Letters from an American - June 3, 2025
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June 3, 2025. On June 1, Ukrainian forces struck deep inside Russia in Operation Spiderweb.
117 drones, each operated by its own pilot, hit airfields in five regions. Ukraine says the drones hit 41 strategic bombers that had been attacking Ukrainian cities and
destroyed at least 13 of them.
Russia does not have the industrial capabilities to replace them.
The Security Service of Ukraine, or SBU, head Vasil Malyukuk emphasized that military airfields and the aircraft that are bombing
Ukraine are absolutely legitimate targets according to the laws and customs of war.
The SBU estimates the drones did $7 billion of damage, hitting 34% of the aircraft that
delivered cruise missiles.
The operation took more than 18 months of planning.
It apparently involved sending trucks
loaded with wooden cabins that had detachable roofs
that could be opened remotely.
Unsuspecting truck drivers hauled the cabins
to locations near air bases where the drones launched.
Once the drones were in the air,
the vehicles carrying the cabins exploded.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the people who helped with the operation from
within Russia had been withdrawn and are now safe.
Russia denied that the damage was that extensive, but there is no doubt that the attack was
a significant blow to Russia's war effort, demonstrating, as it does, that
Ukraine can bring the war home.
As Katerina Bondar of the Washington, D.C. think tank Center for Strategic and International
Studies notes, June 1 was Military Transport Aviation Day in Russia, a significant holiday
for the armed forces.
Russian President Vladimir Putin frequently ties operations
to significant dates, as when he hosted a number
of American lawmakers in Moscow on July 4th, 2018.
And the choice of this date for an attack
on military aircraft threw that habit back at him.
Analysts recognize the Ukrainian attack
as a new moment in warfare.
Using apparently unwitting civilians, the Ukrainians managed to get their drones close enough to their targets to avoid Russia's air defense systems.
Then, Bondar explains, the drones relied on a system that allowed operators to pilot them to the plane's strategic weaknesses.
The drones themselves cost between $600 and $1,000 apiece.
And by using deception, technology, and strategic surprise, the Ukrainians managed to destroy
billions of dollars' worth of aircraft.
Bonder notes that the attack heralds a change in modern warfare in which technological agility
will trump industrial capacity and advantage will go to those countries that can adapt
quickly to changing conditions.
Some observers are calling the attack the Russian Pearl Harbor, a reference to the attack
by the Japanese Navy on the U.S. Pacific Fleet stationed at Pearl Harbor Naval Base in Hawaii on December
7, 1941, an attack that led to the US entry into World War II.
But Russia has been attacking Ukraine since 2014 and launched a full-scale invasion in
2022.
This attack illustrates extraordinary vulnerability at this point, rather as if Pearl Harbor had
happened in early 1945.
A former commander of U.S. Army Europe, retired U.S. Army Lieutenant General Mark Hurtling,
posted,
For months, some believed that Ukraine didn't hold any cards.
Many of us have refuted that claim, saying an inflection point due to failing
Russian war economy and continued lack of Russian leadership adaptation, but especially
due to a continued strong Ukrainian government, military and population support, and will,
mixed with their innovative use of special operations, uncrewed systems, various drones, and fiber optic capabilities to counter
Russian electronic warfare would soon be felt on the battlefield.
The coordinated and synchronized attack today, which appears to have decimated much of the
Russian air fleet that were based over 4,000 kilometers from the front line, is showing
that Ukraine certainly has many aces in the
hole.
Hurtling's comment that some thought Ukraine didn't hold any cards is a reference to President
Donald J. Trump, who ambushed Zelensky in the Oval Office on February 28th, warning
him that Ukraine must cut a deal with Putin because Zelensky didn't have the cards to
win the war.
With that meeting, Trump signaled that U.S. policy, which has supported Ukraine since
1994, would change to favor Russia.
In the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assistances, Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons
in exchange for security
assurances from the US, the United Kingdom, and Russia that they would honor
the sovereignty and borders of Ukraine, a promise Russia broke when it invaded
Ukraine's Crimea in 2014. During the 2024 US presidential election campaign, Trump
vowed that he would end the war in
Ukraine in a single day, maybe with a single phone call. And as other
victories have slipped away from him, he has appeared frustrated that such an
achievement has proved more difficult than he thought. After the Oval Office
meeting, the Ukrainians agreed to a 30-day ceasefire on March 11th, but Russia
has consistently refused to agree
unless Ukraine accepts major territorial concessions
and permits Russia to dictate that it not join
the defensive North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or NATO.
Rather than negotiating, Putin has launched repeated attacks
on Ukrainian civil targets.
On Sunday, May 25th, Russia launched the largest air attack
on Ukraine since the war began,
and the week before, it launched its largest drone attack.
Those attacks happened even as Trump was talking directly
with Putin, allegedly about a ceasefire.
The White House policy has skewed heavily toward Russia
against Ukraine, even to the point that Trump's special envoy,
Steve Witkoff, relied on Putin's own translators
during negotiations on February 11th, March 13th,
and April 11th.
