A PROPOSE CHOREOGRAPHED DE-ESCALATION BY THE CRISIS GROUP

FIRE POWER IN EUROPE

Ranking of total available active military power by country

REVISITING THE MINSK II AGREEMENT

The key military element of Minsk II is the disarmament of the separatists and the withdrawal of Russian “volunteer” forces, together with a vaguely worded suggestion for the temporary removal the Ukrainian armed forces (exclusive of border guards). The key political element consists of three essential and mutually dependent parts: demilitarization; a restoration of Ukrainian sovereignty, including control of the border with Russia; and full autonomy for the Donbas in the context of the decentralization of power in Ukraine as a whole.

MAJOR FOREIGN HOLDERS OF U.S. TREASURY SECURITIES

As of September 2021 (in Billion U.S.$)

THE MINSK II AGREEMENT AS A BASE FOR DE-ESCALATION

Resolution 2202 adopted unanimously by the UN Security Council endorses the February 12, 2015, Minsk Two agreement, titled Package of Measures for the Implementation of the September 2014 Minsk Agreements (Minsk One). The UN Security Council incorporates the Minsk Two document as an annex, thus conferring it further weight. This signifies an indirect endorsement of Minsk Two by the United States with the UN Security Council.

THREE POSSIBLE ELEMENTS TO A COMPROMISE WITH RUSSIA

  1. Treaty of neutrality or a moratorium of 10 or 20 years on Ukrainian membership in NATO. The West loses nothing by this, since it is clear that Ukraine cannot in fact join NATO with its conflicts with Russia unresolved. In any case the U.S. and NATO have made it absolutely clear that they cannot and will not defend Ukraine by force.
  2. A return to the (Adapted) Conventional Forces in Europe Agreement limiting NATO forces in eastern Europe and Russian forces in contiguous territories.

WHAT MILITARY OPTIONS FOR RUSSIA IN UKRAINE ?

Russia could contemplate a wide range of scenarios from targeted missile strikes to a limited incursion from the east or south of the country, and even a full-scale invasion backed by cyber warfare.

After deploying about 100,000 Russian soldiers close to Ukraine’s northern, eastern and southern borders, President Putin has warned he has “all kinds” of options if his demands over Ukraine and Nato’s activities in the former Soviet bloc are unmet.

THE SOLUTION FOR DE-ESCALATION IN UKRAINE

Author: Dr. Anatol Lieven, Senior research fellow of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.

One of the most menacing crisis is the armed standoff between the Ukrainian military and Russian-supported separatist forces in eastern Ukraine. However, Russia has not annexed Donetsk and Luhansk (the two Ukrainian provinces that make up the Donbas) or recognized their independence.

EU COUNCIL CONCLUSIONS ON THE EUROPEAN SECURITY SITUATION

24 January 2022

 European security is indivisible. Any challenge to the European security order affects the security of the EU and its Member States.

 In this context:

1. The Council condemns Russia’s continued aggressive actions and threats against Ukraine, and calls on Russia to de-escalate, to abide by international law and to engage constructively in dialogue through the established international mechanisms.

COUNTRIES BORDERING RUSSIA

  1. Norway-Russia border: 195.8 km (land), 23.3 km (sea)
  2. Finland-Russia border: 1,271.8 km (land), 54.0 km (sea)
  3. Estonia-Russia border: 324.8 km (land), 142.0 km (sea)
  4. Latvia-Russia border: 270.5 km (land), 0.0 km (sea)
  5. Lithuania-Russia border: 266.0 km (land), 22.4 km (sea)
  6. Poland-Russia border: 204.1 km (land), 32.2 km (sea)
  7. Belarus-Russia border: 1,239.0 km (land), 0.0km (sea)

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