Sunday, March 30, 2014

Clint Eastwood, Fareed Zakaria, and Crimean Strategy

Someone with whom I grew up (who hopefully won't read this, as I'm essentially calling her out) recently said that an article by Fareed Zakaria "might be the best piece I've read" on Russia and the Crimean crisis - apparently unaware that Zakaria loudly pronounced in late February that Russia was unlikely to invade Crimea.

I'm reminded of a YouTube clip we watched in Strategic Nuclear Doctrine...


... in which Zakaria debates Norman Podhoretz, and delivers an aggressive argument for his view that deterring Iran is the best option. Zakaria states this view matter-of-factly, as if his suggestion is painfully obvious. He then misrepresents Iranian history, and advances a view of nuclear deterrence held only by those who haven't actually studied nuclear deterrence. I've known folks who have thought it was a good idea for Iran to get nuclear weapons, based upon a theoretical idea that more nuclear-armed states will minimize international aggression, rather than encouraging it. (The same theorists are less convincing when asked to explain why Iran would adopt the sorts of arms control and confidence-building measures that the international community has come to take for granted from the United States and Russia, but which are largely absent in peripheral nuclear regimes such as North Korea.) I've always been more convinced with the arguments of seminal nuclear theorist Albert Wohlstetter, who likened nuclear war to an "old-fashioned Western gun duel", and who wrote The Delicate Balance of Terror. (For a great discussion of Wohlstetter, check out this War on the Rocks podcast.) Let's look a bit more closely at the gun duel analogy.


If we liken the Clausewitzian contest of wills to a Wild West gunfight, the most stable situation is two gunfighters in direct opposition to one another. Add any more variables to that equation, and deterrence gets exponentially more complex, and inversely less secure. I'm a big fan of the Man with No Name Trilogy starring Clint Eastwood. My favorite film in the series is For a Few Dollars More, and the climactic scene - save for the intervention of "Manco" - involves a one-on-one duel between Colonel Douglas Mortimer and El Indio. More complex was the final gunfight in the series, from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, which featured a Mexican standoff between Blondie, Tucco, and Angel Eyes. The first film in the series, A Fistful of Dollars, gives yet another model to consider: two factions, plus a third player whose agenda is both vague and fluid. Accounting for a single armed adversary is difficult enough; accounting for two is far more difficult, and any more (not to mention those whose motives and goals are unclear) severely compromises the stability of deterrence. (The Man with No Name's steel chest plate from A Fistful of Dollars' climactic gunfight is also an apt allegory for ballistic missile defense, but that's another matter entirely.)

Now, let's get back to strategic terms. The most stable situation is one in which no states possess nuclear weapons - a situation which, contrary to the goals of nuclear disarmament advocates, ended forever in 1945. The second most stable situation is one with only two nuclear powers, which lasted from 1949 to 1952, and which will never take place again. At present, international strategy must account for five nuclear weapons states (the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, and China), three declared nuclear-armed states (India, Pakistan, and North Korea), and one undeclared but likely nuclear-armed state (Israel). As if this deterrence environment wasn't challenging enough, Zakaria is comfortable adding Iran to the equation.

Unfortunately, his remarks ignore the fact that nuclear weapons would insulate existing Iranian adventurism from international consequences, and encourage more ambitious adventurism in the future. (For a primer on post-revolutionary Iranian-American relations, have a look at this post.) Making irresponsible comparisons of Iran to Mao's China, Zakaria ignores that China's nuclear arsenal insulated it from international consequences for its own adventurism in Mao's era and thereafter. Zakaria also fails to make appropriate comparisons between a notional nuclear Iran, and present-day Pakistan and North Korea. Even when he was debating with Podhoretz (as noted with that article, he was still advocating his "Deterrence!" solution in 2012), Russia's nuclear arsenal insulated it from international pressure - a situation made more poignant by Russia's invasion of Crimea. He also ignores the precedent of Iran signing, then circumventing and violating the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

