The Scotsman

Ukraine’s defence minister says supply delays are costing troops’ lives

- Samya Kullab scotsman.com

Half of promised Western military support to Ukraine fails to arrive on time, complicati­ng the task of military planners and ultimately costing the lives of soldiers, the country's defence minister said.

Speaking at the Ukraine. Year 2024 forum in Kyiv, Rustan Umerov said that each delayed aid shipment meant Ukrainian troop losses, and underscore­d Russia's superior military might.

Commemorat­ions to mark the second anniversar­y of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Saturday brought expression­s of continued support, new bilateral security agreements and fresh aid commitment­s from Ukraine's Western allies.

But Mr Umerov said they still needed to deliver on their commitment­s if Ukraine is to have any chance of holding out against Russia.

"We look to the enemy: their economy is almost two trillion dollars, they use up to 15 per cent official and non-official budget (funds) for the war, which constitute­s over $100 billion annually.

"So basically whenever a commitment doesn't come on time, we lose people, we lose territory," he said yesterday.

Mr Umerov and Commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrskyi toured front-line combat posts earlier amid a worsening ammunition shortage and dogged Russian attacks in the east.

They heard from front-line troops and "thoroughly analysed" the battlefiel­d situation on their visit, Mr Syrskyi said in a Telegram update.

He did not specify where exactly he and Mr Umerov went, but said that "the situation is difficult" for Ukrainian troops and "needs constant control" along many stretches of the front.

Ukraine has suffered setbacks on the battlefiel­d, having lost the strategic eastern city of Avdiivka following intense battles this month, and as military aid for Kyiv hangs in the balance in the US Congress.

Mr Syrskyi earlier this month replaced Ukraine's top military commander, Valerii Zaluzhny, in the most significan­t shakeup of the top brass since the start of the full-scale war, after a long-expected counteroff­ensive last summer failed to produce major breakthrou­ghs.

Russia still controls roughly a quarter of the country.

Yesterday Russian shelling and rocket strikes continued to pummel Ukraine's south and east, as local Ukrainian officials reported that at least two civilians were killed and a further eight suffered wounds in the Zaporizhzh­ia and Kherson provinces.

A woman was wounded and a railway station turned into a smoulderin­g ruin amid heavy shelling in the eastern city of Kostiantyn­ivka, according to the head of the municipal military administra­tion.

Ukraine's public broadcaste­r, Suspilne, cited local police as saying that the strikes also damaged an Orthodox church, over a dozen residentia­l buildings and dozens of shops, a post office, schools and local government offices.

Russia and Ukraine also continued to trade nightly drone attacks, with Ukraine's air defences shooting down 16 of 18 Iranian-made Shahed drones launched overnight by Moscow.

 ?? ?? Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference during the 'Ukraine Year 2024’ forum in Kyiv yesterday, marking the second anniversar­y of the Russian invasion; right, a woman and child walks past the railway station destroyed by a Russian missile attack
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference during the 'Ukraine Year 2024’ forum in Kyiv yesterday, marking the second anniversar­y of the Russian invasion; right, a woman and child walks past the railway station destroyed by a Russian missile attack
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