How Long Can Russia Last In The Ukraine War Before Its Army Is ... - CNA
Maybe your like
- Top Stories
- Asia
- East Asia
- Singapore
- World
- Commentary
- CNA Explains
- Sustainability
- Business
- Sport
- Latest News
- Insider
- TODAY
- Big Read
- Up Close
- In Pixels
- Ground Up
- Voices
- Adulting
- Mental Health Matters
- Watch
- Live TV
- News Reports
- Documentaries & Shows
- TV Schedule
- Listen
- CNA938 Live
- Podcasts
- Radio Schedule
- Special Reports
- Singapore Parliament
- Mental Health
- Interactives
- Lifestyle
- Entertainment
- Women
- Wellness
- Living
- Style & Beauty
- Dining
- Travel
- Luxury
- Experiences
- Obsessions
- People
- Remarkable Living
- Sustainability
- Newsletters
- CNA Eyewitness
- Send us a news tip
- Events & Partnerships
- Branded Content
- Business Blueprint
- Health Matters
- The Asian Traveller
- Brand Studio
- Learning Minds
- Weather
- Singapore
- Indonesia
- Asia
- World
Search
Trending Topics
CNA Explains Budget 2026 artificial intelligence China Indonesia Malaysia podcasts Wellness Thailand JapanFollow CNA
Follow our news- X
- Youtube
- RSS
Recent Searches
Trending Topics
CNA Explains Budget 2026 artificial intelligence China Indonesia Malaysia podcasts Wellness Thailand Japan Advertisement AdvertisementCommentary
Commentary: How long can Russia last in the Ukraine war before its army is depleted?Russia is running out of time and troops to sustain their war effort in Ukraine and could resort to devastating high-casualty attacks to buy time, explains this observer.
Russian troops quickly pushed to the Kyiv outskirts after the invasion, but their attempts to enter the city have failed. (Photo: AFP/Sergei SUPINSKY)
Peter Layton
Peter Layton 29 Mar 2022 06:08AM Bookmark Bookmark Share WhatsApp Telegram Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Set CNA as your preferred source on Google Add CNA as a trusted source to help Google better understand and surface our content in search results. Read a summary of this article on FAST. Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FASTGOLD COAST: To everyone’s surprise, after a month’s hard fighting in Ukraine, the Russian army is now effectively fully committed. There are no more large regular, active forces available elsewhere in the country to replace its combat losses or to rotate the forces currently fighting as they grow tired.
Studies suggest that soldiers should not spend more than 60 days in combat before being rested. Others argue for 45 days before they are ineffective. Russian forces reach 60 days in late April. With its offensive operations thwarted, losses mounting and morale declining, time is running out for Russia’s army in Ukraine.
Russia could quickly agree to a peace treaty but seems disinterested in this. Ukraine’s chief negotiator considers whether Russia believes that it can yet win sizeable battlefield victories which allow it to dictate the terms that end the war.
To do this, Russia must break the present stalemate and this requires combat escalation. The preparatory steps for this are underway.
RUSSIA'S NEXT MOVES
First, the Russian army needs to quickly replace its frontline units’ personnel losses, which the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) estimates at up to 40,000 soldiers killed, injured or captured.
Even if this estimate is excessive, losses are demonstrably high given that the army is now being forced to call up reservists from across Russia, bring in its latest conscript intakes (males aged 18 to 27), hire mercenary forces and find willing foreign fighters.
These individuals will have little time to be properly trained and integrated with the frontline units. They are likely to be used as cannon fodder to be expended while holding the line.
Ironically, Russian generals are being killed in unprecedented numbers partly due to having to be at the frontline to personally direct ill-trained units.
Second, Russia is now going on the defensive to try to reduce ongoing battlefield casualties to a tolerable level. This involves ceasing offensive operations, building field fortifications, digging trenches and laying land mines.
Russia’s fighting will now be done as much as possible by long-range firepower including missiles, aircraft dropped dumb bombs, rockets and artillery.
As in Mariupol, this is likely to involve indiscriminate fire in cities and towns that cause high civilian causalities and great damage. Some cities have been significantly depopulated by such attacks: Mariupol went from having 500,000 inhabitants to under 100,000.
There will be more atrocities such as the Mariupol theatre and maternity hospital attacks that break the laws of armed conflict.
SEEKING VICTORY AGAINST ALL ODDS
Adopting this defensive posture will allow Russia time to rebuild its forces so as to undertake a major new offensive, possibly in early-mid April. There is talk of ten new battalion tactical groups being created to replace losses and gain a short-term numerical superiority on the battlefield.