So, why do I bring all of this up? Because just as Zakaria was wrong about Iran and nuclear deterrence, he's wrong about Crimea and Russian strategy. He repeats Secretary of State John Kerry's critique of Russia's "nineteenth century fashion". Secretary Kerry said:
"You just don’t in the twenty-first century behave in nineteenth century fashion by invading another country on completely trumped up pretext."
From Zakaria:
"Almost all of these critics have ridiculed Secretary of State John Kerry’s assertion that changing borders by force, as Russia did, is 19th-century behavior in the 21st century. Well, here are the facts. Scholar Mark Zacher has tallied up changes of borders by force, something that was once quite common. Since World War I, he notes, that practice has sharply declined, and in recent decades, that decline has accelerated. Before 1950, wars between nations resulted in border changes (annexations) about 80 percent of the time. After 1950, that number dropped to 27 percent. In fact, since 1946, there have been only 12 examples of major changes in borders using force — and all of them before 1976. So Putin’s behavior, in fact, does belong to the 19th century."
The data cited by Zakaria is just flat out wrong. One could make a case that current trends in international relations make annexations difficult, but that's a far cry from the claims made by Zakaria by way of Mark Zacher. Let's just take one example, and look at the claim that "there have been only 12 examples of major changes in borders using force — and all of them before 1976". I can think of two examples of attempted annexations which were narrowly averted through military campaigns: the attempted Argentine annexation of the Falkland Islands in 1982, and the attempted Iraqi annexation of Kuwait in 1990/'91. Russia itself executed de facto annexations of the Georgian territories of South Ossetia and Abkhazia in 2008. We could debate whether or not the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan constituted an "annexation", but it's a shade of grey at very best. Zacher and Zakaria also write off the entire Cold War, in which few borders formally changed, but in which force was used to influence entire nations. The Cold War was also a massive contest of wills between the West and the Warsaw Pact; and although the two sides never fought directly, nuclear weapons pushed them into a series of proxy wars in which they fought one another indirectly - a fact which Zacher and Zakaria omit entirely. Their claims also ignore the role that force has played in conflicts between such nations as Eritrea and Ethiopia, Sudan and South Sudan, Armenia and Azerbaijan, and the Balkans. In fact, the idea that force plays no role in such matters at the present day is often a matter of linguistic nuance, rather than operational factors. As Ryan Evans notes in a recent article for War on the Rocks:
Due to its reluctance to launch military interventions, President Obama’s administration is often described as realist, but recent events have laid bare the pronounced anti-realist character of the Administration’s worldview. The litmus test for realism is not military intervention, but rather whether one views the world through the lenses of power and strategy. Decrying President Putin’s normative views of international relations as being mired in the 19th Century is the farthest one could get from realism during an international crisis.
I'm willing to give Secretary Kerry and the Obama Administration a bit of a pass, because even though their comments about "nineteenth century fashion" are questionable, they're being used as part of a wider strategic communications effort aimed at convincing Russia to withdraw its forces from the Crimean Peninsula. Unfortunately, I can't give Zakaria the same pass: as a member of the commentariat, he's not bound by the same policy limitations as the Obama Administration. Instead, Zakaria is responsible for informing and influencing the public based upon his alleged wealth of knowledge and experience in foreign policy. Based upon his aforementioned remarks about nuclear deterrence, and these comments about "nineteenth century politics", I find myself underwhelmed by the value of his commentary.

There's a reason why strategists double as historians: because historical lessons, even those going back thousands of years, are relevant to modern politics, to include modern war (the latter being a subset of the former). The Book of Ecclesiastes says that "what has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun"; Clausewitz notoriously wrote that war "has certainly a grammar of its own, but its logic is not peculiar to itself" - a sentiment universally understood to mean that while warfare may change, war itself is unchanging. More reputable sources, such as Robert Kagan (The Return of History and the End of Dreams) and strategy doyen Colin S. Gray (Another Bloody Century: Future Warfare) describe the likely return of great power politics, and both are worth reading. (Kagan's book is a quick read; Gray's is excellent, but if you're pressed for time, the chapter summaries are very thorough.)

