Since mid-October, Russia has repeatedly targeted civilian infrastructure across Ukraine, taking out the vital organs of the Ukrainian economy. The man newly in charge of Russian forces in Ukraine—General Sergei Surovikin, so ruthless that even his colleagues call him “General Armageddon”—has shown no signs of relenting. Russia has successfully attacked 40 percent of Ukraine’s power grids with a combination of missiles and Iranian drones. It has bombed energy facilities, including hydroelectric dams, leaving more than one million Ukrainians without electricity. In Kyiv, 80 percent of residents are without water, according to the city’s mayor. Economists project that Kyiv’s economy will shrink by at least 35 percent in 2022, and the United Nations estimates that nine of ten Ukrainians could be impoverished by Christmas.
For the West, the recent wave of attacks should invite a sense of déjà vu. In 1948, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin blockaded the western sector of Berlin, controlled by the United States and its allies, as part of his plan to ultimately dominate a unified Germany. The Soviets cut off all access to the city by rail, canal, and road, inflicting tremendous hardship on West Berlin. But the United States and the United Kingdom quickly responded to the Berlin blockade with what came to be known as the Berlin airlift, flying in food, coal, and other necessities to the besieged city and successfully foiling the Soviets’ cruel plan. By May 1949, Stalin had lifted the blockade, and the Federal Republic of Germany was founded the same month. Thanks to its unwavering stance, the West won an early victory in the Cold War.
Today, as Russian President Vladimir Putin seeks to subjugate Ukraine, the West is facing a new Berlin blockade moment, and it should channel the same determination to prevent Putin from destroying Ukraine that it mustered with the Berlin airlift. The United States and Europe must act now to ensure that Ukraine survives the winter by adopting a variety of measures, including additional financial assistance, equipment to restore power and heat, and air defense systems to protect Ukraine’s infrastructure from the continued onslaught of Russian missile strikes. Sufficient aid to Ukraine will ensure that the country can emerge from a daunting winter battered but primed for recovery, just as West Berlin did in 1949.
SEND LAWYERS, GUNS, AND MONEY
The money the West is sending to Ukraine is just as important as the weapons systems being delivered. Absent the injection of $8.5 billion from Washington, Ukraine would have gone bankrupt overnight. Thanks in part to such aid, the country’s banking system, railways, and hospitals continue to function. Eight months into the war, Kyiv is paying state salaries and pensions in a timely fashion. But it confronts a budget deficit of $5 billion to $6 billion each month, forcing Ukraine’s Ministry of Finance to scramble to ensure that state services are not threatened.
The EU committed to sending $9 billion in loans in May 2022 but is dragging its heels on sending a final tranche of $3 billion. It will likely only arrive next year. The public pledges are there, but the willpower has been wanting. At a G7 meeting in early November, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock stated, “We will not allow the brutality of this war to lead to masses of elderly people, children, young people, and families dying in the coming winter months”. In October, Christian Lindner, Germany’s finance minister and a budget hawk, denied that Berlin is slow rolling funding.
Withholding or slowing the transfer of funds heightens the danger that hyperinflation in Ukraine could ignite. A shortage of funds has prompted the central bank to resort to increasing the money supply by purchasing billions in government bonds, thereby eroding the value of the country’s currency, the hryvnia. In September, Ukraine’s inflation rate rose to almost 25 percent. Hyperinflation would make it even harder for the Ukrainian state to stay afloat, let alone successfully prosecute the war.
The EU is contemplating a transfer of a further $18 billion for 2023, but whether it will come through is an open question. With Germany in particular, there has been a marked difference between what it promises publicly and what it delivers. The EU’s pledged support plus a potential new $10 billion infusion of funds for the next two years from the International Monetary Fund would help to remedy Kyiv’s immediate financing gap, which is several billion a month. Since the conflict began in February, the U.S. Congress and the Biden administration have dispatched vital defense and financial packages with regularity. But maintaining these subventions after the U.S. midterm elections, especially if Republicans win control of the House of Representatives as expected, will likely be difficult.
Alas, as Ukraine enters the winter, already without power and in the dark, support in the United States is starting to buckle. In September, almost all House Republicans voted against a funding bill that contained $12 billion for Ukraine. Kevin McCarthy, the leader of the Republican minority in the House, recently warned that should the GOP win control of the House, it will refuse to write Ukraine a “blank check”. At a campaign rally in Sioux City, Iowa, on November 3, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican who is a frontrunner for a leadership position in a new Congress, declared: “Under Republicans, not another penny will go to Ukraine. Our country comes first”. Indeed, a new Wall Street Journal poll indicates that while the majority of Americans continue to back aid to Ukraine, the number of Republicans who believe America is granting excessive support has rocketed to 48 percent.
Compared with the massive budget outlays for the U.S. Defense Department, the aid to Ukraine is not only modest but something of a bargain. For fiscal year 2022, Congress appropriated $728 billion for the Pentagon. Meanwhile, it has committed over $18 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since the war began in February. The result of that spending is that Russia has been significantly weakened. Its ignominious defeats on the battlefield have rendered hollow its pretensions to great-power status, dramatically magnifying the relative military power of the United States almost overnight.
