Kyiv has faced Russian barrage after barrage (SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images)

In his State of the Union speech last month, President Joe Biden told America that, while he strongly supports Ukraine against Russia’s aggression, he won’t have US troops deployed in Ukraine. “Killing Russians”, he has previously made clear, is a strict red line. Less clear, however, is what Biden thinks the US should do instead. Would, for instance, Biden agree to Americans shooting down the missiles and drones that, every month, kill hundreds of Ukrainian civilians in cities far from the front lines? On Sunday, as Eastern Europe braced itself for the fall-out from a terror attack in Moscow, one of these missiles briefly crossed through Polish airspace. How long can the West allow this to happen, risking further escalation that may include weapons of mass destruction?
Since the first day of Putin’s war, the Russian military has conducted two separate but coordinated operations: a ground campaign intended to seize terrain, and an air campaign intended to disrupt Ukrainian logistics and terrorise the population. This is why, as Western nations rallied to support Ukraine with weapons, ammunition and funding, some observers suggested that the West should establish a “no-fly” zone over Ukraine to protect cities and infrastructure from Russian air attacks. Ultimately, the idea was rejected by Western leaders, who understandably erred on the side of caution, not knowing then how many Russian and Ukrainian lives would be at risk or how long the war would last. In hindsight, it was a deadly decision. Russia’s ensuing campaign of air attacks by missiles, drones, and bombs is now a recognised war crime which, according to the UN, kills an average of 500 to 1,000 civilians a month.
Today, everyone has a much better understanding of the outlines of Putin’s war. As Russian military analyst Ruslan Pukhov recently wrote, Russia (and others) initially thought that its “special military operation” would be more of a “special” than “military” operation, and assumed that it could be completed without large-scale military operations or organised military resistance. But now it’s clear that the ground campaign is “doomed”, with “a protracted war” in the style of the Korean or Iran-Iraq wars seemingly inevitable. This means that, while fighting along the front lines will likely stall, Russia’s air campaign could continue unabated for years to come. In fact, we know that it escalated in the first months of 2024.
More importantly, in terms of defence, we also know that, while Russia flies manned aircraft in battles along the front lines, it does not send manned aircraft deep into Ukraine to bomb cities or infrastructure: such attacks early in the war proved too costly for pilots and airframes. Two years later, this means that air-defence systems deployed around major cities deep in Ukrainian territory do not risk killing Russian pilots or troops. Indeed, since the outbreak of the war, the West has already donated a number of air-defence systems to Ukraine, some of which are protecting cities and infrastructure.
But today, what Ukraine lacks as much as the systems are the soldiers to operate them. To help with this, Western countries — which are running short on “spare” air defence systems — could deploy them to Ukraine, but keep them in the hands of the troops that man them.
Of course, this approach carries obvious risks, depending on the nature of Russia’s response. Putin and his leadership circle have frequently reminded the West that, should they intervene more explicitly in the conflict, Russia might resort to nuclear weapons in Ukraine. To that end, Putin has deployed nuclear-capable Iskander surface-to-surface missile units in Crimea and Belarus, the latter of which also contains Russian tactical warheads. Moscow also retains the capability to launch nuclear cruise missiles from deep inside the territory of the Russian Federation. It’s not unreasonable to imagine that Western air-defence units could provoke a nuclear attack in Ukraine — one of the things they are meant to protect against.
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