Friday, March 21, 2014

Answering Snowden

Edward Snowden gets a lot of press. At a recent TED Talk, a spokesman for the NSA got the chance to share the other side of the story. Go watch.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Yesterday's News

"When the United States leaves a war zone, they generally don't take their munitions. It costs more to bring it back than buy new stock."
- Nicholas Cage, Lord of War
In 2013, I posted about Egypt, F-16s, and American Strategy. A couple of days ago, I saw this article from the Washington Post: Pakistan eyes U.S. military equipment in Afghanistan. Apparently, much of the buzz revolves around whether to retain, destroy, or sell thousands of vehicles, including MRAPS.

While I was working in the Middle East (ironically, for the MRAP program), I personally witnessed equipment being moved out of Iraq, and my organization was able to benefit from some of the surplus created by the coalition's withdrawal. Iraq was a large and complex retrograde operation, but it was essentailly "cheap and easy" due to Iraq's geography, particularly its proximity to ports in neighboring Kuwait. It has been much more expensive to get equipment and supplies into Afghanistan, and although much of it will be removed, that removal will be a gargantuan task (and one that's been discussed for the last several years). Many will find the prospect of Pakistan receiving MRAPs and other military supplies unsettling, but military logisticians are likely limited by a challenging cost/benefit situation - even if the quote from Lord of War is actually fictional nonsense.

I also saw this article from CNN: NATO websites attacked by hackers. It reminded me of this comic from xkcd.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Strategic Communications and Social Media

I've written previously about social media security. Another element of social media-related risk management is strategic communications. As the guy behind Terminal Lance notes, America's soldiers have showcased poor judgment on social networks in recent weeks, leading the Army to publish a new education campaign. This includes an article entitled Social media antics can ruin career, misrepresent military services, for which the tagline is dead on: "Soldier. Civilian. Self. There are no split personalities in social media."

Regardless of your affiliation, it's important to keep these concepts in mind. Any strategic corporal can do serious damage to both personal and organizational reputations. Social media provides some great opportunities, but it can also be a massive liability. Organizations and individuals should keep this in mind before posting. Remember the "New York Times Rule" and the "Karachi Corollary".

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Identifying and Mitigating Insider Threats

The FBI caught a retired Navy chief doing something bad. Go have a read, and then education yourself on indicators and mitigation factors of insider threats.

  • DSS
  • FBI
  • FBI
  • CMU/CERT
  • CMU/CERT
  • CMU/CERT
  • Defcon

    Insider threats are universally recognized as the most serious security threats, and should be taken seriously in all cases. to prevent any organization from facing a proverbial "Coriolanus". In fact, many of the most rigorous security controls seek to mitigate insider threats caused by either negligence or malicious intent. Security practitioners downplay insider threats at their own peril.
  • OPSEC and Casualty Notifications

    This blog post provides some food for thought.

    Tuesday, March 11, 2014

    Reverse Wardriving in the Bay Area

    This article is fascinating, and an indicator of just how difficult it can be to keep information secure in this day and age. To nutshell it: a guy in the Bay Area has used his wifi apparatus to track bus throughput and identities for corporate commuter buses from Google, eBay, and Apple that pass by his home on a daily basis. He's even corroborated them with unofficial maps floating around on the Internet that document these companies' bus routes. (As noted, this is the reverse of "wardriving", which is the term for driving around looking for accessible wifi hotspots - in this case, the wifi hotspots are coming to him, hence "reverse wardriving".)

    Monday, March 10, 2014

    Information Secrecy

    I've really been enjoying the War on the Rocks Podcast lately. They've only been doing it for a few months, and that only sporadically, but they've produced some great content and discussed some important issues with a variety of sharp folks. I listened to one such installment earlier this week, and they ended up elucidating state secrets and classified information in a very substantive and insightful discussion. I've shamelessly copied and pasted their code for your listening pleasure, so give it some attention.

    Play

    Saturday, March 8, 2014

    Topic: Export Control

    Have a look at the following headlines (some of which are old enough that they're no longer available without a subscription - sorry). What do they all have in common?

