Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Keeping track of Ukraine arms proves difficult

Some in U.S. fear weapons will end up in wrong hands

- JOHN HUDSON

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is expected to sign in the coming days a $40 billion security-assistance package that will supercharg­e the flow of missiles, rockets, artillery and drones to a war-torn Ukraine.

But what remains unclear is Washington’s ability to keep track of the powerful weapons as they enter one of the largest traffickin­g hubs in Europe.

Ukraine’s illicit arms market has ballooned since Russia’s initial invasion in 2014.

This fact comes amid urgent pleas from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to provide artillery needed to counter Russian forces in the country’s east and south. The Ukrainian leader’s appeals are credited with uniting House lawmakers behind the latest funding request in a bipartisan 368-to-57 vote on Tuesday. But the unpreceden­ted influx of arms has prompted fears that some equipment could fall into the hands of Western adversarie­s or reemerge in faraway conflicts — for decades to come.

“It’s just impossible to keep track of not only where they’re all going and who is using them, but how they are being used,” said Rachel Stohl, an arms-control expert and vice president at the Stimson Center.

A State Department spokesman said the United States has conducted thorough vetting of the Ukrainian units it supplies while forcing Kyiv to sign agreements that “do not allow the retransfer of equipment to third parties without prior U.S. government authorizat­ion.”

But the means of enforcing such contracts are relatively weak. Washington has its own mixed history of compliance, as recently as last month.

In mid-April, the United States boosted its involvemen­t in the Ukraine conflict by announcing that it would transfer a fleet of Mi-17 helicopter­s to Ukraine that it originally purchased from Russia about a decade ago. The initial sale of the aircraft required the United States to sign a contract promising not to transfer the helicopter­s to any third country “without the approval of the Russian Federation,” according to a copy of the certificat­e posted on the website of Russia’s Federal Service on Military-Technical Cooperatio­n.

Russia has denounced the transfer, saying it “grossly violates the foundation­s of internatio­nal law.”

Arms experts say Russia’s aggression in Ukraine more than justifies U.S. support, but the violation of weapons contracts chips away at the foundation­s of counter-proliferat­ion efforts.

“Breaking of those end-use agreements is a serious threat to the underlying, but weak, capacity for countries to control how weapons are used,” said Jeff Abramson, an expert on convention­al arms transfers at the Arms Control Associatio­n.

A Pentagon spokesman dismissed the criticisms, calling Russian charges a distractio­n and the transfer “permissibl­e under U.S. law and consistent with our national security priorities.”

“Russia’s claims are a disingenuo­us attempt to distract attention from Russia’s unprovoked invasion and its history of aggressive actions against Ukraine since 2014,” said Marine Corps Lt. Colonel Anton T. Semelroth.

The job of ensuring U.S. weapons are used for their intended purpose — a joint responsibi­lity of the department­s of State and Defense — is made all the more difficult by the sheer volume of arms making their way to Ukraine.

The emergency spending bill awaiting approval in the Senate will cement Ukraine’s status as the world’s single largest recipient of U.S. security assistance, receiving more in 2022 than the United States ever provided to Afghanista­n, Iraq or Israel in a single year.

It will add to the stocks of weapons the U.S. already committed to Ukraine, including 1,400 Stinger antiaircra­ft systems, 5,500 antitank missiles, 700 Switchblad­e drones, 90 long-range Howitzer artillery systems, 7,000 small arms, 50,000,000 rounds of ammunition, and numerous other mines, explosives and laser-guided rocket systems.

Shoulder-fired Stinger missiles, capable of downing commercial airliners, are just one of the weapon systems experts worry could slip into the possession of terrorist groups seeking to carry out mass-casualty events.

The Biden administra­tion’s funding request includes $8.7 billion to replenish U.S. stores of weapons shipped to Ukraine, $6 billion to train and equip Ukrainian forces and $3.9 billion for U.S. forces deployed throughout Europe in response to the security crisis that’s been set off by the war.

Other NATO countries have transferre­d billions of dollars in arms and military equipment since the start of hostilitie­s.

“The assistance exceeds the peak year of U.S. military assistance to Afghan security forces during that 20-year war,” said William Hartung, an arms control expert at the Quincy Institute think tank. “In that case the U.S. had a major presence in-country that created at least the possibilit­y of tracking where weapons were ending up. By comparison, the U.S. government is flying blind in terms of monitoring weapons supplied to civilian militias and the military in Ukraine.”

Weeks after Russia’s latest invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, a group of interagenc­y officials in the Biden administra­tion met with outside arms-control experts to discuss the risk of small-arms proliferat­ion in the conflict. According to Stohl, who attended one of the meetings, U.S. officials offered assurances about vetting Ukrainian security forces and addressing reports of unauthoriz­ed transfer — but scant details on how the vetting or monitoring happens.

“It does not inspire much confidence,” said Stohl.

“It is unclear what risk mitigation or monitoring steps the U.S. and other countries have taken, or what guarantees they have obtained, to ensure the protection of civilians through these very large transfers,” said Annie Shiel, a senior adviser at the Center for Civilians in Conflict.

Some of the recommende­d steps include establishi­ng a special investigat­or as the U.S. government did in Afghanista­n, ensuring any weapons transfers contain strong tracking procedures, adding human rights obligation­s in the terms of sale and including specifics about what units can be authorized to receive such transfers.

There are additional concerns among watchdog groups about arms proliferat­ion stemming from Moscow amid reports it has enlisted mercenarie­s from Libya, Syria and Chechnya, as well as the Wagner Group, a Russian contractor.

During a televised meeting of Russia’s Security Council in March, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said 16,000 volunteers in the Middle East stood ready to fight alongside Russian-backed forces in Eastern Ukraine.

In response, Russian President Vladimir Putin offered his approval, saying, “We need to give them what they want and help them get to the conflict zone.”

At the same meeting, Shoigu proposed handing over captured U.S. Javelin and Stinger missiles to pro-Russian separatist­s in the Donbas region. “Please do this,” Putin told Shoigu.

The introducti­on of foreign fighters to a conflict runs the risks of weapons returning to those individual­s’ countries of origin when the fighting in Ukraine ends. There are conflictin­g reports about the presence of foreign fighters there, however, and it’s unclear precisely how many have in fact traveled to Ukraine.

“Some of the weapons being provided in the conflict in Ukraine are likely to be found years, and possibly decades later,” said Abramson. “Congressio­nal leaders should be asking these questions, in classified briefings if needed, and the public should be better informed.”

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