The tire guy has become famous among those following the war in Ukraine closely for the following thread.
He argued that the Russian convoy north of Kiev was in deep trouble for tire-related reasons. I am not a tire expert. Is there truth to what he is saying? If so, can Russia fix the problem?
To be honest with you, I have no idea. In order to forecast the outcome in Ukraine, maybe I need to do the work of spending a day or so learning about tires since that’s going to be the determining factor in whether or not Kiev falls. Or maybe it’s a waste of time and what he’s saying isn’t even true or it’s true but not that important in the grand scheme of things. I have no way to decide.
Here’s another thread on the nature of globalization and why Russia can’t produce anything that is on the technological cutting edge from Kamil Galeev. The part on why mafias control relatively simple businesses instead of complex ones makes sense. But Galeev also has a theory about Russian elite behavior, claiming that complex scientific and technological industries empower nerds, and brutes like Putin, FSB types, and the guys who run the energy industry are too stupid to do those things themselves and won’t let smarter people do them because they would then lose power to the nerds. For simple brutes, this seems like a pretty complicated and far sighted way to stay in control. And it strikes me as highly unlikely to be true, as authoritarian governments have shown themselves able to let industries grow without giving them political power. That was Putin’s deal with the oligarchs in the first place, so why can’t he do the same with the Russian version of Zuckerberg?
Does Galeev’s thread have any relevance to the ultimate outcome of the war? I know little about whether Russia can undertake a successful scheme of import substitution. Galeev says they can’t, and he seems smart and sensible, but then he has a theory about Russian elite behavior that I think sounds sort of absurd, and maybe that means he’s biased and I can discount whatever he says about the state of Russian industry. I’m not sure.
Now I think you can see why forecasting the outcome of a war is so difficult. My process in this conflict has involved looking at a lot of maps, reading a lot of articles and Twitter threads, seeing various arguments, and deciding “This looks right, this looks wrong, this looks probably true but not nearly as important as the author implies. This author seems credible but is saying crazy things, while this one seems crazy but is making sense.” I don’t have the time to look into every plausible theory of how the war will end or what the determining factor will be. Maybe it’s all about tires. Or a thousand other things.
This is something of a problem with forecasting as a general matter. But although forecasting almost anything worth debating is difficult, war is probably in its own special category. The sample size of previous conflicts is large if you go back far enough, but the world changes and it’s unclear how much guidance we can draw from past centuries. There are too many known unknowns, and unknown unknowns. If you ask me to predict what’s going to happen in the next presidential election, I can take a few inputs like the outcome of recent elections, Biden’s approval rating, who the Republican nominee is likely to be, etc. and give you a pretty decent guess that will resemble what ends up happening in the real world. I think it’s most likely going to be a close election with Republicans winning, with my second guess being a close election that Democrats win. I can promise you that neither candidate is going to win 40 states. If you ask me what US GDP growth will be in 2023, without any economic training I’d say something like 3% since that’s what it is pretty much every year with a few exceptions.
But when Putin invaded Ukraine, every possibility was on the table from “Ukraine collapses like the Afghan government did in August, Putin becomes the greatest conquerer in a century” to “Russian tires all get stuck in the mud and it becomes an international laughingstock, sparking internal turmoil and the removal of Putin.” The result has been something in between those two extremes. And every war is similarly unpredictable, which is why even smart leaders can convince themselves to take radical gambles that seem insane in retrospect.
All of this means that I have low confidence in my predictions for how the war in Ukraine will turn out. Nonetheless, I don’t think my methodology is that bad compared to how other people are approaching the topic, and making clear how I’m thinking about it can therefore contribute to the public discourse. Moreover, if I’m going to make policy suggestions about what the US should do, it is useful to explain the empirical beliefs I am starting with and how I’ve arrived at them.
My method of forecasting generally involves seeking out a few big facts that others are ignoring or downplaying. Here are the ones that jump out at me regarding the eventual outcome in Ukraine.
