Carla Babb
Nearly two years after Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the territory remains
under Russian control, and in the eastern part of Ukraine there has been an
uptick in the fighting. VOA Pentagon correspondent Carla Babb discussed the
issue with Michael Carpenter, deputy assistant secretary of defense with
responsibilities for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia.
VOA: Let's start with the European Reassurance
Initiative. This was started in June of 2014, a few months after the annexation
of Crimea. Now that budget has increased a lot — it's at, I think, $3.4
billion. Has this been effective
to deter #Russian_aggression?
Carpenter: Well, I think the ERI, especially the increase,
the quadrupling to $3.4 billion in fiscal year '17, is a testament to how
seriously we take the threat from the East. And this is an investment in
setting the conditions for effective deterrence and defense of our NATO allies,
especially those on the eastern flank of the alliance. It'll involve a variety
of different things, including an augmented rotational force posture in Europe,
prepositioning of equipment, additional exercises, increasing readiness of our
NATO forces as well as infrastructure investments, but the bottom line is this
testifies to how seriously the United States takes the threat from the East for
our NATO allies.
VOA: What, specifically, out of all those things that
you've mentioned, what do you feel has been the most effective?
Carpenter: Well, deterrence and defense have to take place along
various different levels of the escalation ladder, and they have to take place
across various different domains — air, sea, land, et cetera. There's also
conventional deterrence and nuclear deterrence. So it’s a multifaceted effort,
and we're approaching this very much not only from a joint military perspective
but, frankly, from a whole-of-government perspective. Because as we see some of
the new hybrid toolkit that's being developed in Russia and elsewhere, it's
incumbent for us and our allies to develop an appropriate response to that, and
that's frankly a whole-of-government response and not just a military response.
... It's the combination. Look, I mean these various different threats —
there's cyber threats, there's maritime threats, there's A2AD
anti-access/area-denial threats, and so we have to be prepared to meet all of
those and ensure that our NATO Article 5 collective defense commitment remains
robust and sacrosanct, and we are very much committed to doing that.
VOA: [Lieutenant] General [Ben] Hodges, the head of
U.S. Army Europe, spoke with VOA back in December, and he was talking about the
Donbas region, saying that there is a chance to make some sort of agreement and
to get some sort of solution there, but he said when it comes to Crimea, that's
going to be a longer-term problem. So what can be done? The anniversary is
going to be approaching soon. What can be done? What has been done by the
United States to try to help Ukraine retake Crimea?
Carpenter: Well, look, clearly Crimea is a long-term
problem, and we approach it from that perspective. We just celebrated last July
the 75th anniversary of the Sumner Welles Declaration on nonrecognition of the
Baltic states. That was a policy that we kept over many many decades, and I
think our approach to Crimea is similar. But let there be no mistake: We view
Russia's illegal attempted — and we refer to the term "attempted"
because we don't care for any legitimacy on what Russia has done in Crimea —
its attempted annexation is completely out of keeping with all norms of the
international order — the inviolability of borders, sovereignty, territorial
integrity — and we will maintain a robust nonrecognition policy going forward.
Some of the sanctions that we have employed against Russia are specifically
tied to the illegal attempted annexation of Crimea, and those will remain in
place for the future.
VOA: There are some Ukrainians that watch VOA that
would say that the longer-term problem [is that] the United States is giving up
on Crimea. What would you say to that?
Carpenter: No, we're not giving up on Crimea. We recognize
there was not a military solution to that problem, just as there is not a
military solution to the problem in the Donbas. However, we have applied
extraordinary diplomatic pressure over the course of the last two years, as
well as economic sanctions pressure to deal with Russia's military intervention
in Ukraine, and the combination of sanctions applied by the U.S. and our
European partners, as well as, frankly, the drop in oil prices, has had a real
detrimental effect on the Russian economy — not one which we are happy about,
but one which is necessitated by Russia's actions in Ukraine.
Training effectiveness
VOA: Let's talk about the training, because that was
one thing that VOA got a first look at — going into some of the training at the
training center, seeing firsthand the U.S.-Ukrainian relationship. It's been a
few months now, because we were there at the start of the training. Would you
tell us what's been going on? Give us an update on the training. Has it been
effective?
Carpenter: I believe the training has been very effective.
We started our training program with the National Guard, which is subordinate
to the Ministry of Interior, and we transitioned it in November to Ukraine's
conventional armed forces as well as their special operations forces. Initial
reports in the field indicate that the Ukrainians value the training they we’re
providing. Our own assessments indicate that it's really having a breakthrough,
not just in terms of having Ukrainians understand small-unit tactics and
operational concepts, but it's fundamentally inculcating a new culture in the
Ukrainian armed forces, which is so important for their defense reforms and the
professionalization of the military going forward. So we think it's having a
real effect, and we're going to continue with this training out into the
future.
VOA: Have you noticed any improvement with some of the
casualties from preventable blood loss? I know that was a huge issue in eastern
Ukraine. Up to 40 percent of the casualties there were preventable if they‘d
just have the right training for a medical attention. Have you been able to see
any of these effects yet, or is it still too soon? Has it not been long enough to take
effect?
