Frank GardnerSecurity correspondent
BBC
Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine will soon enter its fifth year. Mysterious incidents of so-called “hybrid warfare” are mounting in Europe, increasing tensions. And in the UK, military chiefs have warned we must prepare for war if we want to avoid it. But if the unthinkable happened, and war with Russia broke out, could the UK fight for more than just a few weeks?
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“We are not planning to go to war with Europe. But if Europe wants to, and starts, we are ready right now.” So said Russian President Vladimir Putin on 2 December, accusing European countries of hindering US efforts to bring peace in Ukraine.
To be clear, it is extremely unlikely that the UK would ever find itself in a war with Russia on its own, unsupported by Nato allies.
But Putin’s words were an uncomfortable reminder that a war between Russia and Nato countries, including the UK, was not as remote as people hoped.
How war could look in the tech-age
“Well that’s odd. I’ve got no signal on my phone.” “Me neither. I’m offline. What’s going on?” That scenario, hypothetically, is just one way we could know that a war with Russia had begun, or was about to. (I should add that there can also be other, perfectly benign, reasons for a loss of signal.)
That signal interruption could be followed by an inability to make bank payments for essentials like food and fuel.
Food distribution would be disrupted, electricity supplies compromised.
AFP via Getty Images
‘We are not planning to go to war with Europe. But if Europe wants to, and starts, we are ready right now,’ Putin has said
There are many ways of fighting a war, and not just the physically destructive wave of drones, bombs and missiles so tragically familiar to the citizens of Ukraine.
Our modern, tech-driven society is highly dependent on the network of undersea cables and pipelines that connect the UK to the rest of the world, carrying data, financial transactions and energy.
Covert activity by Russian spy vessels, such as the Yantar, is widely believed to have scoped out these cables for potential sabotage in a time of war, which is why the Royal Navy has recently invested in a fleet of underwater drones equipped with integrated sensors.
In a war, these hidden, unseen actions, combined with an almost inevitable attempt to “blind” Western satellites in space, would seriously hamper the UK’s ability to fight, as well as potentially wreaking havoc on civil society.
Getty Images
In the UK, military chiefs have warned we must prepare for war if we want to avoid it
At a recent conference in London entitled Fighting the Long War, organised by the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), a Whitehall think tank, military and political figures came together to discuss whether the UK’s current armed forces would be in a position to sustain a protracted conflict before they ran out of everything from troops, to ammunition to spare parts.
“There remains little evidence that the UK has a plan to fight a war lasting more than a few weeks,” argues Rusi’s Hamish Mundell. “Medical capacity is limited. Reserve regeneration pipelines are slow… The British plan for mass casualty outcomes appears to be based on not taking casualties.”
With classic British understatement, he says: “This could be considered an optimistic planning assumption.”
He adds that to fight a long war you need proper back-up. “It demands a second and even third echelon; personnel, platforms and logistics chains that can absorb losses and continue the fight. Yet this depth is notably absent from current British force design.”
Russia’s ‘low quality’ army
“There are shortfalls in ammunition, artillery, vehicles, air defence, and people, with limited to no ability to regenerate units or casualties,” says Justin Crump, CEO of Sibylline, a private intelligence company.
Two of the biggest military lessons to come out of the Ukraine war are firstly, that drones are now integral to modern warfare, at every level, and secondly, that “mass”, or sheer volume of personnel and military hardware, matters.
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‘There are shortfalls in ammunition, artillery, vehicles, air defence, and people, with limited to no ability to regenerate units or casualties,’ says Justin Crump
Russia’s army is generally of a very low quality. Its soldiers are poorly equipped, poorly led and poorly fed. Their life expectancy in the deadly “drone zone” of eastern Ukraine is short.
UK Defence Intelligence estimates that since the start of the full-scale invasion in February 2022 Russia’s army has suffered more than 1.1 million casualties – that is killed, wounded, captured or missing.
Even conservative estimates put the number of Russians killed at 150,000. Ukraine has also suffered catastrophic casualties but numbers are hard to ascertain.
But Russia has been able to draw on such a massive pool of manpower that it has so far been able to replace its estimated 30,000 monthly battlefield casualties with fresh blood.
Russia’s economy has also been on a war footing for more than three years now: an economist has been placed in charge of the Defence Ministry, while its factories churn out ever more supplies of drones, missiles and artillery shells.
According to a recent report by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, Russia has been producing each month around 150 tanks, 550 infantry fighting vehicles, 120 Lancet drones and mo
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