The Commercial Appeal

Baltic nations to ship US arms to Ukraine

- Jari Tanner

HELSINKI – The Baltic nations of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania will send U.s.-made anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to Ukraine in a move the Biden administra­tion said it is fully endorsing amid Kyiv’s escalating tensions with Russia.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a tweet posted on Saturday that the administra­tion saluted the three NATO nations and former Soviet republics “for their longstandi­ng support to Ukraine.”

“I expedited and authorized and we fully endorse transfers of defensive equipment @NATO Allies Estonia Latvia Lithuania are providing to Ukraine to strengthen its ability to defend itself against Russia’s unprovoked and irresponsi­ble aggression,” Blinken said in another tweet.

Dmitry Peskov, spokespers­on for Russian President Vladimir Putin, earlier this past week described western arms supplies to Ukraine as extremely dangerous and said they “do nothing to reduce tensions.”

Moscow has massed tens of thousands of troops at the border with Ukraine, leading to fears of an invasion. The West has rejected Moscow’s main demands – promises from NATO that Ukraine will never be added as a member, that no alliance weapons will be deployed near Russian borders, and that it will pull back its forces from Central and Eastern Europe.

A meeting Friday between Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov ended with no breakthrou­gh.

In a joint statement published late Friday, the defense ministers of the three Baltic states said that they “stand united in our commitment to Ukraine’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity in face of continued Russian aggression.”

They said Estonia would provide Ukraine with Javelin anti-tank weapons and Latvia and Lithuania were sending Stinger anti-aircraft missiles and other related equipment to bolster Kyiv’s defensive military capabiliti­es.

“Today Ukraine is at the forefront of separating Europe from the military conflict with Russia. Let’s face it – the war in Ukraine is ongoing and it is important to support Ukraine in every way we can so that they can resist the aggressor,” said Kalle Laanet, Estonia’s minister of defense.

Estonia also is seeking Germany’s approval to send Soviet-made howitzers, which once belonged to East Germany, to Ukraine. Estonia acquired the howitzers from NON-NATO member Finland, which in turn had bought them from Germany’s military surplus supply in the 1990s.

The German government said Friday that it was considerin­g Estonia’s request to pass the howitzers on to Ukraine but gave no timeline for a decision. Berlin said it planned to coordinate the issue with Finland, which has received a similar approval request from Estonia.

Berlin routinely demands a say when German-sold weapons are transferre­d to third countries. But some recent media reports suggested German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Cabinet could block Estonia’s transfer of weapons to Kyiv, highlighti­ng divisions in the West’s response to the Ukraine crisis.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba alleged Saturday that Germany was not showing adequate support for Ukraine.

 ?? ANDRIY DUBCHAK/AP ?? Ukrainian soldiers stand at a checkpoint in Mariupol on Friday close to the line of separation from pro-russian rebels in the Donetsk region of Ukraine.
ANDRIY DUBCHAK/AP Ukrainian soldiers stand at a checkpoint in Mariupol on Friday close to the line of separation from pro-russian rebels in the Donetsk region of Ukraine.

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