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‘Payback’: Vladimir Putin urged to launch ‘all-out war’ as Ukraine invasion falters

Vladimir Putin’s top military leaders are reportedly urging him to ditch all pretence and resort to an even worse level of aggression in Ukraine.

Documentary Putin doesn’t want you to see (CNN)

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s army chiefs have urged him to launch an all-out war on Ukraine as “payback” for the shambolic invasion, western officials have warned.

Russia expected it could march across Ukraine without much of a fight when troops invaded in what Putin’s regime called a “special operation” in late February – but instead the invaders encountered valiant resistance.

Putin’s military leaders have become increasingly frustrated with the scale of the offensive in eastern Ukraine and their leader’s handling of the war, with a vicious “blame game” exploding in Moscow, The Sun reports.

Military bosses have now urged Putin to drop the “special operation” pretence and declare war on Ukraine, which would enable the mass mobilisation of Russian troops.

An all-out war would allow Moscow to draft in more conscripts, impose martial law and also bid for support from its international allies, such as Belarus.

A source close to Russian military chiefs told the UK Telegraph: “The military are outraged that the blitz on Kyiv failed.

“People in the army are seeking payback for failures of the past, and they want to go further in Ukraine.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin. Picture: Alexandr Demyanchuk/Sputnik/AFP
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Picture: Alexandr Demyanchuk/Sputnik/AFP

British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace warned Putin could use Russia’s victory day parade on May 9 to announce the mobilisation of his reserves for a final push in Ukraine.

He told LBC: “He is probably going to declare … that we are now at war with the world’s Nazis and we need to mass mobilise the Russian people.

“Putin, having failed in nearly all objectives, may seek to consolidate what he’s got, and just be a sort of cancerous growth within the country.

“We have to help Ukrainians effectively get the limpet off the rock and keep the momentum, pushing them back.”

And ex-NATO chief Richard Sherriff warned the West must “gear itself up” for a “worst case scenario” with Russia in Ukraine.

“The worst case is war with Russia. By gearing itself up for the worst case, it is most likely to deter Putin because ultimately Putin respects strength,” he told BBC Radio 4.

Meanwhile, the editor of Russia’s state-owned broadcaster RT, Margarita Simonyan, said it was “more probable” that Putin would launch a nuclear strike than allow Russia to lose the war.

That ominous assessment came as one of the state TV programs discussed a hypothetical triple-nuclear strike on London, Paris and Berlin.

“One Sarmat missile and that’s it, the British Isles will be no more,” politician Aleksey Zhuravlyov told Channel One.

Host Evgeny Popov pushed back on the idea of launching nuclear war.

“No one will survive in this war when you propose the strike with a Sarmat. Do you understand that no one will survive? No one on the planet.”

Zhuravlyov replied that Russia would “start with a blank slate”.

Putin under pressure

Putin’s top generals are already said to be turning on him over the invasion as the prospect of a military coup rises.

The powerful Russian “siloviki” – or security bloc – has reportedly blamed Putin for a “serious error” after Russian forces’ retreat from the capital, Kyiv, and renewed focus on taking control of the Donbas in the east.

Thousands more Russian troops have poured into eastern Ukraine, but they are making limited advances.

Putin’s military chief, General Valery Gerasimov, is now thought to be heading to the frontline to inject “momentum” and “authority” into the struggling troops.

“There are credible reports that he is going to go forward,” one western official reportedly said.

“In overall terms, it does show the continuing command and control challenges that the Russians are having.”

Ukrainian Preident Volodymyr Zelensky. Picture: Sergei Supinsky/AFP
Ukrainian Preident Volodymyr Zelensky. Picture: Sergei Supinsky/AFP

Igor Girkin, a retired military intelligence officer who led separatist forces in eastern Ukraine in 2014, has slammed Moscow’s “failures” in Ukraine.

In a post online, he said: “What else has to happen before the dwarves in the Kremlin realise they are in an all-out, harsh war and start to act accordingly?”

And Alexander Arutyunov, a retired Russian commando and usually a pro-Kremlin blogger, said: “Vladimir Vladimirovich, can you please make up your mind: are we fighting or are we playing around?”

The ex-military intelligence commander said: “Strike them all over, completely destroy all their aerodromes.

“Turn them into moon craters so that not a single plane with a Bayraktar (military drone) can take off.

“We must destroy all their railway lines with missiles of such big size that they spend years repairing them.

“If I understand it, why don’t your top guys get it? This is beyond me.”

Russia analyst Alexey Muraviev has previously warned that Putin faces a potential coup from within his military and intelligence services.

Mr Muraviev told Sky News Australia that the coup may come as they want to try and win the war – not to stop aggression in Ukraine.

He said: “I think that there have been tensions between Russia and the intelligence community and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.

“Because clearly, there’s been a clear error of judgment that was made and it was probably driven by Putin himself about the situation in Ukraine.

“About the initial planning and the initial phase of the invasion where the Russian military naturally assume that they’re going there as liberators rather than the invaders.

“I think that sort of false narrative was presented to them by the Supreme Commander in Chief, and when it fired back when the Russians began taking heavy casualties, Putin began quietly blaming the security services.

“Which I don’t think went really well also because he’s coming from within the security apparatus.”

This story first appeared on The Sun and has been republished with permission.

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/world/payback-vladimir-putin-urged-to-launch-allout-war-as-ukraine-invasion-falters/news-story/79dbe490badbe24875d76a1bef1d79d1