  • DebkaFile: Defecting Iranian cameraman brings CIA priceless film of secret nuclear sites
  • AFP: N. Korea shipped missile parts to Syria: media
  • Foreign Affairs: China's Economic Espionage
  • Foreign Affairs: China's Economic Espionage
  • Wired Danger Room:Pentagon Warns: ‘Pervasive’ Industrial Spying Targets U.S. Space Tech
  • Wired Danger Room: Report: Chinese Tech Firms Should Be Viewed With Suspicion, Barred From U.S. Networks
  • CNN: Congressional report: U.S. should 'view with suspicion' two Chinese companies
  • CSIS: National Security and China's Information Security Standards

    The answer is "export control". Export control is a functional area of DoD risk management, governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR). The goal of American export controls is to prevent the United States government, and United States industries, from exporting weapons or weapons precursors to recipients whose possession of such items might run contrary to American interests. The actual regulations, their reach, and their intricacy are extremely complex, but they're sort of similar in spirit to the Prime Directive from Star Trek, for lack of a better example. The difference is that whereas the Prime Directive is an altruistic measure to avoid contaminating developing civilizations, export control protects American interests.

    In the last couple of years, both the Heritage Foundation and the Center for Strategic and International Studies have held events (Heritage, CSIS) in which they discussed prospects for export control reform. I've not been able to listen to the podcast from CSIS, but the Heritage Foundation's event was very good.

    So, why should you care? There are a few reasons.

    First and foremost: If your operation, be it public or private, does business abroad, you need to be aware of it. There are both strict punitive measures, and important ramifications, of violating export control restrictions.

    Second: The current export control system is extremely complicated, which makes it a good example of how not to control your information and materials. For example, American export controls divide responsibilities between the Departments of State, Commerce, and Defense. As they currently stand, American export controls demonstrate the value of keeping controls as simple as possible.

    Third: At their core, export controls provide a good model for taking an enterprise view of safeguarding critical assets. American export controls go into excruciating detail with regard to what's controlled, and it includes bona fide weapons systems, but also industrial machinery for making components, and software, and data, processes and techniques, and all sorts of other assets. Every good risk management program should take such a holistic approach to ensure that one asset isn't lost by way of another asset being poorly protected.
  • Thursday, March 6, 2014

    A Strategic Dialogue: Force Strength and Structure

    In the last week or so, I've had several people ask me my opinion of the pending Army personnel cuts. One such prompt came from one of my grad school peers, CN Slapshot, via Facebook. Since it turned into a fairly good discussion, I've edited it for blog consumption and post it below. One of my undergraduate peers, Corporal Anger (formerly of the 173rd Airborne Brigade) got involved at the end.

    By the way, some of this discussion involves naval strategy and procurement, so some folks may want to review my recent discussion of austerity and naval strategy for background.

    CN Slapshot: RMA is dead. Long live RMA. The Army Force Cuts: 3 Truths, 4 Fallacies


    CN Slapshot: And while we are at it, thoughts? One of These Mean Little Ships Could Be the Navy’s New Frigate


    Tom@JTS: Wow. So much to cover here.

    1) First and foremost, the fact that we'd be below WWII force levels IS a bad thing. Doctrine Man(!!) posted this article (War is Boring: The Secretary of Defense Wants an Army of Just 450,000) yesterday, with the tagline that the proposed cut is "not as bad as you think", and used the quote: "But the comparison to World War II is about as meaningful as Mitt Romney’s election-year claim that Navy was as small as it was in 1916." I commented, and I stand by it: "So... Extremely meaningful, then?" You can talk about technology until you're blue in the face, the simple fact of the matter is that you can only leverage technology so far before you need volume. A single squadron of highly capable F-22's can't cover the training, deployment, and combat needs of the entire planet, and that illustration stretches across the entire defense enterprise. And, let's face it, our Army (like the rest of our force) has a bigger remit than it did in World War II, counterintuitive though that may be.

    2) General McMaster is right in all four of his stated fallacies, and yet all are popular lines of thinking at present. They're sort of like Marxism: like Marxism, we know that SOF, allies, local surrogates, and a variety of other tactical or operational concepts do not a strategic force make, and yet there are still idealists who refuse to pay attention to the last decade and a half.

