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Echoes of World War I in Ukraine’s duels and trenches

It’s easy to see why experts and leaders have drawn parallels with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and World War I.

An aerial view of the destruction in the town of Pryvillya at the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on Tuesday. Picture: AFP
An aerial view of the destruction in the town of Pryvillya at the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on Tuesday. Picture: AFP

Looking at the shell-blasted, trench-marked landscapes of the frontlines in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine from above, it’s easy to see why experts and leaders have drawn parallels with World War I.

Satellite images portray “war landscapes comparable to those visible during the First World War, totally destroyed villages all along the frontline,” said Nicolas Beaupre, a board member at a French association for research into the 1914-18 conflict.

Pictures taken last week showed fields strewn with vast craters near the town of Sloviansk and evidence of shell blasts along the Siverskyi Donets river.

But beyond the visual similarities, the hopes and fears stoked ­internationally by the conflict and its difference from recent fighting elsewhere bear comparison with the “Great War” – even if the thousands of casualties in Ukraine over four months fall far short of the thousands per day seen over 100 years ago.

In 2022, many thought the fighting would be over in days or weeks as Russian forces advancing from Belarus threatened the capital Kyiv – recalling the WWI mantra that things would be “over by Christmas”.

A Ukrainian serviceman shoots at a Russian drone with an assault rifle from a trench at the frontline east of Kharkiv on March 31. Picture: AFP
A Ukrainian serviceman shoots at a Russian drone with an assault rifle from a trench at the frontline east of Kharkiv on March 31. Picture: AFP

A quick war would have been in line with recent battles around the Russian periphery, including Moscow’s 2008 attack on Georgia, its 2014 occupation of Crimea or the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict of 2020 over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

But determined defence by the Ukrainians pushed back repeated assaults, forcing the attackers to reorient towards the present grinding war of attrition in the eastern Donbas region.

Those early days of the war generated their own heroic tales, like the defiant soldiers of Snake Island radioing expletives to a Russian warship demanding their surrender, or the legendary fighter pilot dubbed the “Ghost of Kyiv”.

In filling a need for a popular story to boost morale, these are not unlike the fleet of commandeered Paris taxis who supposedly helped save the capital by ferrying soldiers to the 1914 Battle of the Marne.

Evoking another French ­national memory, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has compared the scene in his country’s east with “the ruins of ­Verdun”, the bitter 1916 defence against a German offensive that became a symbol for the entire war.

Meanwhile, a top preoccupation of leaders in Western capitals like Berlin has been avoiding an escalation that would lead to open conflict between Russia and NATO.

Some German politicians have even cited by name Christopher Clark’s book The Sleepwalkers on the causes of WWI, fearing a rerun of the spiral of military move and countermove resulting from the killing of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand in June 1914.

Ukrainian servicemen greet people as they ride through the eastern region of Donetsk on Tuesday. Picture: AFP
Ukrainian servicemen greet people as they ride through the eastern region of Donetsk on Tuesday. Picture: AFP

Russian President Vladimir Putin has put a modern twist on the escalation scenario with his early, public order to place Russian nuclear forces on high alert, raising the spectre of the ultimate tit-for-tat with the West.

Citing reports about unease over the war among Putin’s entourage, Australian historian Clark told German broadcaster Deutsche Welle last month that “there’s a lot to suggest that the system would be robust enough to avoid such a risk” – unlike after the 1914 Sarajevo assassination.

The Ukraine war is also seeing the use on European soil, and at large scale, of battlefield weapons that have mostly been used in deployments far overseas.

NATO-made kit including drones and precision artillery systems are being used with large formations of tanks and infantry.

In WWI, many of the weapons suddenly mowing down European young men in their thousands had only previously been used in anger in colonial settings against technologically outmatched opponents.

Russia has also reached into the past for artillery shells that fling out metal darts known as flechettes, widely used in WWI and rarely since, Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported in April.

A Ukrainian serviceman walks in a trench between the southern cities of Mykolaiv and Kherson this week. Picture: AFP
A Ukrainian serviceman walks in a trench between the southern cities of Mykolaiv and Kherson this week. Picture: AFP

More broadly, “it’s obvious that the Ukraine conflict is on a large scale, with relatively fixed frontlines that move slowly and where advances are mostly achieved through ­artillery duels”, said Olivier Kempf of the French Foundation for Strategic Research think tank.

Still, there are huge differences between the two conflicts. “People see a lot of trenches and tend to make the parallel with World War I, even though trenches are a fortification system seen in many other conflicts” like Nagorno-Karabakh, said war historian Camille Harle Vargas.

Modern artillery has also come a long way in the past century, ­offering much longer ranges and higher precision – sometimes thanks to drones, which are far more effective than the early spotter planes used in 1914-18.

And with about 200,000 men on each side, the conflict remains far smaller. Ukrainian forces are using up to 6000 shells a day, ­according to deputy intelligence chief Vadym Skibitsky, where about 1.5 billion – or one million a day – were fired in WWI.

AFP

Read related topics:Russia And Ukraine Conflict

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/echoes-of-world-war-i-in-ukraines-duels-and-trenches/news-story/c419c71c9d86ffceb9ff0ecfd3e6439c