO]have a different vision of what the outcome" of the war should look like.

There is no such lackof clarity on the part of Ukrainians themselves, as their ambassadorto Canada Yuliya Kovalivmade clear last week to MPs onthe Commons foreign affairs committee.

"Ukraine seeks peacebut Ukraine seeks real peace," Kovaliv said. "Ukraine President Zelenskyy developed and presented a peace formula that has 10 pointsand the most crucial of them is the restoration of Ukrainian borders, bringing justice."

A serviceman salutes Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as he is awarded a medal in Trostianets in the Sumy region of Ukraine, Tuesday March 28, 2023.
A serviceman salutes Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as he is awarded a medal in Trostianets in the Sumy region of Ukraine on March 28, 2023. (Efrem Lukatsky/The Associated Press)

Zelenskyy's conditions for peace,put before the United Nations last year, includethe complete withdrawal of Russian troops, the establishment of a special tribunal to prosecute Russian war crimes and a commitment to de-mining.

"This is the framework for future peace," Kovaliv said. "What Ukraine offered to every country was a peace plan that is actually based on international rules and order."

On Monday, Zelenskyy spoke with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau who, according to an official readout from Trudeau's office, "expressed support for Ukraine's diplomatic efforts toward a just peace." The statement notedZelenskyy will participate virtually inthe upcoming G7 summit in Hiroshima, Japan.

Watling said the next few weeks will decide the fate of the counter-offensive and the counter-offensive itself will decide the future direction of the war.

And that's why the timing of these peace overtures issignificant.

'The next few months are going to be ... critical'

Because of the "low morale and poor training quality of its soldiers," said Watling,"ultimately, Russia lacks leverage because it is losing ground and losing people on the battlefield. And that is the thing that we have to make sure continues.

"We can't let them have a ceasefirewhere they can put their mobilized troops through deliberate training and therefore improve their capabilities. And we also can't let them start to grind away the Ukrainians [with]attritional fightingbecause the Ukrainians lack the firepower to hold them back."

Russia has invested heavily in creating a fortified line throughout the south and east of Ukraine in territory it captured early in the war. If that defensive line is breached, it could set off a cascade of events, Watling said.

"The next few months are going to be absolutely critical because if the Ukrainians are able to get the Russians moving backwards, the Russian command and control system is likely to make that a very chaotic process. Their headquarters are 120 kilometres from the front," he said.

"If that can happen, then we might start seeing quite a rapid breakdown of the Russian defensive positions."

On the other hand, Watling said, if the Ukrainians "are not able to breach those obstacle belts that the Russians are building, and they lose those units or suffer attrition in those units that have the skills to do obstacle-breaching then this could become a very, very protracted attritional fight."

Ukrainian military fires from a multiple rocket launcher at Russian positions in the Kharkiv area, Ukraine, Saturday, Feb. 25, 2023. The Biden administration declared its Ukraine solidarity with fresh action as well as strong words on Friday, piling sweeping new sanctions on Moscow and approving a new $2 billion weapons package to re-arm Kyiv a year after Russia's invasion.
Ukrainian military members fire from a multiple rocket launcher at Russian positions in the Kharkiv area, Ukraine on Feb. 25, 2023. (Vadim Ghirda/Associated Press)

If the counter-offensive results in a renewed war of attrition, he said,the advantage slides over to the Russians.

Ukraine continues to askits western alliesfor heavy military equipment tanks and artillery,combat aircraft.

Watling told the four-party Commons defence committee that the biggest challenge Ukraine faces is findingspare parts.

"Actually, it's boring, but it's hundreds and hundreds of different very small spare parts for which the Ukrainians don't have the intellectual property," he said.

"If they don't have the [technical drawings]to be able to produce them, they don't know the heat treatment or the tolerances. That is leading to a lot of their own equipment ... Soviet legacy equipment breaking down, but also the equipment that's being provided by the international community breaking down."

Because of equipment shortages, Watling said, "Ukrainian commanders are having to decide between sending a howitzer back to Poland and not knowing when it's going to come back to them" or using equipment that is damaged.

"I think this is a very, veryunder-appreciated aspect that we are struggling to follow through on."