    3) A couple of years ago, Andrew "Abu Muqawama" Exum made a good point in a now-deleted blog post: "If the United States has to fight another resource-intensive counterinsurgency campaign... it is easier to design and build new brigades than to design and build new aircraft or ships. I am more concerned the U.S. Army and Marine Corps will abandon the doctrine, training and education wrapped up in preparing for counterinsurgency and stability operations." He's right, you can recruit and train a new brigade for cheaper and on a much shorter timeline than it would take to build a new aircraft or ship. What people are ignoring is how painful it was to plus-up the ground forces in the wake of 9/11 in order to respond to Afghanistan and Iraq. That happened because we cut too deep during the 1990's under the "Peace Dividend", which was provided intellectual top cover by RMA/"Military Transformation". We are preparing to do the same thing all over again.

    4) In the article's final paragraph: "The current mood reminds Galston of the years just after Vietnam, when 'it took us the better part of a decade to get over the psychological and political consequences,' he said. (And at least then we had an obvious Soviet threat to justify a large land force)." In that vein, some may be interested in this article, which I found very cogent and relevant: War on the Rocks: Failure to Learn: Reflections on a Career in the Post-Vietnam Army

    5) I'm personally of the opinion that if we really want to adjust to 2014 budget realities, we should fold the Air Force back into a subordinate Army Air Corps, and eliminate several extraneous federal departments.

    Okay, now on to the Navy article. Give me a few.


    Tom@JTS: Okay, the Navy article.

    1) I'm increasingly skeptical of the LCS. It was a promising concept in the late '90's/early '00's under the operational concepts of the day (Expeditionary Maneuver Warfare, Sea Power 21, Operational Maneuver from the Sea). I think the decision to fund two different hull types was a mistake, the Navy did an uncharacteristically poor job of managing procurement, and some really basic mistakes were made with some of its development and construction. (Wired Danger Room: Builder Blames Navy as Brand-New Warship Disintegrates) Cutting the program at thirty-something boats could be a good way to cut losses. Buuuuuuut...

    2) "That leaves the Navy with a two-dozen-ship gap in its force structure - one Hagel intends to fill with a more powerful combatant. 'The Navy will submit alternative proposals to procure a capable and lethal small surface combatant, consistent with the capabilities of a frigate,' he said. 'I’ve directed the Navy to consider a completely new design, existing ship designs and a modified LCS.'" In this case I suspect "we're cancelling a bunch of LCS units and will instead look to replace/expand the frigate inventory" is actually a precursor to "Y'know how we're shrinking the Army to pre-World War II force strength? Stop me if you've heard this one before... "

    3) The article mentions European designs, but most of these aren't what I'd want to sail on. For example, it mentions British frigates and destroyers, buuuuuuut... War is Boring: All the Things the British Military Can’t Do Anymore

    4) We absolutely need a next generation frigate (or maybe some custom destroyers? Small Wars Journal: Six Frigates and the Future of Gunboat Diplomacy). I'd like to see the Navy repeat some of the processes and philosophies it used to get an affordable and capable Virginia Class SSN as it pursues a replacement for the Perry class. I think you could probably even come up with a fairly simple design that combines the benefits of the Perry Class with the scalability and modular design of the LCS. We'll see whether that happens or not.


    CN Slapshot: I was really happy/surprised that they capped the LCS at 32 (and hopefully fewer) for several of the reasons you mentioned. A heavy frigate like the one Israel bought from the Germans only with the latest American tech would bridge the cost/capability cap between Burkes and the LCS. Yay for the Navy!

    I disagree on how bad the cuts are now - for a number of reasons the pre WW2 comparison is misleading - but am aware of the dangers of cutting too much. Repeating the mistakes of the last two decades would seem like a silly and avoidable thing to do. As usual we disagree on how to solve the deficit/debt - I'd focus on entitlement and tax code reform, before bothering with federal departments. Growing the economy would also help, but that is a bit more of a nebulous affair than simple revenue/expenditure analysis.

