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Mattis vows support for Ukraine against Russia

- By W.J. Hennigan Washington Bureau Washington Bureau’s Tracy Wilkinson contribute­d. william.hennigan@latimes.com

KIEV, Ukraine — Defense Secretary Jim Mattis condemned Russia’s attempts to “redraw internatio­nal borders by force” and pledged support for Ukraine on Thursday but stopped short of promising U.S. weapons for Ukraine’s fight against pro-Russia separatist­s.

Mattis is the first Pentagon chief in a decade to visit Ukraine, which has been on the front lines of Russian aggression since Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014 and began supporting armed insurgents in eastern Ukraine.

Deliberati­ons in the Trump administra­tion have heated up in recent months over whether to provide lethal defensive weapons, such as Javelin antitank missiles, to Ukrainian forces that are battling the separatist insurgency.

The debate has been awkward for President Donald Trump, who faces multiple investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election and possible collusion between Moscow and his campaign.

Washington has no treaty obligation­s with Ukraine and the Obama administra­tion gave nonlethal military aid to the government in Kiev. It also shared intelligen­ce and posted U.S. troops to the Lviv region in western Ukraine, far from the conflict zone, to train Ukrainian soldiers.

Critics fear sending sophistica­ted U.S. arms to a low-level conflict on Russia’s border would worsen Washington’s already precarious relations with Moscow.

Those who support sending arms argue that the war has been prolonged because the U.S. has not provided stronger support.

Senior Defense and State Department officials have privately supported proposals to supply more lethal weapons, according to U.S. officials, but the White House has yet to make a decision.

Standing beside Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko at the presidenti­al building in Kiev, Mattis indicated he was in favor of stepping up military aid, but he stopped short of committing to it.

Mattis said he doesn’t consider providing defensive weapons to be controvers­ial because Ukraine is fighting a foreign enemy in defense of its sovereign borders.

“Defensive weapons are not provocativ­e unless you’re an aggressor, and clearly Ukraine is not an aggressor since it’s their territory where the fighting is happening,” he said.

Mattis declined to reveal his advice to Trump on the issue, saying, “I owe him some confidenti­ality on that.”

Washington has provided Ukrainian forces with about $750 million in nonlethal materiel since November 2015, including small reconnaiss­ance drones, Humvees, and night-vision goggles, according to the Pentagon.

Poroshenko said Thursday that he was grateful for the U.S. assistance, but that further aid would apply greater pressure on Moscow and deter Russian forces from further incursions.

“Having discussion­s about lethal weapons would increase the price if Russia made the decision to attack my troops and my territory,” he said.

Poroshenko met with Trump at the White House in June. The administra­tion subsequent­ly announced additional financial sanctions on Russians involved in supporting the secessioni­sts in Ukraine.

Ukraine aspires to join Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and other former Soviet bloc nations in the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on. But Russian President Vladimir Putin is strongly opposed to further expansion of the military alliance that originally was created to counter the Soviet Union.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson already has visited Kiev to show support. On Thursday, the 26th anniversar­y of Ukraine’s independen­ce from the former Soviet Union, he expressed U.S. backing for the beleaguere­d country.

 ?? MIKHAIL PALINCHAK/EPA ?? Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, left, speaks at a news conference with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.
MIKHAIL PALINCHAK/EPA Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, left, speaks at a news conference with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.

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