Orlando Sentinel

NATO united on Ukraine, but cracks emerge

- By David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt

WASHINGTON — The billions of dollars in new arms for Ukraine announced this month — including British tanks, American fighting vehicles, and howitzers from Denmark and Sweden — are testament to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s failure to split the NATO allies after nearly a year of war. But small yet significan­t fractures are getting too big to hide.

The difference­s are over strategy for the coming year and the more immediate question of what Ukraine needs in the next few months, as both sides in the war prepare for major offensives in the spring. And although most of those debates take place behind closed doors, Britain’s impatience with the current pace of aid and Germany’s refusal to provide Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine broke out into public view last week.

When the new British foreign secretary, James Cleverly, visited Washington, he made the case that it is possible for Ukraine to score a “victory” in the war this year if the allies move fast to exploit Russia’s weaknesses. Officials in Poland, the Baltic States and Finland have largely agreed with the British assessment.

But American officials say it is critical to pace the aid, and not flood Ukraine with equipment its troops cannot yet operate. And they argue that in a world of limited resources, it would be wise to keep something in reserve for what the Pentagon believes will probably be a drawn-out conflict, in which Russia will try to wear Ukraine down.

On Friday, at the conclusion of a meeting in Germany of the dozens of nations supplying the war effort, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark Milley, repeated the assessment

he has offered since the fall.

“For this year, it would be very, very difficult to militarily eject the Russian forces,” he said. The best that could be hoped for is pressing Russia into a diplomatic negotiatio­n — the way most wars end.

Then came the more immediate blowup with the German government of Chancellor Olaf Scholz, over his refusal to send what many military experts believe could be a decisive weapon in Ukrainian hands: German-built Leopard 2 tanks.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin spent several days trying to persuade the Germans to ship them, or at least allow Poland and other nations that use the tanks to reexport them. But by the time the meeting with scores of allies ended, German Defense Minister

Boris Pistorius reported that no agreement had been reached, although he said they would make a decision “as soon as possible.” He and Austin tried to focus on the unity of the effort to confront Russia, rather than the obvious rift over arms.

Difference­s of strategy among wartime allies is the norm. In World War II, there were major debates about whether to focus on defeating Nazi Germany first and turn to Japan — which had actually attacked American territory. Similar debates happened during the Korean War, Vietnam and the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n. Because the United States was providing the bulk of the fighting force, it usually prevailed.

But in interviews with U.S., British and other European officials, including senior military leaders, it is clear that Ukraine is different.

Only the Ukrainians are on the line, and no one wants to tell them how to fight a battle in which their forces, the only ones engaged in the daily brutality, have shown both grit and determinat­ion. But with both Russia and Ukraine planning fresh offensives, the debate over strategy and arms has reached what the NATO secretary-general has called “an inflection point.”

The Ukrainians have made no secret that much as they appreciate the support of their allies, what they are getting is not enough. When Britain announced it was sending Challenger 2 tanks, Ukraine’s foreign minister and defense minister issued a joint statement thanking the British government but adding that “it is not sufficient to achieve operationa­l goals.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

was typically blunt. After thanking the United States for a $2.5 billion contributi­on of arms, atop $3 billion announced weeks earlier, he said: “Hundreds of thank yous are not hundreds of tanks.”

American officials were clearly frustrated after their negotiatio­ns with the German government last week. Germany had begun by saying that it would send Leopard tanks, and authorize others to, if the United States sent its M1 Abrams tank as well. The United States declined, saying the tank is such a gas guzzler — it employs a jet engine — and requires such a supply line to keep running that it would not be useful in Ukraine’s environmen­t. (The officials dodged questions about why a tank so difficult to operate on European battlefiel­ds is in the American arsenal.)

The British Challenger­s and German Leopards are more flexible and easier to run. But in public, Austin and others avoided criticizin­g Scholz, who in their view has managed the biggest reversal of German foreign policy — starting with the suspension of two pipelines bringing gas from Russia — quite skillfully.

Scholz’s real concern, they suspect, is that he does not believe the world is ready to see German tanks near the borders of Russia, a reminder of the Nazi invasion in World War II. One senior American official said that if Scholz and the German public are worried about that, in these circumstan­ces “they are the only ones who are.”

Although Germany did not say yes to sending Leopard tanks last week, it didn’t say no, either — at least not yet. But Ukraine has a very narrow window of time in which to launch a potentiall­y decisive spring offensive before the Russians do, and the tanks are a key part of that effort.

Before that launch, Ukraine has to muster thousands of combatread­y troops, receive new advanced weapons from the West, and train their soldiers in how to use and maintain those arms.

Getting all that done would be, according to Milley, “a very, very heavy lift.”

That’s why Germany’s delay on approving tanks was so frustratin­g to Austin and other top Western officials who had been trying all last week to reach an agreement with their German counterpar­ts to provide what Ukraine needs now to wrest back territory.

“If we stop now or limit or diminish it, it will all have been in vain,” said Dutch Foreign Affairs Minister Wopke Hoekstra. “We have to double down. There is no substitute for victory on the battlefiel­d.”

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP ?? U.K. Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, left, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Jan. 17 in Washington. Cleverly believes that Ukraine could win its war with Russia in 2023 if allies move fast to exploit the Kremlin’s weaknesses.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP U.K. Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, left, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Jan. 17 in Washington. Cleverly believes that Ukraine could win its war with Russia in 2023 if allies move fast to exploit the Kremlin’s weaknesses.

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