The Suwalki Gap Is NATO’s Achilles’ Heel and the Place Where Russia Could Start War – The Daily Beast

Posted: October 27, 2019 at 3:10 pm

They came trundling through the town of Voronezh in western Russia in broad daylight on Oct. 3. Green army vehicles on flatbed train cars, apparently heading west, toward Russias borders with Ukraine and Belarus.

The next day, social media users spotted Russian-made armored vehicles speeding down a highway in Belarus. The local forest is literally crammed with armored vehicles, reported Charter 97, a Belarusian news website.

Russia, like all major military powers, frequently moves its military forces around its own territory and deploys them to allied countries for exercises. The Belarusian and Russian armies as recently as September conducted a major military exercise involving 12,000 troops and 950 vehicles.

Whats remarkableand, for many, worryingabout the October sightings is where they took place: near the Suwalki Gap, where two NATO countries, Poland and Lithuania, have a roughly 40-mile border running through heavily forested territory that separates close Russian ally Belarus from Russias enclave on the Baltic Sea, Kaliningrad.

As tensions between Russia and the West escalate and Russia cements its land-grab in Ukraine, U.S. and allied military planners have cast a nervous gaze on this contentious bit of real estate. If the new cold war turns hot, the Suwalki Gap just might be where the fighting starts.

For NATO, thats a problem. The Suwalki Gap, which some experts also call the Suwalki Corridor, is on the alliances territorial fringes, where European military might is at its thinnest. But it butts up against a major concentration of Russian forces in Kaliningrad.

The Suwaki Corridor is where the many weaknesses in NATOs strategy and force posture converge, Ben Hodges, Janusz Bugajski, and Peter Doran explained in a 2018 report for the Center for European Policy in Washington, D.C..

Hodges, for one, knows what hes talking about. A retired U.S. Army general, Hodges from 2014 to 2017 commanded thousands of American ground troops in Europe. Right before retiring he organized NATOs first major exercise along the Suwalki Gap.

The gap is vulnerable, he warned at the time.

With 29 member states including the United States, NATO possesses far more military power than Russia. But many of NATOs reserves of troops and tanks are based hundreds or, in the case of American forces, thousands of miles from potential battlefields such as the Suwalki Gap. Russia, on the other hand, has concentrated troops and vehicles in its Western Military District, just a short trip by road or rail to the Suwalki Gap.

The imbalance is striking. In 2014 and 2015 the California think-tank RAND simulated a Russian attack across the Suwalki Gap. The Russians should be able quickly to mobilize 25 battalionsaround 10,000 ground troopsfor the assault, RAND calculated. NATO would be able immediately to mobilize just 17 battalions with around 6,800 troops.

But the troop-count belies the true balance of power. Every battalion Russia could call up for the attack possesses armored vehicles, including heavy tanks. Just one of NATOs nearby units has any armored vehicles at all. And those vehicles are Stryker armored cars belonging to a U.S. Army reconnaissance unit.

The Strykers biggest weapon is a 30-millimeter-diameter cannon. Russian tanks pack 125-millimeter-diameter guns with an order of magnitude more explosive power.

By and large, NATOs infantry found themselves unable even to retreat successfully and were destroyed in place.

Rand Corporation on Sulwaki Gap War-Game Results

When RAND gamed out the Suwalki Gap battle, the results were chilling, if not surprising. NATOs light forces were not only outgunned by the much heavier Russian units, but their lack of maneuverability meant that they could be pinned and bypassed if the Russian players so desired, RAND explained. By and large, NATOs infantry found themselves unable even to retreat successfully and were destroyed in place.

In RANDs admittedly extreme case-study, Russia quickly closes the Suwalki Gap, creating a territorial bridge between Belarus and Kaliningrad and cutting off NATO states Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia from the rest of the alliance.

Such a move could incite a major war. Indeed, for Russia that could be the pointto start a fight that it views as inevitable, and to do so on its own terms.

While Russia is unlikely to start a military campaign just to capture Suwalki, it would undoubtedly try to secure this territory if conflict were to emerge in the region, Agnia Grigas, a Lithuania-born American political scientist and Russia expert, told The Daily Beast.

There would be warning signs of an impending Russian attack, the experts at RAND and the Center for European Policy explained. Russian battalions could speed in and out of the Suwalki Gap, temporarily holding sections of the border and testing NATOs resolve.

The possibility of Russia launching small-scale incursions as a prelude to a bigger assault helps to explain the alarm over the October troop-sightings. But secret probes are equally likely. These could involve the same type of hybrid Russian forcesbasically, intelligence operatives and special forces commandos in disguisethat appeared in Ukraines Crimean Peninsula right before Russian tanks rolled in.

These so-called little green men could scout out invasion routes, mobilize pro-Russian locals and prepare to seize government buildings and set up checkpoints. Detecting these interlopers is critical for NATOs defense.

NATO has to watch not only Russian build-up in Kaliningrad and Belarus but also Russias soft power and intelligence operations in Suwalki, Grigas said.

But theres a problem. Lithuania controls one side of the Suwalki Gap. Poland controls the other. Both countries are NATO members, but they havent always gotten along. Poland and Lithuania are cooperating allies today but they have a history of tensions and conflict over territory and minorities, Grigas explained.

The Kremlin could exploit those tensions, Grigas said. Russia might count on Lithuania and Poland refusing to share information as more and more little green men appeared in each others territory.

After years of war games, simulations and studiesand occasional scares such as Russias October troop movementsNATO is well aware of its problems along the Suwalki Gap. And the alliance is taking steps to try to solve them.

The U.S. Army has begun installing heavier weapons and other new gear on the Stryker armored vehicles that would be the first to fight any Russian invasion force. The Army has announced that in early 2020 it will practice deploying 20,000 troops from the United States to Europe in order to build readiness within the alliance and deter potential adversaries. NATO in September set up a new headquarters in Germany whose sole job is speeding reinforcements around alliance territory.

As for those Russian vehicles in the woods in Belarus? I have no idea what is going on or whether it's significant, Pavel Podvig, an independent expert on the Russian military, told The Daily Beast. I hope it's not.

View post:
The Suwalki Gap Is NATO's Achilles' Heel and the Place Where Russia Could Start War - The Daily Beast

Related Posts