Michael - Alternate Thursdays from South Africa
Welcome to 2026! I wish all our readers the very best for the New Year. May it be healthy, happy, and lucky for you!
A new year
always has its fleet of “What will happen this year?” articles. The predictions
are usually wrong, often because they are too conservative one way or the other. Nevertheless, being
human we lap up any predictions, especially if they make us feel better.
| Carlo Masala |
Let’s start
with what If Russia Wins is not.
Despite a shout out that it “reads like a thriller,” it doesn’t. It doesn’t
even read like a novel. There are essentially no characters. There is a family
in Mali that we care about briefly, but they rapidly disappear into the churn
of the plot. Actually, there isn’t really that much plot either. There is a powerful
premise that leads to a scenario with seriously interesting ideas. To be fair, the
full title of the book is If Russia Wins:
A Scenario. Although it’s fiction, it doesn’t claim to be a novel. It’s a
scenario that’s dressed up as fiction to make it more approachable for the
general reader. The narration features clangers like “you
could hear a pin drop.”
The book is exactly what it says it is – a feasible scenario following a Russian victory in Ukraine. By Russian victory, Masala means that the West agree to, and Ukraine is forced to accept, essentially what Russia now says it wants – recognition of its claim to a large block of Ukrainian territory, Ukraine’s exclusion from NATO, and weak guarantees for the security of the rest of the country. Masala postulates that the West then supports reconstruction in both the remaining Ukraine and what becomes part of Russia.
Next, Putin
stands down and replaces himself with a handpicked deputy who is put forward as
a reformer and with whom the West is more comfortable. What follows is a poker
game. Russia knows it can’t defeat NATO, but also knows that NATO won’t know
how far it is willing to go. That is a great set up for a thriller, but the author
wants his scenario to play out too quickly. Soon Russia grabs Narva, a small town
in Estonia on the transparent pretext that the Russian-speaking population
there is being suppressed. Estonia is a NATO member and its president asks that
Article 5 – that an attack on a NATO country represents an attack on all NATO
members - be invoked.
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| On the left bank, Narva. To the right, Russia |
Here is the core of the scenario. Is the West willing to go to war over “a small town in Estonia”? If so, what form will that war take? Will it be a “conventional war" of the type fought in Ukraine? What happens if Russia starts to lose? It has at least 6,000 nuclear weapons. Russia's bluff is that it has very limited objectives and no desire for war with NATO, but it is willing to go the whole hog if its interests are in real danger. Who will blink first? [Spoiler alert – it isn’t Russia.]
There is a nice twist that the Russians send a nuclear submarine to Hans Island, a small uninhabited
island, once in dispute between Canada and Denmark, and put up a flag before heading off. The
point is not that they care about the island, but that the submarine is able to
get that close to North America without being detected.
Probably
the most interesting part of the book is the Afterword, where Masala explains the development of his premise and why the scenario could play out in
the way it does. He’s at pains to point out that this is not intended as prediction or
even as the most likely scenario. The point of these war scenarios is to see how
to avoid them if possible. Already European rearmament is a big step in that
direction he says, but he notes that he finished the book just as Donald Trump took
office in the US for his second term. Certainly, he could fit the bill for the
(unnamed) US president in the author's scenario.
Last
weekend’s developments in Ukraine’s peace talks may pre-empt all of this, or maybe
just fast track it. If the US is really proposing to give an Article 5 style
guarantee to Ukraine, then Putin doesn’t need to risk an altercation with
Estonia…
Samuel
Charap is distinguished chair in Russia and Eurasia Policy at Rand. Jennifer
Kavanagh is a senior fellow and director of military analysis at Defense
Priorities. They also know their stuff. Take a look at their reaction to these latest developments in this
Washington Post article from last Friday.
We may need that good luck in 2026!



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