The Denver Post

Special military cell coordinate­s weapons, equipment for Ukraine

- By Eric Schmitt

STUTTGART, GERMANY » It takes a village to help Ukraine fight the Russians.

Consider a recent shipment of 105-millimeter howitzers. Britain donated the weapons, and New Zealand trained Ukrainian soldiers how to use them and provided spare parts. The United States supplied the ammunition and the vehicles to tow them and flew the load to a base near Ukraine’s border.

Choreograp­hing the sequence was the job of dozens of military logistics specialist­s ensconced in a large, secure attic room at the U.S. European Command headquarte­rs in Germany. The little-known group is playing a pivotal role in keeping the Ukrainian military armed and equipped as its battlefiel­d needs become more complicate­d.

Think of the cell as a cross between a wedding registry for bombs, bullets and rocket artillery, and a military version of Fedex. Uniformed officers from more than two dozen countries try to match Ukraine’s requests with donations from more than 40 nations then arrange to move the shipments by air, land or sea from the donor countries to Ukraine’s border for pickup — all within about 72 hours.

“The flow has been nonstop,” Rear Adm. R. Duke Heinz, the European Command’s chief logisticia­n, told a small group of reporters who visited the logistics hub last week.

As the 5-month-old war appears to be edging closer to a new phase — with Ukraine laying the groundwork for a major offensive in the country’s south — Ukrainian political leaders and commanders are pressing the United States and its other allies to accelerate and broaden the flow of arms and munitions.

“Ukraine needs the firepower and the ammunition to withstand its barrage and to strike back at the Russian weapons launching these attacks from inside Ukraine’s own territory,” Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said last week in Washington. “And so we understand the urgency, and we’re pushing hard to maintain and intensify the momentum of donations.”

More U.s.-supplied weapons like the High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or HIMARS, are at the top of Ukraine’s wish list. But so are armed drones and fighter jets. Gen. C.Q. Brown, the Air Force chief of staff, suggested last week that the United States or one of its European allies could send fighter jets to Ukraine in the coming weeks or months.

The United States recently said it would send four more M142 HIMARS to Ukraine, adding to the dozen mobile rocket launchers already in the field. Ukrainian soldiers have used them to destroy dozens of Russian command posts, air defense sites and ammunition depots, Ukrainian and U.S. officials say.

“This has significan­tly slowed down the Russian advance and dramatical­ly decreased the intensity of their artillery shelling,” Ukraine’s defense minister, Oleksii Reznikov, said in an online interview last week for the Atlantic Council, a Washington research group. “So it’s working.”

Heinz said the cell was trying to meet Ukraine’s demands for more weapons faster and acknowledg­ed that “if the roles were reversed, then the comments would be the same.”

The weapons distributi­on nerve cell, formally called the Internatio­nal Donor Coordinati­on Center, is where it happens. For such a high-profile mission, the room has a distinctly bare-bones feel. Officers sit at long folding tables, tapping on their laptops or conversing on phone headsets with colleagues in several languages.

Like much of Europe, which suffered through last week’s heat wave, the attic room has no air conditioni­ng. Just a few open ceiling windows offered a faint breeze.

The center started its round-the-clock operations in March, combining British and U.S. efforts to coordinate the flow of weapons and equipment. The process is straightfo­rward. Ukraine submits requests through a secure, classified database. Military officers peruse the online list to determine what their countries can donate without jeopardizi­ng their own national security. Nations also contribute training and transporta­tion. A Ukrainian three-star general working in the center answers questions and clarifies his country’s priorities.

The center can send a technical team — a military version of the Geek Squad — to check the condition of a donor’s potential contributi­on and help arrange the paperwork for its delivery. Once a match is approved, planners find the best way to deliver the shipment.

About 75% of the arms are sent to staging bases in Poland, where Ukrainian troops

pick up their cargo and take it back across the border. Heinz declined to identify two other neighborin­g countries where shipments are delivered, citing security concerns by those nations. The planners use different border crossings into Ukraine for weapons and for humanitari­an assistance, he said.

In nearly five months, the center has moved more than 78,000 tons of arms, munitions and equipment worth more than $10 billion, U.S. and Western military officials said.

The initial shipments of weapons, including Stinger anti-aircraft and Javelin anti-tank missiles, were flown into Poland and quickly shuttled across the border. But as larger, heavier and more complex weapons are donated, the military planners also send shipments by sea, rail and truck.

The center also arranges for Ukrainian solders to be trained on how to use and maintain the weapons, like the HIMARS, which requires at least two weeks of instructio­n, military officials said.

The United States has trained about 1,500 members of the Ukrainian military, largely in Germany. A group recently arrived in Britain to attend a new program that officials there say ultimately will train as many as 10,000 Ukrainian recruits in weaponry, patrol tactics, first aid and other skills.

When the Ukrainians run into a problem, “tele-repair” sites set up by the center can help keep equipment running and check the maintenanc­e status of weapons.

Shifting to this all-inclusive program of equipping, training and sustaining the flow of weapons and synchroniz­ing the shipments with training has posed growing challenges to the coordinati­on center.

“It’s definitely a more complex task,” said Brig. Gen. Christophe­r King, the top British officer in the center. “They are very easy to train and very committed.”

For now, senior officials say the allies are standing firm behind Ukraine’s fight.

“The goal is for Ukraine to win the right to defend the sovereignt­y of their country and to regain that ground,” said Heinz, an Afghan and Iraq war veteran.

“I can’t define what winning looks like for the Ukrainians,” he said, adding that was up to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people. “The United States and our allies and partners are in it until he tells us he doesn’t need any more help.”

 ?? Ivor Prickett, © The New York Times Co. ?? Ukrainian soldiers prepare to fire an American-supplied M777 155-millimeter howitzer at Russian positions in the Donetsk region in May. A little-known group at U.S. European Command in Germany fills Ukraine’s battlefiel­d requests with donations from more than 40 countries.
Ivor Prickett, © The New York Times Co. Ukrainian soldiers prepare to fire an American-supplied M777 155-millimeter howitzer at Russian positions in the Donetsk region in May. A little-known group at U.S. European Command in Germany fills Ukraine’s battlefiel­d requests with donations from more than 40 countries.
 ?? Doug Mills, © The New York Times Co. ?? President Joe Biden greets employees in May at a Lockheed Martin facility in Troy, Ala., that manufactur­es weapon systems, including Javelin antitank missiles, foreground.
Doug Mills, © The New York Times Co. President Joe Biden greets employees in May at a Lockheed Martin facility in Troy, Ala., that manufactur­es weapon systems, including Javelin antitank missiles, foreground.

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