Carpenter: I think we've seen, of course, the fighting has
died down from what it was in August of last year, so we haven't seen the level
of violence, although recently there has been an uptick over the last six weeks
that's been considerable. But we haven't seen quite that same level of violence
as we had in August, so it’s probably a little bit too early to tell whether
all of our medical training has had the desired effect. But we're going to
continue with this.
We have deployed a field medical facility to Ukraine as part of the training and equipment that we’ve provided. We’re also doing training in the medical arena, and so our hope is that this is going to have an effect on the tactics, techniques and procedures that they employ during those critical first hours after a soldier is injured. We see some success, but it sort of remains to be seen if this is a culture that is internalized and adopted over the long term.
We have deployed a field medical facility to Ukraine as part of the training and equipment that we’ve provided. We’re also doing training in the medical arena, and so our hope is that this is going to have an effect on the tactics, techniques and procedures that they employ during those critical first hours after a soldier is injured. We see some success, but it sort of remains to be seen if this is a culture that is internalized and adopted over the long term.
Rise in violence
VOA: You mentioned the decrease in fighting since
August. You also mentioned the recent uptick you have seen over the last few
weeks. So give me more specifics. What's going on right now in eastern Ukraine?
Carpenter: Well, unfortunately, what we've seen over the
course of the last six weeks or so is precisely an uptick in violence. We've
seen on February 15th, we've seen Russian-backed separatists actually
threatening to fire at OSCE monitors from the special monitoring mission. We've
seen repeated incidents of access being denied to areas of the Donbas, where
then later the OSCE is able to verify that in fact there are proscribed weapons
in those areas. And we've seen, frankly, since the Minsk agreement was adopted
a year ago, over 430 casualties among Ukrainian armed forces. So the cease-fire
that has been in place since September has been a very imperfect one and
increasingly so over the course of the last four, five, six weeks, which is a
cause for concern.
VOA: What’s Russia's role in this? Are they still as
involved as they once were? Do you still see any Russian activity?
Carpenter: Let me be very blunt on this point: Russia
maintains command-and-control links over the separatists that it backs over in
eastern Ukraine. We see Russia continuing to pour heavy weapons into the
region. We believe that Russia still maintains a force presence inside eastern
Ukraine and certainly trains and controls the separatists there in the Donbas.
So this is a Russia-fostered problem. This is not some sort of spontaneously
emerging problem in the Donbas, and it has been that way since the start of
this conflict.
VOA: And so has that sparked additional assistance?
Can you talk through a little bit about what the United States has done
assistance-wise? What the numbers are right now dollar-wise?
Carpenter: Since the start of the conflict, the U.S. has
provided $265 million in security assistance to Ukraine. And we have engaged in
the training programs that I referred to earlier. This equipment has gone to —
or this assistance, rather, has gone to — a variety of different types of
equipment, from counter battery radars to night vision equipment, secure
communications, vehicles, patrol boats. It's been a wide array of different
types of equipment. The goal here is to make the Ukrainian forces more capable
and able Ukraine to defend itself.
VOA: But still no lethal assistance?
Carpenter: We've done a lot, and thanks to Congress we have
an appropriation for $250 million in additional security assistance to Ukraine.
We have calculated from the beginning that the solution to the conflict in the
Donbas is not on the battlefield but is precisely through diplomatic and
economic [measures], meaning sanctions pressure. And we are fully committed to
maintaining sanctions against Russia until the Minsk agreement is fully
implemented — and I want to stress "fully implemented," which means
that the border will be returned to Ukrainian control, the international
Russian-Ukrainian border. So that has been our mode of leverage over Russia;
that is the pressure that we have applied, together with diplomatic pressure. I
think we have been very successful in galvanizing international support,
particularly with our European partners. We have had to deploy our diplomatic
engagements and attention frequently over the course of this conflict to ensure
that the Europeans are with us. I think we've been very successful in that
effort, and that will remain the case. We will continue, however, of course to
provide security assistance to Ukraine, because as I said earlier, Ukraine has
a right to defend itself. But I think the lethal equipment vs. nonlethal
equipment distinction is not necessarily the right one for understanding what
capabilities Ukraine needs going forward. We're here to train Ukrainian forces
to make them more capable, including NATO interoperable over the long term.
That's been our goal and that remains our goal.
VOA: But there are Ukraine commanders that would
disagree, saying, "We need more equipment. We're going up against Russia;
our army is just not that ready when it comes to such a big Russian
threat." So how do you ...
balance that?
Carpenter: Well, the reality is that over two decades, the
Ukrainian armed forces were significantly hollowed out through corruption and
through mismanagement, lack of attention, lack of resourcing. And so when
Russia intervened militarily in Ukraine, the Ukrainian armed forces were not in
a state where they could defend themselves capably. We have sought to rectify that.
As I said we have a very robust training program in place, both for the
conventional armed forces and for Ukraine special operations forces. We have
advisers that we've deployed to advise the Ministry of Defense. We have worked
through the joint multinational commission to promote defense reform within
Ukraine's defense establishment, its general staff as well as its Ministry of
Defense. So we have frankly done a lot, I think, to spur Ukraine capacity and
capabilities to defend itself, and we're going to continue to do that. We are
also enlisting the support of our allies, and we have a number of allies who
participate in that joint multinational commission, which is very important.
