I am sure you will be able to get access to a full piece soon. But it is almost full here.
First
things first. I may be a newsletter writer, but I’m also a retired U.S.
Navy officer. I’m obliged to tell you that what follows are personal
opinions. I do not speak for the Navy, Department of Defense or U.S.
government. Now,
something else to mention up front: The price of gold is up as are
futures for oil and natural gas. This while “stocks tumble” is the
headline in Yahoo News. In
other words, we have a flight toward safety and away from risk. To the
extent it matters, that’s what we’ve been counseling readers here in Lifetime Income Report for some time now. Did you buy some gold or invest in energy? War
or no war, one way or another your dollars are losing value against
gold and definitely in terms of what you can buy. Whether it’s gas at
the filling station, heating your home this winter, or food at the
grocery story, prices have been going up. And now with the smell of
gunpowder in the air, it appears the inflationary trends will stay that
way.
Byron continues:
“War
is a dark room,” said one of my old professors at the Naval War
College. Yes, because it’s hard to know exactly what’s going on while so
many other things are happening in the complex arena of combat. It’s
the classic fog-of-war issue. To
phrase it another way, pretty much everything you see or hear about the
early phases of a war are wrong. Okay, yes. You may see a photo of a
smoking hole in the ground or a burning truck. And likely somewhere
there’s a smoking hole in the ground, or a burning truck. But that
doesn’t explain what’s really happening. Meanwhile,
it’s not as if Western media are all that good at covering wars in
general, despite all the practice over the past 30 years and more. And
it’s not like many colleges or universities teach anything like real
“military history.” (No, that course you took on the Civil War doesn’t
cut it.)
Byron's focus on Western media and the way they "report" war is crucial.
Still, there are a few basics that matter, things that help you make sense, at least at the strategic or operational level. Begin with the basic point of la guerre
now raging in Ukraine. Plenty of reports of Russian missiles and
aircraft; Russian troops, tanks and artillery; Russian electronic
warfare and cyberwar and much more. But for now, don’t worry about
tactical details; focus on what’s called “operational maneuver.” The
proverbial balloon went up last night when military-grade fireworks lit
off. But in reality, Russia has been preparing the battlefield for
weeks, months and even years. That
is, the Russian Army has been making plans for “how” to fight in
Ukraine for over 300 years. This is something deep in the military DNA
of Russia.
In
the 1770s-80s, Catherine the Great rousted the Turks from much of what
is now Ukraine, and not incidentally seized Crimea. More recently,
Ukraine was the site of major conflict during World War I, the Bolshevik
Revolution and Russian Civil War, and World War II. Then post-war,
Ukraine was a keystone of the Soviet state, filled with Soviet-built
industrial and military assets, and totally covered by Soviet defense
doctrines and plans.
The
takeaway here is that Russia’s General Staff are quite capable of
planning combat operations in and around Ukraine. Do not underestimate
Russian planners or equipment for even a moment. In my professional
opinion (my 30 years of association with the U.S. Navy) they are
outstanding at what they do.
As
just an aside, and to illustrate the point, I should mention that
Russian military maps are beyond excellent; they are works of art. Long
story, but it goes back to the Napoleonic Wars when Russian generals
realized they needed better maps. So they set up a cartographic branch
that is nothing but superb, and that legacy continues today.
Meanwhile,
Russia’s military cartographers work hand-in-hand with Russia’s
extremely competent intelligence services (another legacy of the
Napoleonic Wars) to identify pretty much everything; and I mean
everything! They know the weight-bearing capacity of every bridge. They
know what’s inside every factory. They know where every petroleum
pipeline is buried. All this and more.
The
point is, I’ve seen many Russian military maps, and Russia’s generals,
colonels, company commanders and assault teams collectively know where
everything is located that’s worth a bomb, a missile or a tank attack.
Byron, then goes to purely operational and geopolitical assessment:
Russia
began its operation with lightning-fast, precise missile and air
strikes on Ukrainian airfields, radar systems, supply sites,
communication nodes, military headquarters and other targets of
warfighting import. Plus, paratroops and special forces landed behind
lines or on top of important objectives, all coupled with blistering
artillery and rocket strikes.
And
Russian weapons are very good. They hit where they aim. So early on,
Russian strikes (the air, rocket, artillery and special forces) took out
pretty much all of the Ukrainian command structure, thus neutralizing
higher headquarters. Right now, Ukrainian troops in the field have no
leadership or coordination above the tactical level.
