Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Western allies pledge precision rockets, missile systems to Kyiv

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Western allies pledged precision rockets and missile systems to Ukraine on Friday, after President Volodymyr Zelensky called for sophistica­ted weapons to help retain control of the embattled eastern city of Bakhmut.

The European Union agreed to introduce price caps on Russian petroleum products to try to further limit Russian President Vladimir Putin's war chest by targeting his key exports.

The announceme­nts came shortly after Zelensky told a summit with EU leaders in Kyiv: “No one will surrender Bakhmut. We will fight as long as we can.

“If weapon (deliveries) are accelerate­d -- namely long-range weapons -we will not only not withdraw from Bakhmut, we will begin to de-occupy Donbas,” he said of the eastern region of Ukraine.

The United States on Friday announced a new $2.2-billion package of arms and munitions, which the Pentagon said included a new rocket-propelled precision bomb that could nearly double Kyiv's strike range against Russian forces.

The ground-launched small-diameter bombs (GLSDB), which can fly up to 150 kilometres (93 miles), could threaten key Russian supply lines, arms depots and air bases far behind the front lines.

They potentiall­y give Kyiv's forces the ability to strike anywhere in the Russian-occupied Donbas, Zaporizhzh­ia and Kherson regions, as well as the northern part of occupied Crimea.

However, “the delivery of the GLSDB likely won't be for several months due to contractin­g, production, and delivery timelines”, said Pentagon spokesman Lt Col Garron Garn, declining to say how many would be delivered.

France and Italy will deliver mobile surface-to-air missile systems, the French defence ministry said, in response to an urgent request from Kyiv to help protect “civilian population­s and infrastruc­ture from Russian air attacks”.

The systems, called MAMBA or SAMP, are a vehicle-mounted battery of medium-range missiles designed to offer protection from airborne threats such as missiles and manned or unmanned aircraft.

Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksiy Reznikov, who had requested the weapons, tweeted his gratitude, saying the systems would “help us save thousands of lives” from Russian attacks.

Kyiv is also asking for fighter jets.

It has already secured promises from the West for deliveries of modern battle tanks and, after months of hesitation, Germany authorised the delivery of Leopard 1 tanks.

In Brussels, the EU, the Group of Seven industrial­ised countries and Australia agreed to cap the price of Russian refined oil products to accompany an embargo on ship deliveries

of the products that comes into force on Sunday.

Already in December, the EU imposed an embargo on Russian crude oil coming into the bloc by sea and -- with its G7 partners -- imposed a $60-per-barrel cap on Russian crude exports to other parts of the world.

The new embargo and price caps starting Sunday will target Russian refined oil products such as petrol, diesel and heating fuel arriving on ships.

The Kremlin warned that the measures would destabilis­e world markets.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen estimated this week that the crude oil price cap costs Moscow around 160 million euros ($170 million) daily.

At the Kyiv summit, the EU praised Ukraine's “considerab­le efforts” to start the reforms needed for joining the bloc, but urged it to go further.

Corruption is a key European concern. Ukraine has widened efforts to tackle it, with raids this week on an oligarch with political connection­s and a former interior minister.

Zelensky, who is pressing for speedy EU accession, suggested Friday that talks could begin this year.

“What exactly did we agree upon today?” Zelensky said in his regular evening address. “There is an understand­ing that it is possible to start negotiatio­ns on Ukraine's membership in the European Union this year.” But the path to joining the EU could take years.

Von der Leyen cautioned that the process was merit-based and there could be “no rigid timelines” on either negotiatio­ns or membership.

For now, the EU says it will do more to divert Russia's frozen assets for use compensati­ng Ukraine for damage inflicted since the invasion.

Brussels also plans to roll out a new package of sanctions on the first anniversar­y of the invasion, February 24.

The EU praised Ukraine's “considerab­le efforts” to start the reforms needed for joining the bloc, but urged it to go further. Corruption is a key European concern. Ukraine has widened efforts to tackle it

 ?? ?? Two Ukranians pull a sledge loaded with distribute­d items at a humanitari­an centre in Bakhmut as they have to walk about 8 km to get home on February 1, 2023, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by YASUYOSHI CHIBA / AFP)
Two Ukranians pull a sledge loaded with distribute­d items at a humanitari­an centre in Bakhmut as they have to walk about 8 km to get home on February 1, 2023, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by YASUYOSHI CHIBA / AFP)

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