Read:
Commentary: Why are Russian generals being killed in the Ukraine war?
Commentary: Is a neutral Ukraine the only way to stop this war?
This new offensive may seek to decisively capture eastern Ukraine as a Russian general foreshadows, but significant Russian forces remain in place around several Ukraine cities, so a renewed push for the encirclement of Kyiv cannot be ruled out.
It is in this major offensive that Russia may use chemical and biological weapons or possibly, if unlikely, tactical nuclear weapons. Such weapons would be used for their battlefield shock value, to try to break the tactical deadlock and attempt to compel Ukrainian forces to surrender or hurriedly retreat.
Using chemical and biological weapons would effectively represent Russia’s last gasp try for victory.
NATO is signalling that the use of chemical and biological weapons would change the war’s dynamics. United States President Joe Biden declared that this “would trigger a response in kind” although noting that “the nature of the response will depend on the nature of the use”.
This leaves open the possibility that NATO itself may attack those Russian military units using chemical and biological weapons, such as Russian air force squadrons or tactical rocket forces.
NATO would probably use long-range smart missiles to inflict pinpoint damage and try to avoid further escalation; the missiles would likely come from several NATO countries to demonstrate alliance solidarity.
If that sounds improbable, that’s what happened in Syria when the US, the United Kingdom and France struck Syria’s Russia-built bomber aircraft that delivered chemical weapons.
If this last-ditch offensive fails, Russia will try for a ceasefire so as to freeze the conflict in place and retain its territorial gains. As in the Donbas, Russia may then physically reduce Ukraine by converting captured territory into multiple puppet statelets.
At this point, Russia is likely to declare victory and hope to walk away. Already, Russian generals are telling the public that they have achieved significant success and, by implication, victory is in sight.
The big problem in this plan is that the war has now gone too long and inflicted too much death and destruction. Ukraine is now unified as never before, has battle-proven military forces and has a very angry population. The war will not end when Russia says it has, but only when Ukraine agrees.
There is a second problem. Russian President Vladimir Putin remains unrepentant and has indeed recently stepped up efforts to undermine Estonia. The size and destructiveness of the Ukraine war, which Putin denied for months he would start, means that no country on Russia’s border can now treat Russia as anything other than a serious existential threat.
Unsurprisingly, there is now talk of Finland and Sweden joining NATO. International sanctions will need to stay indefinitely to constrain the Putin regime’s future military potential.
Biden’s office may have sought to diplomatically soften his words in Poland, but he speaks truthfully: To return to peace along Europe’s long border with Russia, “[Putin] cannot remain in power”.
Dr Peter Layton is a Visiting Fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute, an Associate Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute and a Fellow of the Australian Security Leaders Climate Group. This commentary first appeared in the Lowy Institute's blog The Interpreter.
Related:
Commentary: Ukrainian childhood fairy tales are powerful cultural tools in these times of trouble
Commentary: Why drones are silent heroes in modern warfare between Ukraine and Russia
Source: CNA/gehSign up for our newsletters
Get our pick of top stories and thought-provoking articles in your inbox
Subscribe here
Get the CNA app
Stay updated with notifications for breaking news and our best stories
Download here
Get WhatsApp alerts
Join our channel for the top reads for the day on your preferred chat app
Join here
Related Topics
Ukraine Ukraine invasion Russia military soldiers AdvertisementAlso worth reading
Content is loading... Advertisement Expand to read the full story Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FASTWe know it's a hassle to switch browsers but we want your experience with CNA to be fast, secure and the best it can possibly be.
To continue, upgrade to a supported browser or, for the finest experience, download the mobile app.
Upgraded but still having issues? Contact us
Tag » How Long Does A War Last
-
How Does It End? What Past Wars Tell Us About How To Save Ukraine
-
How Long Do Wars Usually Last? - Quora
-
List Of Conflicts By Duration - Wikipedia
-
Will War Ever End? - Scientific American
-
Are We In The Middle Of A Long Peace—or On The Brink Of A Major War?
-
Top 10 Reasons Why Wars Last Too Long - Foreign Policy
-
War And Peace - Our World In Data
-
The War In Ukraine Is Just Beginning - The Atlantic
-
Full Article: How Do Wars End? A Strategic Perspective
-
Why Do Some Civil Wars Last So Much Longer Than Others? - Jstor
-
Revolutionary War - Timeline, Facts & Battles - HISTORY
-
Political Science Says Syria's Civil War Will Probably Last At Least ...
-
[PDF] Why Do Some Civil Wars Last So Much Longer Than Others?∗