I share the frustration over Putin’s murderous war.
But I fear we have grown accustomed to fighting enemies who had no way to out-escalate us.
A thread on what we can learn from the Libya #NFZ for our options today and the risks of escalation: (1/15)
Eleven years ago, the U.S. was on the cusp of imposing its no-fly zone over Libya to stop Qaddafi’s attacks on civilians. Now pressure is growing for a #NFZ over Ukraine. (2/15)
NATO expected a quick no fly zone operation in Libya. Conditions were favorable because most of Qaddafi’s air force had defected.
But the Libyan dictator still had old Soviet long-range surface to air systems -- SA-2 Guideline, SA-3 Goa, and SA-5 Gammons. (3/15)
NATO had to destroy these threats for its planes to fly safely.
And so, the US and UK fired 130 Tomahawk cruise missiles, US B-2 Stealth Bombers dropped 45 precision-guided bombs on Libya, and other NATO aircraft attacked across the country. (4/15)
What would this look like in Ukraine eleven years later? Russia isn't Libya, so naturally, the military requirements would be much more stressing. And escalatory. (5/15)
Consider the reports that Russia has deployed several air defense systems to the theater, including S-400s, their most advanced. These would have to be eliminated for NATO pilots to fly safely over key parts of Ukraine, including potentially Kiev. (6/15)
This means NATO -- and almost certainly US pilots -- would have to bomb Russian units outside of Ukraine (e.g. S-400s in Belarus). They would also have to engage Russian planes flying over Ukraine. (7/15)
Russia could attack them from within Russian and Belarussian airspace. Would our pilots be allowed to return fire? (8/15)
If so, NATO would then be attacking Russians inside Russia. If not, some US pilots would probably be shot down. (9/15)
The pressure to broaden the war would then become insurmountable.
Unfortunately, there’s an even easier way a #NFZ would escalate... (10/15)
NATO would struggle to fly passively over Ukraine's cities while Russia showered them with cluster munitions. We would probably end up attacking Russian forces on the ground. That's not a risk I'm ready for. (11/15)
Meanwhile, the historical precedents of NATO NFZs would almost certainly encourage Putin to escalate. Libya is one precedent Russians often complain about, but the 1999 Kosovo air campaign is no less important for several reasons. (12/15)
In 1999, the United States began an air campaign against Serb forces who were killing Kosovars. Many experts at the time expected the nationalist Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic would capitulate after only a few days. Did he? (13/15)
No. Everyone was surprised when the operation dragged on for months – just like in Libya. Eventually NATO widened its strikes to include civilian infrastructure in Serbia itself. Milosevic capitulated and within a few years was overthrown – just like Qaddafi. (14/15)
Putin almost certainly has both Qaddafi and Milosevic – and obviously Saddam Hussein – in mind when he looks at Ukraine today.
But unlike these despots, the one in the Kremlin has many options for escalation. Anyone who thinks he won't use them isn't watching the news. (15/15)
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THREAD: For nearly two decades, America has sought to remake Afghanistan on a western model. It turns out that Afghanistan was never America’s to fix. I was part of the foreign policy establishment that tried to find technical solutions for the challenges of nation-building. 1/18
But ultimately there can be no technical solutions for intractable political problems. Weapons and skills are transferable. The will to fight for your country is not. 2/18
The dramatic collapse of Afghan National Security Forces is the best evidence that the project had become a Potemkin village – if any was needed. 3/18