Ukraine is really important to Russia. Not just Putin, but Russian society. Countries have taken serious casualties fighting for places that mean nothing to them, like the US in Vietnam and Russians in Afghanistan. Looking back in history, it’s amazing how pointless the things are that countries will die for, even from a perspective that takes into account their own national myths. Two great powers shed blood over Indochina in the second half of the twentieth century? Incredible (three if you count Deng’s China, but at least it was a neighbor). Once they’re invested in a war, leaders don’t like giving up, and this is especially true when the territory they are fighting over has great significance in terms of cultural symbolism or security, whether real or perceived (again, Deng gave up on Vietnam quickly, but he was an unusually brilliant head of state). Leaders find it too embarrassing to quit wars they’re involved in, and the masses tend to listen to their leaders during wartime no matter how little they’ve done to deserve their trust. When I say Ukraine is “important” to Russia, I mean it in a subjective sense. You can argue that the average citizen in Moscow should just want good healthcare and a higher GDP and not care what happens in Kiev, just like you can argue that the North would’ve been self-interested to let the American South secede in 1861. But the psychological attachment that Russia has towards Ukraine appears real and central to Putin’s ideology, and this has to be taken into account when we are trying to forecast what is going to happen. The sacrifices that Russia is going to have to endure in order to win in Ukraine will of course be higher than what American society had to suffer through in Vietnam. Yet it strikes me that the difference in the subjective importance of each war is greater than the difference in sacrifice between the two conflicts, even if the latter is very large.
Authoritarian regimes can survive economic collapse and continue in their war efforts. Syria is a recent example of this. The country has been immiserated due to war and sanctions and cut off from the rest of the world. But the government ended up taking back all major population centers in the country and would likely have all of it if not for continuing outside intervention. Yes, it has had Russian and Iranian help, but it has also faced economic blockade and the opposition of the West and its neighbors. Sometimes economic crisis and war do lead to regime change, as in the case of the Romanov dynasty. But modern authoritarian regimes seem a lot less brittle than a European monarchy from the early 20th century. I saw a Q&A with Stephen Kotkin where someone asked him a question I always wondered about, which was that if Stalin was so dangerous to the Tsarist authorities, why did they keep arresting him and letting him escape? Kotkin basically replied that it was all about incompetence and lack of state capacity. The government would pick up young Stalin, send him to Siberia, and then basically forget about him. With modern communications technology and larger and more capable governments, that kind of thing seems to happen a lot less.
No one doubts that Russia has the military capabilities to flatten Ukraine.
Pundits and analysts seem to be in denial. For all the problems of the Russian military that they’re talking about, every time I look at a map it is gaining territory. Progress on the ground has not been slow by historical standards. Maybe the pundits are right that eventually the supply lines will become too long and they’ll overextend themselves. But I don’t think at this point you need to occupy cities. I don’t see any Ukrainian defense against simply blockading them indefinitely until the diehards like the Azov Battalion are killed and everyone else surrenders. The tendency of pundits and analysts to exaggerate how badly the Russian military campaign is going makes me think they’re engaging in wishful thinking, which leads me to discount much else of what they say.
Every forecaster must reduce a very complicated and messy reality to a few fundamental components, and here I think the keys are capabilities and resolve. Sanctions could in theory prevent Russia from being able to wage war, but I suspect that Moscow would prioritize the effort in Ukraine over anything else and find a way to keep the war going up until it achieves something that looks like victory. If North Korea can maintain a formidable army, I suspect that Russia can too no matter how bad sanctions get. Maybe Russian manufacturing is different because it’s just becoming isolated while North Korea has always been alone and had to rely on itself. Maybe the psychological factors at work are different, as North Koreans never had access to McDonalds and the PlayStation Store and so they don’t miss them. This is possible, and unknown factors like these are why I give Ukraine any chance of victory at all. There’s nothing resembling a perfect historical analogy we can use to guide us, or even a very good one. But in the end, it seems to me that Russia only loses if it is forced to admit failure as it fundamentally rethinks what its core interests are – more precisely, what Putin considers important in terms of his own survival, ideology, legitimacy, legacy, etc. – and I’ve already written about why that’s unlikely. I keep trying to play the scenario out in my head as to what a Russian loss looks like and it’s hard to see it.
Based on the arguments above, I break down the likely outcome of the war in Ukraine in the following way.
Russian victory: 70%
I’m defining “victory” here in the sense that Russia is better off than when the war began regarding its key foreign policy aims. It either has more land or territory under its control than when the war started, gets international recognition for what it already controls, i.e. Crimea, changes the status of the Donbas, or gets a no-NATO pledge or some other guarantee of Ukrainian neutrality, whether it can be enforced or not.
