CBC Edition

Ukrainian MP calls on Canada to step up its game on weapons shipments

- Murray Brewster

Inna Sovsun, a member of the Ukrainian parliament, checks in with her boyfriend every morning to make sure he's still alive.

He's fighting with Ukrain‐ ian forces somewhere in the east of the embattled coun‐ try. Sovsun said she can't un‐ derstand why Canada has not agreed to ship her country more armoured vehicles, in addition to what has been promised and provided al‐ ready.

Her criticism is one of the first public rebukes Canada has heard from a Ukrainian official since the start of major hostilitie­s with Russia last win‐ ter.

"He's fighting there and he's risking his life every single day," Sovsun said in an inter‐ view broadcast Saturday on

CBC Radio's The House.

"The risk to his life, as well as to [the] lives of thousands of other Ukrainians, would be much, much lower if we had the armoured vehicles, if we had the tanks."

In a letter to his Canadian counterpar­t last month, Ukraine's defence minister asked for more combat vehi‐ cles over and above the 39 ar‐ moured troop carriers and eight lightly armoured Roshel tactical vehicles that Canada has either promised or deliv‐ ered.

When Defence Minister Anita Anand announced this week an additional $47 million in military aid for Ukraine, she made no mention of addition‐ al combat vehicles or the howitzers the Ukrainians also requested.

"Not making decisions on the armoured vehicles, on the tanks that could be protect‐ ing our military personnel, it [is] just unexplaina­ble," said Sovsun, a sitting MP with the liberal, pro-European Holos party. She is also a member of the Ukrainian parliament's en‐ ergy committee.

"There are no good rea‐ sons for that and I want to hear an explanatio­n as to why this is taking place."

'I really hope that Cana‐ da will reconsider'

She said she's also not hearing straight answers from other countries, including Germany and the United States, which have similar but much larger inventorie­s. She said that in conversati­ons with foreign lawmakers, she has heard that Ukraine's allies are afraid of escalating their confrontat­ion with Russia.

"You know, it is escalated enough already," Sovsun said. "What we need to do is to free our land from the Russians and we cannot do that unless we get the weapons that we are asking for. So I really hope that Canada will reconsider."

She said she was in Kyiv early last week when Russia unleashed a stepped-up cam‐ paign of air bombardmen­t with cruise missiles and Iran‐ ian-made drones.

Sovsun said she and her 10-year-old son hid in the win‐ dowless bathroom of their home while the bombs fell. At one point, she said, the boy asked her if he was going to die.

As they huddled listen‐ ing to the explosions, she said, her son also asked her it was a convention­al or nuclear detonation.

"And I said, 'It's a regular one,'" she said. "And then he said, 'Oh, OK, because you know, I know what to do in case of [a] nuclear attack be‐ cause we learned that at school.'

"That is something I will never forgive Russians for, for my son knowing what to do in case of [a] nuclear attack."

In response to Sovsun's re‐ marks, the defence minister's office underlined Cana‐ da's previous promises and deliveries of armoured vehi‐ cles.

DND reluctant to draw further from inventorie­s

In a media statement, Anand said Canada "is explor‐ ing a variety of options to continue providing Ukraine with the comprehens­ive mili‐ tary assistance that it is specifical­ly requesting."

Beyond the troop carriers, howitzers and antitank weapons Canada has provided already, the Depart‐ ment of National Defence and the Canadian Army have re‐ sisted dipping further in‐ to current inventorie­s of mili‐ tary equipment. Canada's mil‐ itary fears getting caught short in the event it is asked to confront Russia directly.

Speaking this week at the regular meeting of NATO de‐ fence ministers, Anand seemed to have heard and understood that concern.

"It is not sufficient for the Government of Canada to continue to draw down on the inventory of the Canadian Armed Forces," she said.

The meeting this week in Brussels was devoted partly to allies convincing defence contractor­s to ramp up pro‐ duction.

"Each country needs to leverage their own respective expertise, and in Canada, our expertise is in the area of [ar‐ moured] vehicles, is in the area of cameras for drones, is in the area of garments and winter clothing that we know well, given our own climate," Anand said.

"We will continue to lever‐ age and exploit our areas of expertise to provide Ukraine [with] whatever it needs to fight and win this war."

A report tabled before Par‐ liament recently showed the defence department did an inventory of its used ar‐ moured vehicles that might be of use to Ukraine. That re‐ port — contained in a re‐ sponse to a written question tabled in the House of Com‐ mons — said most of the de‐ commission­ed equipment was not suitable for transfer.

It did identify 62 Coyote reconnaiss­ance vehicles "in repairable condition, but [they] would require signifi‐ cant repairs and parts which would take over 220 days to procure."

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