    Also, apparently that letter that Sen. Ayotte sent to the air force is having an effect- they've agreed not to cut the A-10s at least until the FY2015 budget is decided on. Apparently that was actually a legal constraint written into the NDAA that the air force was about to just disregard so...yeah. For once, its not a terribly depressing day in the defense procurement world.


    Tom@JTS: Hey, don't take me out of context. If it were up to me, we'd sunset Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, eliminate or pare back some federal departments. I also think the Air Force will continue failing to kill the A-10 for the foreseeable future. I have yet to find anyone outside the Air Force who believes that the F-35 can do the job.


    Corporal Anger: The main thing missing in all of this? What is the desired capability? There is 0 statement of desired capability in this, the closest is "one large-scale conflict."

    We could use a new frigate. We could use a new General service rifle too. How about we quit trying to make the next new Uniform every decade.
    In his initial comment, Slapshot refers to "RMA", or the Revolution in Military Affairs. Known in American military circles as Military Transformation, RMA/MT was an effort to update doctrine and equipment in the wake of the Cold War's end. The movement followed technological developments in the 1970's and 1980's which afforded Western forces a qualitative edge against the Red Army's quantitative edge. RMA/MT was spearheaded by U.S. Joint Forces Command (before its disestablishment in 2011), and by NATO Allied Command Transformation. I worked at USJFCOM for several years. Based on my observations and research, I believe that RMA/MT showed a lot of potential, but suffered from three major drawbacks: 1) they were developed with insufficient intellectual rigor; early RMA/MT concepts were used to justify deep cuts to force strength and defense spending, rather than actually informing the "right-sizing" of force strength; and most fundamentally, promising concepts were taken beyond their actual operational utility. Unfortunately, many of the very RMA/MT events which were undermined by historic events have become fashionable once again as policy-makers and senior military leaders seek to leverage technology as a justification for reduced force strength. Their challenge is to strike the right balance between technology, manpower, and sheer numbers of each. It's a difficult and thankless challenge.

    Of course, all of this is tied into the constant debate about ways, means, and ends. At some point, I may try to put together a discussion of ways, means, ends, and the American approach. In the mean time, I hope that this discussion by CN Slapshot, Corporal Anger, and myself has been informative and thought-provoking.

    Tuesday, March 4, 2014

    Netflix Phishing Alert

    Fair warning: Netflix is having some security issues.

    I still remember being furious in Summer of 2012, when a banner ad on Netflix was preventing me from seeing my selections correctly unless I full-screened it (which I rarely did because I was usually multitasking). I even called customer service. My buddy Chops, who helped to teach me network security, happened to be working for Netflix at the time, and let me know that it was a problem with my system, but that I wasn't alone. I finally traced the issue to my recent upgrade to Adobe Flash Player, which had somehow been infiltrated with some adware. A reinstall of the latest version fixed the problem. It's important to be aware of such issues in order to protect both your equipment and, more importantly, your critical information.

    Saturday, March 1, 2014

    Demystifying the Crimea Crisis

    So, although the post-Soviet republics aren't really my area of expertise, I thought I'd post a bit of clarification for folks who are confused about what's going on in Ukraine at the moment. Hopefully I can clarify a few things for those who are curious, but who have no prior background on the topic.

    I'll admit up front that I haven't really followed the protest movement that spurred recent events, so I'm not sure about the causes. I followed the Orange Revolution in 2004. The Orange Revolution arose when the pro-Russian presidential candidate, Viktor Yanukovych, was declared the victor in the Ukrainian election. The election was widely reported to have been rigged. The opposition candidate, Viktor Yushchenko, also suffered severe dioxin poisoning, which many attribute to the Russians. A popular uprising resulted in the ouster of Yanukovych, and Yushchenko and his political ally Yulia Tymoshenko took power. Yanukovych was later elected President in 2010. (Tymoshenko has also been imprisoned for quite a while, possibly on trumped up political charges, and I have yet to hear whether she's been released as a result of the recent turmoil.) UPDATE: My friend Windshield Ninja, who follows all things Russia a bit closer than I do, informs me that Tymoshenko was released a couple of weeks ago.

