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Schram: ‘No-fly’ zone is no solution to Russia’s war against Ukraine

As days stretched into weeks, our news screens have been bombarding us with images of brave and determined Ukrainian civilians seeking shelter and sometimes getting killed as Vladimir Putin’s war of choice exploded over their homes, schools, hospitals.

As we watched, we were all Ukrainians. Volodymyr Zelenskyy was the brave leader who made us all want to fight for what is right. And this week we all grieved but could not look away as our screens filled our safe lives with unspeakably horrific pictures of Putin’s military demolishing a Ukraine maternity hospital. We heard TV anchors and correspondents saying it was a “bombardment,” an “airstrike.”

Our news screens recycled Zelenskyy’s weeks of frustration that the United States and NATO would not provide the “no-fly” zone that could help Ukraine stay safe or at least survive. We tensed with rage, but understood, as our president and other NATO leaders explained that if our military enforced a “no-fly” zone it meant shooting down nuclear Russia’s jets — and that could plunge us into a nuclear World War III.

But very few of us heard what two retired U.S. army generals — both frequent TV network analysts — had to say, separately, Wednesday afternoon and late that night. And apparently very few of the TV news anchors or their news-decider bosses heard them either.

At lunchtime, retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling said the crater he saw on his screen looked like “a long-range strike” by ground launched artillery or missiles. “The majority of these strikes are being conducted by artillery and missiles,” Gen. Hertling said. The trigger is being pulled by a soldier who could be many miles away from the target. “So a ‘no-fly’ zone is no panacea,” he added. “This is the Russian way of war.”

Late that night, retired Gen. Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmett said those war-torn homes, apartments, schools and hospitals we’d been looking at were mainly victims of “continuing fire from hundreds of ground-launched rockets and missiles.” Most were fired from 12 to some 60 miles away from their targets, he said. A “no-fly” zone would not affect those deadly assaults.

Schram: ‘No-fly’ zone is no solution to Russia’s war against Ukraine

But the anchors didn’t then ask their military analysts how, or even if, Ukraine’s military could protect besieged Ukrainian citizens from ground-launched assaults that could indeed be causing the abhorrent devastation. And the news-deciders continued recycling the vain pleas and frustrations, of Zelenskyy and other Ukrainian political figures who still wanted the West to provide a protective “no-fly” zone.

Then on Thursday, C-SPAN provided wall-to-wall coverage of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s annual hearing in which the heads of all the intelligence agencies delivered their assessment of the national security threats America faces.

Perhaps the most globally meaningful facts were found during an exchange late in the hearing, initiated by perhaps the Senate’s most meaningful and even reasonable figure. Maine’s certifiably independent Sen. Angus King began asking the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, about what is causing all the damage such as that Ukraine hospital attack that has shaken the world.

“What’s hitting them?” the senator asked. “Is it mostly bombing from aircraft or is it missiles and artillery?”

And the DIA head replied: “It is a combination of mostly missiles and artillery and mobile rocket launchers.” Lt. Gen. Berrier added that actually, the Russian air force “is having a tough time” flying missions over Ukraine now, as defensive antiaircraft weapons supplied by the U.S. and others in NATO seem to be having an effect.

“So the talk about a ‘no-fly’ zone wouldn’t really impact what’s causing the damage?” Sen. King pressed. “A ‘no-fly’ zone wouldn’t inhibit missiles, rockets and artillery?”

Lt. Gen. Barrier replied: “That is correct.”


Martin Schram is a syndicated columnist. This column was provided by Tribune News Service.

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