Ukraine War Plans Leak Prompts Pentagon Investigation
Classified
documents detailing secret American and NATO plans have appeared on Twitter and
Telegram.
Classified
war documents detailing secret American and NATO plans for building up the
Ukrainian military ahead of a planned offensive against Russia were posted this
week on social media channels, senior Biden administration officials said.
The
Pentagon is investigating who may have been behind the leak of the documents,
which appeared on Twitter and on Telegram, a platform with more than half a
billion users that is widely available in Russia.
Military
analysts said the documents appear to have been modified in certain parts from
their original format, overstating American estimates of Ukrainian war dead and
understating estimates of Russian troops killed.
The
modifications could point to an effort of disinformation by Moscow, the
analysts said. But the disclosures in the original documents, which appear as
photographs of charts of anticipated weapons deliveries, troop and battalion
strengths, and other plans, represents a significant breach of American
intelligence in the effort to aid Ukraine.
Biden
officials were working to get them deleted but had not, as of Thursday evening,
succeeded.
“We
are aware of the reports of social media posts and the department is reviewing
the matter,” said Sabrina Singh, the deputy press secretary at the Pentagon.
The
documents do not provide specific battle plans, like how, when, and where
Ukraine intends to launch its offensive, which American officials say is likely
coming in the next month or so. And because the documents are five weeks old,
they offer a snapshot of time — the American and Ukrainian view, as of March 1,
of what Ukrainian troops might need for the campaign.
To
the trained eye of a Russian war planner, field general or intelligence
analyst, however, the documents no doubt offer many tantalizing clues and
insights. The documents mention, for instance, the expenditure rate of HIMARS —
American-supplied high mobility artillery rocket systems, which can launch
attacks against targets like ammunition dumps, infrastructure and
concentrations of troops, from a distance. The Pentagon has not said publicly
how fast Ukrainian troops are using the HIMARS munitions; the documents do.
Analysts
said on Friday it could be difficult to assess the impact of the documents’
disclosure on the frontline fighting now and in the coming months. Russia’s own
recent offensive has struggled to make gains in eastern Ukraine, and Western
analysts debate whether the Russian military, after suffering staggering
casualties, is capable of mounting another or resisting a Ukrainian attack.
One
of the slides said 16,000 to 17,500 Russian soldiers had been killed while
Ukraine had suffered as many as 71,500 troop deaths. The Pentagon and other
analysts have estimated that Russia has suffered far more casualties, with
closer to 200,000 killed and injured, while Ukraine has had more than 100,000
killed and injured.
Nonetheless,
analysts said parts of the documents appeared authentic and would provide
Russia with valuable information such as the timetables for the delivery of
weapons and troops, Ukrainian troop buildup numbers
and other military details.
A
document labeled “top secret” offers the “Status of
the Conflict as of 1 Mar.” On that day, Ukrainian officials were at an American
base in Weisbaden, Germany, for war game sessions,
and a day later, Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. Christopher Cavoli,
the supreme allied commander for Europe, visited the sessions.
Another
document includes columns that list Ukrainian troop units, equipment and
training, with schedules for January through April. The document contains a
summary of 12 combat brigades that are being assembled, with nine of them apparently
being trained and supplied by the United States and other NATO allies. Of those
nine brigades, the documents said that six would be ready by March 31 and the
rest by April 30. A Ukrainian brigade has about 4,000 to 5,000 soldiers,
analysts said.
The
document said that equipment delivery times would impact training and readiness
in order to meet the timeline. Total equipment needed for nine brigades, the
document said, was more than 250 tanks and more than 350 mechanized vehicles.
That
the documents could be posted on a widely dispersed social media channel, and
presumably get into the hands of Russian officials, is a big coup for Moscow at
a time when Russia had appeared to be trailing the United States in
intelligence gathering in Ukraine.
The
leak is the first Russian intelligence breakthrough that has been made public
since the war began. Throughout the war, the United States has provided Ukraine
with information on command posts, ammunition depots and other key nodes in the
Russian military lines. Such real-time intelligence has allowed the Ukrainians
to target Russian forces, kill senior generals and force ammunition supplies to
be moved farther from the Russian front lines, though U.S. officials say
Ukraine has played the decisive role in planning and execution of those
strikes.
But
early on during the war, Ukrainian officials were hesitant about sharing their
battle plans with the United States, for fear of leaks, American and European
officials said. As recently as last summer, American intelligence officials
said they often had a better understanding of Russia’s military plans than of
Ukraine’s.
Concerned
that sharing their operation plans could also highlight weaknesses and
discourage continued American support, the Ukrainians were closely guarding
them even as American intelligence was gathering precise details on what the
Kremlin was ordering and Russian commanders were planning.
The
intelligence sharing between Ukraine and the United States loosened up
considerably last fall, and the two countries have been working closely on
options for a Ukrainian offensive.
But
an intelligence leak of this sort, posted on social media and available around
the world, is bound to harm intelligence sharing between Ukraine and the United
States.