Russia’s
Ministry of Defense claims that Ukrainians are surrendering in droves,
and I actually believe that. Russian Defense Minister Shoigu has given
instructions to treat all prisoners with respect. I believe that too.
As
Day One closes and Day Two plays out, it’s fair to say that Russia has
destroyed all significant Ukrainian air power and bases. One report,
confirmed by NATO sources, had a Ukrainian jet make a dash to safety in
Romania, escorted by NATO F-16s.
And
Russia has destroyed all Ukrainian air defense systems, except for
mobile, shoulder-fired weapons. Russia also destroyed all Ukrainian
drones, or at least the command-and-control systems. And for what it’s
worth, Russia has collapsed all Ukrainian naval power.
Right
now, Russian troops are moving into and across Ukraine from the south,
east and north, under a blanket of air superiority if not supremacy. The
electronic battle space is entirely controlled by Russian operators. In
this respect, Ukrainian ground forces are blind and being surrounded.
And in any case, they are heavily outgunned by superior numbers of
Russian machinery and outclassed by Russian systems that are truly state
of the art.
When
people say, “Russia is just a gas station with nuclear weapons,” I have
to wonder about their overall knowledge. Because no, Russia is a highly
sophisticated manufacturing and energy powerhouse full of well-educated
people. Russia has everything from vast oil and gas fields to a space
program that spent the past dozen years flying American astronauts into
low orbit. And there’s much else of an advanced nature within the
Russian economy, so don’t discount the place for even a second.
From
where things stand right now, in all likelihood the war will be over
soon. Expect a few more days of intense combat. Then over the weekend or
early next week, things will culminate in some version of a general
“surrender” by whatever Ukrainian government remains and follow-up
neutralization of opposing forces.
Here
in the West, politicians and pundits are apoplectic. They fill the
airwaves with diatribes against Russia-Russia-Russia. They make it quite
personal about Russian President Putin, too. And of course, there’s no
discounting the will and power of one man to reshape history.
At
the same time, Russia’s Ukraine operation is proceeding at national
scale, not per the whim of one person. This military expedition reflects
Russia’s pursuit of long-held national interests — again, going back to
the days of Catherine the Great, the Napoleonic Wars and more recent
adventures by other actors contra Moscow.
Prudently,
President Biden and NATO leadership have publicly disclaimed any intent
to send U.S., NATO or other Western forces to confront Russia in
Ukraine. Good idea, right? Do not get into a war with Russia!
Russia
has long made it crystal clear that it opposes NATO expansion towards
its borders, and in the past eight years the Ukraine matter has been a
top-shelf complaint. Russia watched what was happening and how, despite
not being part of NATO-proper, Ukraine integrated itself into NATO force
structures. This was never a secret; it was open and notorious.
Until
recently, Russia was willing to make a deal that Ukraine not become a
member of NATO and that the country play a neutral role in terms of any
threat it might pose. But lately, and more to the point, for 31 years
since the fall of the Soviet Union, the West has failed to work things
out with Russia.
Two
generations of U.S. and European leaders and policymakers have
forgotten the sage advice of Germany’s long-ago Iron Chancellor Otto von
Bismarck who once quipped, “The secret of politics? Make a good treaty
with Russia.”
No treaty. No deals. And so now we have a war. Things will play out in unpredictable ways.
The
West is placing economic sanctions on Russia, to which Russia scoffs
because the country is about as autarkic as a country can be. Russia
self-produces almost everything. That, and sanctions work both ways.
Shut off banking or trade with Russia? Russia can shut off natural gas to Europe.
Kick
Russia out of the international SWIFT money-clearing system? Russia and
China have an alternative system in place, Plan B so to speak. Or
Russia could demand gold for sales of vital materials like titanium or
uranium.
Isolate
Russia diplomatically? Russia can terminate airline overflight
permission to Western airlines, essentially shutting down much of the
international air commerce system.
And it goes on. We will have to wait and see how things play out.
For
now, gold and energy look good. And Russia or no, the U.S. and Western
world will still be stuck with growing rates of inflation. The war only
masks our collective problems, and certainly will not solve them.
On that note, I rest my case.
Interestingly, UK imposed "sanctions" on Aeroflot. As Byron correctly points out--if Russia imposes sanctions on British Airways denying its right to fly in Russian airspace. Boy, look at the map--a major major bypass. And you know, oil is not cheap nowadays. So, here is Byron superb piece and I wanted to share with you with Byron's eloquence and clarity, which by now have become his trade mark.