This can't just be a bilateral effort; this has to be an effort that is multinational,
and we have been successful, I think, so far in multinationalizing that effort
to spur Ukrainian defense reform and increase their capabilities.
Lethal aid?
VOA: VOA Ukraine has heard through some sources that
the United States is considering providing lethal aid through other nations. Is
there any truth to this?
Carpenter: No, I think you've seen we've been very
transparent. We have sought to be transparent from the very beginning about the
assistance that we've provided to Ukraine. So we are not engaging in any
efforts to channel lethal aid through other countries.
VOA: Switching over to the topic of the MH17 flight that
was shot down: There was a report just released recently by a group of
independent journalists saying that they had used satellite imagery and social
media to confirm that the missile that shot the plane down came from the
Russian base and was transported by Russian troops. My question to you is: Where
is the United States in this, and why are we not hearing more from the United
States talking about how horrible this was to happen, and can the United States
confirm this?
Carpenter: Well, look, we have been very forthright from
the very beginning about this tragedy, in which over 300 souls lost their
lives, and ... we have cooperated with the Dutch safety board in the
investigation. ... They, in fact, released a report in October which confirmed
what we have been saying all along, which is the MH17 was brought down by a
Russian-produced missile that was fired from territory in eastern Ukraine that
was controlled by the Russian-backed separatists. We came out with that
information very early on, and that was corroborated by the Dutch safety board.
Right now, there is a joint investigation team — it's a multinational effort to
look into the causes of the downing of MH17 and hold those who are responsible
accountable, because ultimately the goal here is to do justice in this case, in
this terrible tragedy, and we have been fully supportive of the efforts of both
the Dutch safety board and now of the joint investigation team.
VOA: Is the U.S. planning to put any sort of
anti-missile defense system in or near Ukraine?
Carpenter: A missile-defense system in Ukraine? No. No.
VOA: And then, finally, I want to turn it toward the
situation in Syria. The United States and Russia have been working together. We
reporters have been watching a cessation agreement come into fruition. What
happens now?
Carpenter: Right now we are focused on this
cessation-of-hostilities agreement which you just referred to. We are going to
test this agreement. We want to make sure that Russia abides by the agreement
in terms of its deeds and not just words, and so this is frankly a moment of
truth for both Russia and for the Assad regime. Will they comply with this
agreement or not? We are not naïve; we are not hopeful without any cause. We
are going to test this proposition and apply every effort possible to see
whether we can have some sort of diminution in the level of hostilities which
have claimed so many civilian lives over the course of this conflict.
Russian behavior
VOA: Analysts have argued that as Russia continues
airstrikes, there's not a possibility for other groups fighting alongside to
respect the cease-fire. What do you say to that?
Carpenter: Look, the battle space in Syria is very complex.
There are numerous groups on the ground. These groups are often intertwined.
... It's a country that’s been in civil war now for a number of years. It is
not an easy task to implement a cease-fire even locally, much less nationally,
so this is going to be a very difficult process. But it will fundamentally
depend on Russia's ability and the regime's ability to withhold support to
elements on the ground that right now are seeking to gain additional territory.
So it will be incumbent on Russia and the regime to not provide the air support
and hold back their forces on the ground that right now are on the offensive.
So again we have this agreement on cessation of hostilities. We are going to
test the proposition [of whether it can be] implemented, but at the same time
we’re going to look at deeds and not words and terms of implementation.
VOA: Has the United States spoken with Russia about the consequences
if this cease-fire does not hold?
Carpenter: We have had extensive discussions with the
Russians about this cessation-of-hostilities agreement, and we have impressed
upon them that their intervention in Syria has only fueled the conflict there on
the ground. It’s only resulted in more radicalization, and that will be the
case over time as well. I think Russia knows what the stakes are. The question
is, again: Are they willing to press the forces that they support on the ground
to stop fighting?
VOA: Romania says that it wants to create a NATO fleet on
the Black Sea permanently. I know that this is not your exact country — you
don't cover Romania — but could you talk a little about how this is going to
affect U.S.-Russia relations and whether or not the United States is having
talks about [this subject]?
Carpenter: Well, what I would say is that we have right now
a very low level of a maritime force posture in both the Black and Baltic seas,
and it's something that we need to address. ... That said, the European
Reassurance Initiative that I talked about earlier and the $3.4 billion is not
focused on Black Sea augmentation but on other aspects of our force posture and
the prepositioning [of] equipment in the eastern flank of the alliance. But we
will have to look at the Black Sea. ... We do look at it as a strategic region
in which we have both Turkey and NATO allies Romania and Bulgaria ... so we do
have an interest in security in this region. But at the same time — and I want
your viewers to understand this important point — that when we talk about the
European Reassurance Initiative, we are talking about something that is
fundamentally defensive in nature and proportionate to what Russia is doing,
and that will continue to be the standard by which we look at all of our future
augmentations of force presence and posture in the region.
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