Some Republicans, such as Victoria Spartz, the Ukrainian-born Indiana congresswoman, have raised the specter of corruption in Kyiv. There can be no doubting that the Ukrainian government has a long history of peculation, but in the case of budgetary support during the war, it has worked hard to be a good citizen. This year, for example, Ukraine’s Ministry of Finance has opened its books to the financial consulting company Deloitte. For months, its auditors have been embedded in the ministry and are overseeing funds as they are transferred, making sure they are spent as intended and not stolen. In addition, the majority of U.S. funds are being provided on a reimbursement basis, minimizing the risk of fraud and embezzlement. Given the conspicuous lack of actual evidence of fraud, arguments against sending aid that cite Ukrainian corruption are nothing more than convenient excuses to do nothing and let Moscow triumph.
LEAVE A LIGHT ON
Money is scarcely the only problem confronting Kyiv. Moscow’s attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure have led to blackouts across the country. The government is requesting that its citizens voluntarily turn off their electricity and mandating rolling blackouts thereby reducing the demand on power stations so they can be properly repaired. By and large, the public is complying. When Russia launched a barrage of missile strikes on October 10 in retaliation for the bombing of the Kerch Strait Bridge, which connects the Crimean peninsula to Russia, Kyiv residents rushed to gas stations to fill their tanks, but there was no mass panic.
The Kremlin clearly hopes that through its bombing campaign it can weaponize refugees, provoking a fresh exodus to Poland and elsewhere this winter. This would serve as a recipe for stirring up political turmoil and emboldening far-right parties, many of which are sympathetic to Putin. Already German cities, for example, are overstretched in absorbing an influx of over one million refugees from Ukraine. The refugee crisis is the biggest Europe has witnessed since the end of World War II. Right now, however, Ukrainians remain defiant: Oksana Nechyporenko, a prominent civil society leader, told us that no one is panicking but that her friends with children are searching for safer places in Ukraine to live during the winter. Nechyporenko lives on the 14th floor of an apartment building in Kyiv, and the periodic blackouts mean that she must make the exhausting 20-minute climb up the stairs to her door each time she returns to her building. Since the missile strikes began on October 10, schools have reverted to teaching remotely, a particularly unfortunate development given that 3,000 of Ukraine’s schools were able to reopen on September 1 after being closed since February.
“Putin doesn’t have to use nukes to cause a catastrophe”, said Victoria Voytsitska, the former chair of the Ukrainian Parliament’s energy committee, during an October interview with us in Washington, D.C. “It’s impossible to protect Ukraine’s heating system”. Voytsitska, like Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, has been urging the West to send air defense systems to Ukraine as soon as possible. The damage Russia has inflicted since mid-October has been extensive. Half of the population in Chernihiv, a city in Ukraine’s north, lack water because it requires electricity to pump and deliver it.
In Zelensky’s hometown of Kryvyi Rih in central Ukraine, Moscow has repeatedly hit a dam, causing residents to evacuate their homes in case the area floods. In Zaporizhzhia in the southeast, half of the city doesn’t have heat. Voytsitska urged donors to invest in “warming shelters”, safe public rooms in cities and towns where residents can stay 24 hours a day when temperatures plunge and there is no heat or power. She’s also worried about what might happen if Russian missiles hit hospitals: patients could be left to freeze to death. Voytsitska’s worries are not theoretical. In March, for example, 300 Ukrainians froze to death in Chernihiv.
In the short term, the West can help Ukraine repair its electrical grid. Already, Lithuania is sending technical parts—mostly transformers and electrical cables— to repair power generation stations. Many of the urgently needed parts require a long wait, so Western countries can prod the companies that manufacture them, such as Siemens, to put Kyiv at the head of the line. But even if some of Ukraine’s heating systems can be repaired, Moscow will attack again and again. According to the investigative news outlet Bellingcat, a secret military unit composed of 33 engineers based in Moscow is carefully directing the Kremlin’s targeting of Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure.
Ultimately, the best way to protect Ukraine’s energy systems and its civilian population is to send air defense systems. Five months ago, Germany pledged to send four systems but has only delivered one: an IRIS-T air defense system, which provides medium-range, high-altitude protection for small cities. The rest are expected to be delivered in the new year. Air defense systems are complex, expensive, and in high demand, but Ukraine is in dire need of them. Kyiv has officially asked Israel for a number of these systems. It is high time for Israel to end its neutral posture on the war and start supplying Ukraine the weapons it needs, including Israel’s vaunted Iron Dome, as well as technicians to train Ukrainians on how to use them. For its part, the United States is trying to speed delivery of two advanced surface-to-air missile systems, with six more coming later.
As Putin seeks to pound it into submission, Ukraine continues to advance on the battlefield, and its troops’ morale remains high. But for the country to survive the winter, butter will be as important as guns. A spell of warm weather and abundant imports mean that European gas storage facilities are over 90 percent full, ensuring that fuel prices in Europe have also plummeted. So far, Putin’s attempts to bully Europe on the energy front are failing as miserably as his military adventure. But Putin continues to hope that Western publics will tire of the conflict and push their governments to concede to his demands. For Washington and its allies, however, failure in Ukraine would simply mean confronting him again on another European battlefield. The faster the West aids Ukraine, the more quickly it can stymie Putin’s ambitions.
Melinda Haring is Deputy Director of the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center. Jacob Heilbrunn is the Editor of The National Interest.