Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S., Germany sending weapons to Ukraine as Russia advances

- By John Leicester and Yuras Karmanau

KYIV, Ukraine — President Joe Biden said Wednesday the U.S. will send an additional $1 billion in military aid, the largest single tranche of weapons and equipment since the war began. The aid will include anti-ship missile launchers, howitzers and more rounds for the High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems — all key weapons systems that Ukrainian leaders have urgently requested.

Germany is providing Ukraine with three multiple launch rocket systems of the kind that Kyiv has said it urgently needs to defend itself against Russia’s invasion. Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht said Wednesday that Germany will transfer three M270 medium-range artillery rocket systems along with ammunition.

Germany said the transfer, which echoes similar moves by Britain and the United States, will be accompanie­d by training and will have “a swift and significan­t battlefiel­d impact.”

In recent days, Ukrainian officials have spoken of the heavy human cost of the war, with Kyiv’s forces outgunned and outnumbere­d in the east.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked Mr. Biden for the new aid package.

“The security support of the United States is unpreceden­ted,” he said, reporting on a phone call the two leaders held earlier Wednesday. “It brings us closer to a common victory over the Russian aggressor.”

Mr. Zelenskyy said he has accepted invitation­s to speak at the NATO and Group of Seven summits at the end of the month.

“During the 112 days of this war, the Ukrainian army has proved that courage and wisdom on the battlefiel­d, together with the ability to tactically outmaneuve­r the enemy, can have a significan­t result, even despite the Russian army’s significan­t advantage in number of soldiers and equipment,” he said in his nightly video address.

The Russian military on Wednesday said it used longrange missiles Wednesday to destroy a depot in the western Lviv region of Ukraine where ammunition for NATO-supplied weapons was stored, and the governor of a key eastern city acknowledg­ed that Russian forces are advancing in heavy fighting.

The battle for Sievierodo­netsk in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas area has become the focus of Russia’s offensive in recent weeks.

Russia-backed separatist­s accused Ukrainian forces of sabotaging an evacuation of civilians from the city’s besieged Azot chemical plant, where about 500 civilians and an unknown number of Ukrainian fighters are believed to be sheltering from missile attacks. It wasn’t possible to verify that claim.

Russian officials had announced a humanitari­an corridor from the Azot plant a day earlier but said they would take civilians to areas controlled by Russian, not Ukrainian, forces.

The Ukrainian governor of Luhansk, Serhiy Haidai, told The Associated Press that “heavy fighting in Sievierodo­netsk continues today as well.” The Luhansk and Donetsk regions make up the Donbas.

In the Lviv region near the border with NATO member Poland, Russian forces used high-precision Kalibr missiles to destroy the depot near Zolochiv, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenko­v said. Mr. Konashenko­v said shells for M777 howitzers, a type supplied by the United States, were stored there.

Ukrainian officials did not immediatel­y comment on the Zolochiv strike.

While focusing most of their attacks on eastern Ukraine, where they are trying to capture large swaths of territory, Russian forces have also been hitting more specific targets elsewhere, using high-precision missiles to disrupt the internatio­nal supply of weapons and destroy military infrastruc­ture. Civilian infrastruc­ture has been bombarded as well.

 ?? Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images ?? Ukrainian servicemen fire with a French self-propelled 155 mm/52-calibre gun toward Russian positions Wednesday at a front line in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas.
Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images Ukrainian servicemen fire with a French self-propelled 155 mm/52-calibre gun toward Russian positions Wednesday at a front line in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas.

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