TheEconomistMarch19th 2022 BriefingThewarinUkraine 17
↑ On March16tha bombstrucka
theatreinMariupolwherehundreds
of peoplearethoughttohavebeen
sheltering.Anearliersatellitepicture
shows theword“children”writtenin
Russianateachendofthebuilding.
Chernihiv
Chernobyl
Prybirsk
Ivankiv
Makariv
Irpin
Hostomel
Nizhyn
Brovary
Kyiv
Antonov
Airport UKRAINE
BELARUS
Dneiper
Russian
Convoy
40 km
AssessedRussianadvances*
AssessedRussian-controlled
March th
*Russiaoperatedinorattacked, but does not control
Source:InstitutefortheStudyof War
The fi ghting around Kyiv
Russia’sdepletedforcesmadelittle
progressintoKyiv,buttherewerefierce
battlesforitswesternandeasternsuburbs
anda spikeinrocketfire.Ukraine’sarmy
hasbeenfanningoutintotheforests
aroundthecity.
↑ At least one person died after debris
from an intercepted missile fell on an
apartment block on March 16th.
are only pretending to negotiate.
Likely stickingpoints are not limited to
the territory at stake (Russia will want to
keep its gains in Donbas, including Mariu
pol, should it succeed in taking the city).
What sort of security guarantees are of
fered, and by whom, will matter as much
or more. Mykhailo Podolyak, one of
Ukraine’s negotiators, told The Economist
that the only acceptable deal would be one
with “specific and legally binding guaran
tees” under which Ukrainian allies such as
America, Britain and Turkey “would be
able to actively intervene in case of any ag
gression”. Andriy Yermak, Mr Zelensky’s
chief of staff, says that the guarantors
would have to include not just countries
friendly to Ukraine but also all five perma
nent members of the unsecurity council.
Mr Yermak also says that, although the
two teams of negotiators can prepare the
ground, any agreement will ultimately
have to be hammered out by the two presi
dents. How strong their hands are will de
pend on the fortunes of war between now
and then; the negotiations may not reach
their level until there is desperation on the
part of one or both of them.
Come what may, though, the broadcasts
of March 16th showed that Mr Zelensky will
bring the goodwill of the world and the fer
vent expectations of his people to the table:
“I would tell him ‘Fight until victory!’” says
Vladislav, the electrician in Kyiv. Mr Putin’s
position, meanwhile, will be shaped by a
domestic situation, and an attitude to it,
which are both far darker. n
The risks of escalation
Herman’s ladder
T
o a 16th-centurysiege warrior, the art
of the escalade lay in climbing up a
city’s fortifications without encountering
something unpleasantly hot or sharp. To
the men who rewrote the rules of strategy
for the nuclear age, the art of escalation
was the process which, bit by bit, moved a
limited war towards an unlimited one. As
in sieges of old, the key was a ladder: a con
ceptual one where each rung both in
creased the level of the conflict and sent a
signal to the other side.
Herman Kahn, one of several inspira
tions for the title character of Stanley Ku
brick’s unmatched treatise on deterrence,
“Dr Strangelove”, devised a 44rung escala
tion ladder with which to study and ana
lyse the phenomenon. The step from rung
nine (“Dramatic military confrontations”)
to ten (“Provocative Breaking Off of Dip
lomatic Relations”), he noted, was the one
which marked the point at which nuclear
war ceased to be unthinkable.
“Dr Strangelove” is a comedy because
Kubrick found the absurdities of such es
chatological accountancy and its affectless
theorising impossible to put on screen in
any other form. That does not mean the
concepts the ladder systemised have no
meaning. The invasion of Ukraine (rung 12:
“Large Conventional War”) has undoubted
ly moved the world past the threshold
where nuclear war stops being unthink
able; in the words of Antonio Guterres, the
secretarygeneral of the un, such horrors
are “back within the realm of possibility”.
The chances of a conflict escalating into a
nuclear war are greater than they have
been for more than half a century.
As it stands, only one side in the war has
nuclear weapons; although Ukraine had
Soviet ones stationed on its territory until
a few years after it became independent in
1991, but they were never under its political
control. Nor, Russian propaganda to the
contrary, has it any route to acquiring
them. But an adversary without nuclear
weapons does not guarantee nuclear re
straint. And nato, which is both supplying
Ukraine with weapons and building up its
forces in the area, has nukes aplenty.
Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, has
been keen to remind his adversaries of the
nuclear risks. In a televised speech at the
How things get worse