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1 1 (December 2017)

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Key  Points

  *  The conflict in Ukraine remains an interstate war, though its relatively stable front line is
     beset by recurrent cycles of escalation.
  *  Russia's overarching objective remains keeping Ukraine in its privileged sphere of
     influence, denying the country opportunities to join either NATO or the European
     Union.
  *  Given the interests at stake, Russian leadership is unlikelyto let the present situation
     drift, with its attendant political and economic costs, without taking some action to
     alter the present state of affairs.


The conflict in Ukraine remains an unsettled
interstate war, beset by recurrent cycles of escalation.
Sporadic fighting along the line of control is
punctuated  by skirmishes and large-scale artillery
duels. A moribund peace process, the Minsk ceasefire
agreement, exists largely on paper and has failed
to deliver a meaningful settlement. Back channels
remain the principal means of communication among
Moscow,  Kyiv, and respective European capitals.
Meanwhile  the Normandy  format (Russia, Germany,
France, and Ukraine) has become a high-level political
theater, where the presidents meet to negotiate the
implementation  of a nonexistent ceasefire. The
Minsk  agreement appears to have been dead on
arrival when it was first signed in February 2015.
Three years of war have exacted a substantial
economic  and human  toll on both sides, particularly
the residents of the conflict zone, with no discernible
path toward resolution.


   This paper will examine three potential scenarios
for conflict escalation and the various ways in which
Moscow  may  pursue its interests in Ukraine. While
they are hypothetical in nature, the contingencies
envisioned are grounded in the realities of the conflict,
its present trajectory, and Russia's strategy, doctrine,
and force posture. The options considered include
a political warfare campaign against Ukraine, co-
optation and subversion of internal actors, and a
significantly more escalatory approach centered
on inflicting another military defeat. Among the
options explored, the most probable and preferable
for Moscow,  given Russia's strategic predilections,
is a low-cost effort based on subversion, information
warfare, and the instigation of protests.
   A less likely though potentially desirable path for
Moscow   would be state-sponsored insurgency,
directed terrorism, and destabilization. A third low-
probability development is a sequence of events
that could result in a larger military showdown,


AMERICAN   ENTERPRISE  INSTITUTE

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