While Putin speaks English, Witkoff does not speak Russian.
Trump claims to be frustrated with Putin, at one point calling him absolutely crazy,
which prompted Putin's spokesperson to suggest that Trump was suffering from emotional overload.
On May 27th, Trump appeared to acknowledge his longstanding relationship with Putin when
he posted on his social media site, what Vladimir Putin doesn't realize is that if it weren't for me,
lots of really bad things would have already happened to Russia.
And I mean really bad. He's playing with fire.
And yet,
although more than 80 senators from both parties have co-sponsored a bill to
impose stronger sanctions against Russia,
Trump has refused to back it, thus stalling it.
Meanwhile, Benedict Smith of The Telegraph Today covered State Department Acting Undersecretary
for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Darren Beatty, who dismantled the office that countered
disinformation from Russia, China, and Iran.
In 2021, Smith notes, Beatty married a Russian national whose uncle has ties to Putin.
Beatty was dismissed from the first Trump administration after attending a white nationalist
rally.
He has attacked the United States as the globalist American empire and said that Putin should infiltrate Western institutions to fight woke ideology.
In 2021, Beatty wrote that the position of the U.S. in the global order is rapidly deteriorating and that he looked forward to its prestige and power collapsing. Praising Putin as brave and strong,
he said that Putin had done more
to advance conservative positions in the US
than any Republican,
and that just about every Western institution
would improve in quality if it were directly infiltrated
and controlled by Putin.
Beatty also wrote, NATO is a far worse threat
to the health, liberty, freedom,
and flourishing of American citizens
than Russia and China combined.
Administration officials said the Ukrainians
did not notify them before launching Operation Spiderweb.
On Tuesday, Ukrainian forces detonated underwater explosives attached to the Kersh Bridge connecting
Russia to the occupied Crimean Peninsula.
This is Ukraine's third attack on the bridge since 2022.
The SBU said the explosives severely damaged bridge supports, but the bridge reopened hours later.
The Ukrainian operations are only the most dramatic developments in ongoing stories today
that show the Trump administration is not calling all the shots. Trump's vow to negotiate trade
deals in place of his tariff walls has not yet produced any of those deals,
and the White House today says it's likely that a call will take place this week with
China's leader Xi Jinping.
But Lingling Wei of the Wall Street Journal explained yesterday that Xi has made it clear
China will play hardball with the U.S. Daniel Russell, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs in the
Obama administration.
Phelan Kine, Daniel DeRosha, Megan Messerly, and Ari Hawkins of Politico.
Beijing has a sharp nose for weakness, and for all his bravado, Trump is signaling eagerness,
even desperation,
to cut a direct deal with Xi.
That only stiffens Beijing's resolve.
Biden administration National Security Council Deputy Senior Director for China and Taiwan
Rush Doshi noted that Chinese officials see Trump as unpredictable, and that Chinese diplomats don't usually put the leader
at risk of a potentially embarrassing
or unpredictable encounter.
Jake LaHotte of Wired reported yesterday
that Trump advisors are themselves tired
of right-wing conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer,
who has Trump's ear.
Their comments to Lahat appear designed
to put pressure on Trump to push her away,
a sign that, for now anyway, she is entrenched.
Newark, New Jersey Mayor Ross Baraka,
whom Department of Homeland Security agents arrested
on May 9th, 2025, has sued the acting US attorney
for the District of New Jersey, Alina Habba, and the
special agent in charge of the Newark Division of Homeland Security Investigations, Ricky J. Patel,
for false arrest and malicious prosecution. He's suing Habba alone for defamation.
The suit outlines Habba's public statements against Democrats in New Jersey and her vow to turn New Jersey red. It says Habba acted as a political
operative in her individual personal capacity outside of any function
intimately related to the judicial process when she posted on her social
media account that Baraka committed trespass and ignored
multiple warnings from Homeland Security investigations to remove himself from
the ICE detention center in Newark, New Jersey this afternoon. He has willingly
chosen to disregard the law. After repeated similar public statements,
Habba dropped all charges. Secretary of Homeland Security
Kristi Noem took down
her list of sanctuary cities
she said weren't cooperating
with federal immigration authorities
after the National
Sheriffs Association demanded
an apology.
Trump began today by
attacking Senator Rand Paul,
a Republican of Kentucky, for his opposition
to the extraordinary cost of Republicans' omnibus bill, insisting that the bill would
create tremendous growth.
But this afternoon, billionaire Elon Musk took a firm stand against Trump's one big,
beautiful bill, posting on X, I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it
anymore.
This massive, outrageous, pork-filled congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination.
Shame on those who voted for it.
You know you did wrong.
You know it.
Meanwhile, Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat of Massachusetts, released a report showing
that Musk's net worth has increased by more than $100 billion since Election Day.
The report listed the many ways in which he has used his position in the federal government
to stop investigations into his companies, undercut regulations, win federal contracts,
gain access to data and sensitive information,
attack his enemies, meddle in elections,
and secure foreign deals,
all without informing the American people
of his conflicts of interest.
his conflicts of interest. Michael Moss.