Ukraine allies under pressure to send warplanes
Western countries have only just approved sending battle tanks to Ukraine, but Kyiv is already requesting F-16 warplanes to help repel the Russian war.
While the United States has for now ruled that out, a few European nations appear more open to the idea.
US President Joe Biden on Monday appeared to draw the line on supplying American fighter jets to Kyiv.
“No,” he said when asked by reporters at the White House if he was in favour, though the next day he said he would talk to his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky about his latest requests for advanced weaponry.
In the early months of Russia’s war on Ukraine, Kyiv’s partners were reluctant to provide too much military aid, eager to avoid a more direct confrontation between the West and Russia.
But as the war grinds on, they have repeatedly given in to Ukraine’s appeals for more substantial weapons.
In December, Washington finally agreed to send its highperforming Patriot air defence missiles. In January, it announced it would also be sending Abrams battle tanks. After pressure from allies, Germany in January approved sending Leopard tanks to Kyiv — and said it would agree to requests from other European countries who wanted to send their own German-made Leopards.
Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said on Tuesday during a visit to France that his country was used to having its pleas for more equipment denied at first.
“For each initial request, we first have to fight against this ‘no’. (But) it means ‘no today’,” he said.
“Let me remind you that, with the German Leopard tank, it was ‘no’ at first. But now we have a coalition of tanks.”
Olivier Schmitt, a researcher at the Denmark-based Center for War Studies, said he did not think sending planes would escalate the conflict.