The most likely scenario here is Russia forces a settlement on Kiev that involves most of these components (35%), but it sticks to changes to Donbas and Crimea and exits the rest of Ukraine. There’s also a good possibility that Russia will grab even more territory in the eventual settlement, say parts of the Black Sea coast and Kharkiv too (25%). It’s hard right now to see Ukraine or the West agreeing to any of this, but consider how unthinkable it would have been after 9/11 to believe that the US would let the Taliban ever rule Afghanistan again. Eventually, passions cool down and people accept military realities.
Annexation of Kiev or all of Ukraine still cannot be ruled out (10%). I checked with Anatoly, and he still thinks Putin is going for it all, arguing that this looks like a traditional European war so far where the challenge is destroying the conventional army and then there is a very limited insurgency. He points to the lack of guerrilla war in areas that have been conquered so far, though obviously it’s very early. I think the maximalist scenario would impose massive costs on Russia, but it may well be willing to push forward, especially if there is no off-ramp for sanctions and a big military victory serves as a way to psychologically compensate for international isolation and economic collapse. Note that all Russian victory predictions are compatible with Putin being overthrown in a palace coup since there’s no guarantee that whoever replaces him won’t be just as or even more committed to the war effort.
Draw: 15%
In this scenario, Russia continues to claim Crimea for itself and Donetsk and Luhansk are de facto independent if not annexed by Russia but Ukraine never agrees and otherwise maintains its independence. Eventually everyone just gets tired of fighting and tells a story as to why they won. This is the Korean War model, but the dividing lines will be less official. There is no clear understanding of whether Ukraine will eventually join NATO or not. In the future, we perhaps see another war, or both sides end up so war weary they decide not to do anything that provokes or starts another conflict.
Ukrainian victory: 10%
As in the case of Russian victory, I’m defining a Ukrainian victory as one where that country is in a better position regarding the main issues of the war, that is the Donbas, Crimea, and NATO. This is basically the scenario that Washington fantasizes about. It would take quite a catastrophic collapse in Russia for this to happen, and even then it would have to be a political choice since the country still has nuclear weapons and can use them even if it has nothing else. Even if Putin falls over the course of the war, which I’d put at 10-20%, there is no Lenin waiting in the wings ready to give up wide swaths of territory at any cost in order to achieve peace. One reason US policy is so frustrating is that it seems to be putting a lot of stock in this outcome, and I think it’s unlikely. But again, war is extremely unpredictable, so I do have to give a Ukrainian victory something of a chance.
Larger war with NATO: 5%
This would likely also end in a Ukrainian victory if it stayed conventional. If it goes nuclear I hesitate to say much of anything about what might happen.
This is the way I’m currently thinking about the conflict, and I’m open to other approaches and arguments. For my Metaculus predictions, see here. Feel free to make your own predictions there. See also my previous article on earlier predictions from before the war started.
Note: This essay is crossposted at the Metaculus Journal.
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Historically Russia was waged seemingly inept wars, typically botched at the outset (1914, 1941, First Chechen War). They either eventually win by bulldozing their opponent, after mobilizing their huge human and material resources (1945, Second Chechen War), or give up when the country is in an actual (1905, 1917) or nascent (1856) revolt. Russia has fought against much more powerful enemies and alliances for much longer than a few weeks on many occasions. The idea that Putin will get bored or decide it was all a mistake and go home, or give up because of economic sanctions, is not especially convincing, though, as you say, who knows? Still, the smart bet would be that Russia, having jumped into this thing, will wage it to a favorable conclusion, even at what foreigners would consider to be stupid and excessive cost. That's their way.
There is a meme that circulates periodically about how ppl pivot from being an "expert" on X to being an expert on Y (virology to Russia or something). https://ifunny.co/tags/slowik is a good example.
It has always struck me as silly. It's not expertise - it's critical reasoning, which allows for an intelligent person to study and have an opinion about a variety of topics. We all know that "expertise" is quite often useless or worse.
I think you make a really good and humble point here - you can read and learn - and then form an opinion, while still acknowledging that it may not be a perfect forecast. You don't have to be the tire guy. You can read what the tire guy says and then incorporate it into your mental model.