Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Scrounging for tanks for Ukraine, Europe’s armies come up short

- By Erika Solomon, Steven Erlanger and Christophe­r F. Schuetze

BERLIN — Nearly a month after Berlin gave European allies permission to send German-made tanks to Ukraine, the flow of tanks so many leaders vowed would follow seems more like a trickle.

Some nations have discovered that the tanks in their armory don’t actually work or lack spare parts. Political leaders have encountere­d unanticipa­ted resistance within their own coalitions, and even from their defense ministries. And some armies had to pull trainers out of retirement to teach Ukrainian soldiers how to use old-model tanks.

The struggle to provide Leopard tanks to an embattled Ukraine is just the most glaring manifestat­ion of a reality Europe has long ignored: Believing that largescale land war was a thing of the past and basking in the thaw of the Cold War, nations chronicall­y underfunde­d their militaries. When Russia launched the largest land war on the continent since World War II, they were woefully unprepared.

Hints of the problem have surfaced repeatedly since Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago, through shortages of weapons and ammunition. But now, as Germany and its allies struggled for weeks to scrape together enough Leopard 2s to fill two battalions of tanks — 62 vehicles

in total — the extent of their quandary has become even clearer.

The irony of this situation is not lost on Germany.

For weeks, Chancellor Olaf Scholz resisted an intense public pressure campaign from Ukraine’s leaders, European politician­s and security experts to supply

Ukraine with tanks, and to permit other nations to send some of their own Leopards, despite German concerns that it could be perceived by Russia as a NATO escalation. Many goaded Mr. Scholz with a social media campaign: #Freetheleo­pards.

The Leopards may be free

now, but they are scarce on the ground. And some countries that clamored for permission to send them to Ukraine are having difficulti­es doing so, or second thoughts of their own.

Despite Europe having an estimated 2,000 Leopard 2 tanks of different models — they are among the most

commonly used main battle tanks across the continent — pledges for Ukraine are still short of the hundreds it says it needs.

Germany has offered 18, and Poland another 14, but the numbers drop from there. And once the currently pledged tanks go into battle and get hit or break down, it is not clear which Leopards — or which country — will replace them.

“Of course some nations have delivered, or at least announced that they will,” Germany’s defense minister, Boris Pistorius, said at the Munich Security Conference this month. “But others have not done that.”

“That is what I’m a bit shocked about,” he added. “Clearly there were some nations — and I will never name names here — but we had some nations that preferred to hide behind Germany. To say: We would love to, if we were allowed. But when we allowed it, they didn’t do anything.”

Privately, many German and European officials involved in the negotiatio­ns over tank deliveries say the situation is more complicate­d. It is not so much that nations are unwilling to make good on their promises but rather that they have faced a rude awakening as to just how difficult it is.

Finland, where many outspoken members of parliament led the calls for Germany to allow Leopard deliveries, announced Thursday that it would supply three Leopard mine-clearing vehicles — but none of its estimated 200 Leopard main battle tanks.

Some German officials expressed sympathy for Finland, which is not yet a NATO member and has Europe’s longest border with Russia, some 830 miles. It does not want to weaken its defenses now that Russia has shown a willingnes­s to attack a sovereign neighbor.

But some European officials were hoping for a larger contributi­on from Finland, given promises from the United States and Britain to come to its defense if necessary, even before NATO accession.

Nordic countries such as Sweden, which had long pushed for Leopard deliveries but Friday offered only “up to” 10, are facing another unexpected problem, several German officials said: While their politician­s and members of the public appear keen to offer tanks to Ukraine, their militaries are not.

For decades, European countries enjoying a postCold War “peace dividend” had seen war as almost a thing of the past, regularly cutting military support. Now, the shrunken armies tend to be protective of what they still have. At NATO, European militaries are sometimes called “bonsai armies,” after the miniature trees.

For years, the United States has been nagging Europe to increase military spending, and in 2014, after Russia grabbed Crimea,

NATO members agreed to spend 2% of gross domestic product by 2024. Yet even today, by current NATO estimates, only nine of the alliance’s 30 members are spending that much, while a 10th is close. Thirteen countries, including Germany, were spending around 1.5% of their GDP or even less.

In Germany, which for years clung to a foreign policy that emphasized aid and developmen­t more than hard power, some saw the problem as uniquely German. Yearly military reports to parliament offered sometimes comical glimpses of the shortages. Commandos conducted water training at local public pools, because their own facilities were shut down. Planes could not fly. Soldiers trained with broomstick­s instead of rifles. Even newer Puma infantry fighting vehicles recently broke down en masse.

But other European nations are now realizing their own militaries may have similar troubles.

“The trend across the board in European armies has been cutting, cutting, cutting,” said Christian Mölling, a defense expert at the German Council on Foreign Relations. “But at the end of the day, many were on the same track as Germany: War is a theoretica­l thing. So we have theoretica­l tanks.”

Spain, which has 108 Leopard 2A4 tanks, early on sought German permission to offer some of its vehicles to Ukraine. Now it has discovered that many of them are in poor condition and need refurbishm­ent that could take weeks or months. On top of that, one of the prime minister’s coalition partners, the leftist Podemos party, is closer to Russia and has been resistant to offering more support for Ukraine.

Neverthele­ss, as Germany turned the pressure back on its allies for their shortcomin­gs,Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, on Friday improved on his promise to send six Leopards and said Spain would now send 10.

Ulrike Franke, a defense analyst at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said the struggle to find tank numbers raises questions as to where else European militaries face similar shortages and maintenanc­e problems.

“Is it just bad luck that Spain has an issue with their Leopard tanks, but everything else works?” she said. “Or do they have the same issues elsewhere?”

“Does 10% of their equipment not work, or is it 50%?” Ms. Franke asked. “It would be a good idea for Europeans to look at this more closely.”

Poland, which has difficult relations with Germany, was foremost in pressing Mr. Scholz and Berlin on the Leopards, and even threatened to send some to Ukraine without the necessary German permission. Like Germany, Poland has some 200 Leopard 2 tanks — but it says it will provide just 14. It sent the first of the tanks to Ukraine on the anniversar­y of the invasion, Feb. 24, although Poland has yet to finish training Ukrainian soldiers to use them.

Poland may be holding off on deliveries of Leopards until it receives new Hyundaimad­e K2 tanks from South Korea, meant to replace the German model, some analysts said. Poland has sent many upgraded Soviet-era T72tanks to Ukraine.

But some European officials think Poland should be offering more Leopards, and some policymake­rs are planning meetings with Polish officials this week to better understand the situation. Even when it comes to the tanks that are in large supply — namely, the older Leopard 1 models — there are complicati­ons.

The Netherland­s, Germany and Denmark have launched a joint initiative to refurbish and send 150 Leopard 1 models to Ukraine by the end of the year. But at a training session for Ukrainian soldiers in Germany earlier this week, one general said militaries had been forced to seek out retired Leopard 1 tank drivers to come back and help train Ukrainian forces. The old model is too unfamiliar to current militaries.

 ?? Maciek Nabrdalik/The New York Times ?? The struggle to provide Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine has exposed how unprepared European militaries are. The Netherland­s, Germany and Denmark have a joint initiative to send 150 Leopard 1 models to Ukraine by the end of the year.
Maciek Nabrdalik/The New York Times The struggle to provide Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine has exposed how unprepared European militaries are. The Netherland­s, Germany and Denmark have a joint initiative to send 150 Leopard 1 models to Ukraine by the end of the year.

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