    Just as in the West, Ukrainian politics aren't as simple as good guys and bad guys. Around 2008, I met a young Ukrainian woman who was visiting the States, and when I brought up Tymoshenko, she told me that "she's evil." I've also heard reports and read news stories about how widespread corruption and cronyism are in Ukraine. (I've never been to Ukraine myself, and can't speak to any of this from personal experience.) Ukraine also sent troops to both Afghanistan and Iraq in support of Operations Enduring and Iraqi Freedom. At one time, Ukraine and Georgia were on a trajectory to join NATO, but this has been opposed by Russia, and the 2008 South Ossetia War between Russia and Georgia appears to have put such prospects on an indefinite hold.

    The take-away from all of this should be that Ukraine has some internal challenges, and that both the West and Russia are constantly competing for influence there. Western media has been trying to paint the recent protests and political action as a de facto referendum on whether Ukraine should align with Europe or Russia; however, my gut feeling is that we should remember that "all politics is local", and look for both domestic and international causes for the recent turmoil. At any rate, the dispute escalated a couple of weeks ago when troops opened fire on protestors and killed a number of them. Events moved swiftly out of that, Yanukovych was removed from office, and he fled the country.

    The latest news is that Russian-speaking gunmen (suspected to be Russian Spetsnaz special operations troops) have seized various sites in the ethnic Russian majority Crimea region, to include the Crimean parliament building and two airports. Additional Russian military assets have deployed (from what I've seen, they appear to be from Russia's naval base - more on that in a second), and President Putin has requested and received unanimous approval to deploy Russian military assets to the Crimea. So, this begs two questions: why is Russia so concerned with the Crimea, and what is the international community likely to do about it?

    Beyond Ukraine being on Russia's border (think of how concerned America is with security turmoil in Mexico), Russia's big concern with Ukraine (and specifically the Crimean Peninsula) is their naval base at Sevastopol. After the Napoleonic invasion of Russia in 1812, and the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Russian leaders have been (somewhat justifiably) paranoid about its massive land borders. During the Cold War, they attempted to overcome these challenges by establishing strategic depth through conquests and alliances to expand their sphere of influence. As Sir Laurence Martin noted in 1981 (transcript, podcast):
    Now the Soviet Union, for its part, has sought ever since its foundation to extend its influence over the less developed as well as the developed world. This has been partly an ideological imperative and partly, a result of the Soviet obsession - inherited from Russia and compounded by Bolshevik revolutionary experience - with real and imagined external threats. It has been ironically observed that the Soviet Union feels encircled because the world is round, and that they think it a fortunate feature of solid geometry that after they control half the globe, each further addition to their territory will necessarily reduce the length of their exposed frontier.
    The result is that the Russians take their naval bases very seriously - particularly since Russia's access to the sea is very limited, and because their bases are both geographically distant from one another and iced in for much of the year. (For that reason, Russia also maintains a naval base at Tartus, in Syria, and has investigated opening a base in Libya and reopening another base in Yemen. The Syrian base is widely regarded as being a key reason for Russian support of the sitting Syrian regime in the current civil war.) The base at Sevastopol is Russia's only point of access to the Black Sea, and by extension the Mediterranean Sea, so they will be reticent to see it jeopardized by the latest instance of Ukrainian turmoil. As one commentator over at Doctrine Man!! somewhat sensibly noted:
    [I wonder] what we would do if there was civil war with armed militias looming in Cuba outside Guantanamo.
    There's also the issue of the Crimea's ethnic makeup, as it's the only Ukrainian province in which Ethnic Russians and/or Russophiles constitute the majority. Ethnic politics played a big role in Soviet domestic and foreign policy, and those policies remain a big factor to this day. Writing in 2008 at the time of the South Ossetia War in Georgia, independent journalist Michael Totten observed:
    “A key tool that the Soviet Union used to keep its empire together,” Worms said to me, “was pitting ethnic groups against one another. They did this extremely skillfully in the sense that they never generated ethnic wars within their own territory. But when the Soviet Union collapsed it became an essential Russian policy to weaken the states on its periphery by activating the ethnic fuses they planted.

