Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Ukraine pushes U.S. for `Franken' air defense weapons

- By Lara Jakes

With winter approachin­g, Ukrainian officials are desperate for more air defenses to protect their power grids from Russian strikes that could plunge the country into freezing darkness.

So desperate, in fact, that they are willing to experiment with a monster of a weapons system that was the brainchild of Ukraine and is now being pursued by the Pentagon.

U.S. officials call it the FrankenSAM program, combining advanced, Western-caliber, surface-to-air missiles with refitted Soviet-era launchers or radars that Ukrainian forces have on hand. Two variants of these improvised air defenses — one pairing Soviet Buk launchers and American Sea Sparrow missiles, the other marrying Soviet-era radars and American Sidewinder missiles — have been tested over the past several months on military bases in the United States and are set to be delivered to Ukraine this fall, officials said.

A third, the Cold War-era Hawk missile system, was displayed on Ukraine's battlefiel­d this past week for the first time, in an example of what Laura Cooper, a senior U.S. defense official, had described this month as a FrankenSAM “in terms of resurrecti­on” — an air defense relic brought back to life.

Together, the FrankenSAM­s are “contributi­ng to filling critical gaps in Ukraine's air defenses, and this is the most important challenge that Ukraine faces today,” said Cooper, deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia policy.

Almost since the start of the war, Ukraine has tinkered with comminglin­g offensive weapons — its aging Soviet-era stockpiles and the ones it has gotten from the West — in unexpected but, in many cases, successful ways. U.S. military officials spoke admiringly last year of Ukraine's ability to “MacGyver” its arsenal, a metaphor for the 1980s TV show in which the title character uses simple, improvised contraptio­ns to get himself out of sticky situations.

The FrankenSAM­s project is now trying to do the same for Ukraine's air defenses.

Over the past 20 months, the West has supplied a range of air defenses to Ukraine, including stateof-the-art Patriot and IRIST systems, tanks fitted with anti-aircraft guns and more than 2,000 shoulder-fired Stinger missiles.

This past week, Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany announced that his government would provide Ukraine with three more batteries of sophistica­ted air defenses, including another Patriot system, as part of what he called a nearly $1.5 billion “winter package.”

“As winter approaches, we are putting up a protective shield against renewed Russian attacks on energy, water and heating infrastruc­ture,” Scholz said Tuesday. “This is because it is becoming apparent that Russia will once again use cold and energy shortages as a weapon against the civilian population.”

The air defenses are part of the close to $100 billion in military aid that Ukraine has received from allies since Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022. The United States, which has sent more funding for weapons than any other single nation, is considerin­g donating $60 billon more as part of a new Biden administra­tion emergency spending plan.

On Thursday, the administra­tion announced another $150 million in military aid for Ukraine, a package of weapons that included additional munitions for three kinds of air defense systems — including Sidewinder missiles for one of the FrankenSAM­S.

Now that it has Western tanks, armored vehicles, air defenses and long-range attack missiles in its arsenal, and with fighter jets on the way, officials said Ukraine largely needs more of the same weapons it has received as opposed to systems that have yet to be sent.

FrankenSAM­s are a mix of both. The program's origins date to late last year, when Ukrainian officials asked allies to help them find missiles for around 60 Soviet-era Buk launchers and radars that were sitting idle in Kyiv's arsenal. Knowing it would be difficult for the West to obtain Russian-manufactur­ed munitions to fit the Buk systems, the Ukrainians instead suggested refitting the launchers to use NATOcalibe­r anti-aircraft missiles donated by the United States.

“We realized we needed to come up with some solutions,” said Oleksandra Ustinova, chair of a commission in Ukraine's parliament that oversees arms transfers from the West. She said Ukrainian officials offered to jury-rig the weapons themselves, in the interest of time, “because for the winter period we need desperatel­y the air defenses, and this is what is going to be used.”

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A mobile air-defense unit is near Kyiv, Ukraine in May.
THE NEW YORK TIMES A mobile air-defense unit is near Kyiv, Ukraine in May.

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