A US military veteran has advocated for serious Russian retaliation, including bombing the locations in Poland where Western weaponry is delivered and Ukrainian fighter planes are purportedly based. This is in response to the use of a British-made Storm Shadow cruise missile to strike factories in Russian-held Lugansk, which the former US Army Captain described as “crossing the line.” He asked that Russia end the “leniency” it has shown since the start of the war.
The Call of Dominance?
Stanislav Krapivnik, a Russian-American who immigrated to the United States as a child during the Soviet Union and joined the US Army, has participated in NATO missions in Romania. During NATO’s invasion of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, he resigned and returned to Russia, where he now works as a military affairs analyst. He also urged Russia to eliminate “remnants of the Ukrainian Air Force infrastructure and cut off key supply routes.” He went on to say that the UK “confirmed its long-standing status as Russia’s eternal enemy and allowed the Americans to sit on the sidelines and escalate the conflict,” and that deploying the 250 km-range Storm Shadow to Ukraine is a “crossing of red lines.”
According to the Russian Ministry of Defence (RuMoD), Ukrainian fighter planes deployed the Storm Shadow missile to attack the Polipak Polymer Products Company and the Milam Meat Processing Plant on May 12, “destroying nearby residential buildings and injuring six children.”
The Russian Ministry of Defence later claimed to have shot down the Sukhoi Su-24 aircraft that fired the missile as well as the MiG-29 jet “that was covering it.” The Storm Shadow launch was preceded by a second strike that destroyed Russian surface-to-air (SAM) radars. It was later determined that Ukraine utilised the US-made ADM-160 MALD decoy missile, which emits radio signals to simulate large military aircraft and fighters, in this operation, causing Russian air defence radars to activate.
Why Does Russia don’t Strike Poland?
The NATO Charter’s Article 5 is one basic reason why Russia does not attack NATO bases. The provision considers an attack on any NATO member nation’s territory to be an attack on the entire military bloc, rendering other NATO members legally obligated to rush to its military aid.
Both NATO and Russia have expressed a clear aversion to openly attacking one other and risking a wider battle that may quickly escalate to nuclear levels. Meanwhile, Russia lacks the long-range Intelligence-Surveillance-Reconnaissance (ISR) and sensor capability, both in terms of planes and satellites, to guide missiles as deep into Western Ukraine as possible.
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First, Russian has the satellite and spy plane capability to drive those missiles straight to DC let alone to western Ukraine. Get that correct at least.
Secondly, what mission in Romania? At least get my bio straight. I left with an honourable discharge in 2004.