    “They tried that in a number of countries. They tried it in the Baltic states, but the fuses were defused. Nothing much happened. They tried it in Ukraine. It has not happened yet, but it's getting hotter. They tried it in Moldova. There it worked, and now we have Transnitria. They tried it in Armenia and Azerbaijan and it went beyond their wildest dreams and we ended up with a massive, massive war. And they tried it in two territories in Georgia, which I'll talk about in a minute. They didn't try it in Central Asia because basically all the presidents of the newly independent countries were the former heads of the communist parties and they said we're still following your line, Kremlin, we haven't changed very much.”

    He's right about the massive war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, though few outside the region know much about it. Armenians and Azeris very thoroughly transferred Azeris and Armenians “back” to their respective mother countries after the Soviet Union collapsed through pogroms, massacres, and ethnic-cleansing. Hundreds of thousands of refugees fled savage communal warfare in terror. The Armenian military still occupies the ethnic-Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh region in southwestern Azerbaijan. It's another so-called “frozen conflict” in the Caucasus region waiting to thaw. Moscow takes the Armenian side and could blow up Nagorno-Karabakh, and subsequently all of Azerbaijan, at any time. After hearing the strident Azeri point of view on the conflict for a week before I arrived in Georgia, I'd say that particular ethnic-nationalist fuse is about one millimeter in length.
    One way that Moscow accomplished this was by relocating different ethnic groups throughout the borders of the Soviet Union. Operation Lentil, which involved the relocation of the populations of Chechnya and Ingushetia, is the most noteworthy example, but Wikipedia has an entire article about Soviet population transfer. One of their methods was the resettle ethnic Russians throughout the various Soviet republics. When I was working in the Middle East, one of my employees (an American) was married to an "Uzbek" woman who was an Uzbek citizen, but an ethnic Russian, and whose father had been an officer in the Uzbek army whose career hit a ceiling because he wasn't an ethnic Uzbek. On pages 120 to 122 of World Politics and the Evolution of War, John J. Weltman describes how the fate of ethnic Germans in places like the Rhineland, the Sudetenland, and elsewhere became a cause de guerre for the Hitler's invasions of those German-speaking regions prior to the outbreak of the Second World War. In the case of Ukraine in 2014 (and in Georgia in 2008), the Russian government seeks to safeguard the same ethnic Russians whom their Soviet predecessors settled there in the first place.

    The Russians will have their hands full. As I documented elsewhere, the Russian military faces a lot of challenges. Doctrine Man!! posted an alleged order of battle for the Russian military campaign. As that prior piece of mine noted, the Russians had some noteworthy equipment shortfalls on their way to Georgia, and the Crimea is more than twice as large as South Ossetia and Abkhazia (the Georgian regions annexed in 2008) combined. NATO will no doubt be watching the Crimean operation with rapt interest.

    The next question: how is the international community likely to respond? At this point, it's tough to say. I see neither the means nor the international will for military intervention, and non-military measures are unlikely to compel Russia to desist in their operation. The 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances (signed by Ukraine, the United States of America, Russia, and the United Kingdom) has been invoked by some commentators, though the memorandum was apparently never ratified by the United States. Russia suffered some diplomatic and economic consequences after the 2008 South Ossetia War, and I would expect that some such fallout will take place once the dust has settled. The scope and nature of that fallout will depend upon how Russia's campaign plays out.

    In the mean time, you can expect the international community to release a flurry of statements about "restoring order" and "reducing tensions", some of which may be worded as condemnations of Russia's actions. However, as evidenced by the repeated disputes over energy supplies which have taken place in recent years, Russia has military, political, and economic leverage to insulate itself.

    There are a lot of outlets commenting on the current crisis. Two of the better items I've seen are:

  • Foreign Policy: Admiral James Stavridis (Ret): NATO Needs to Move Now on Crimea
  • Michael J. Totten: Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine Was Easy to Predict

    So, to review the bottom line: Russia has both legitimate and fabricated strategic interests in the Crimea, as well as historical precedents there and elsewhere, and those factors are motivating this campaign. As for the international community, it's unlikely that a response of any substance will take place in the short term, and any long-term consequences will come as a function of the campaign's actual events and duration.