Bangkok Post

US intel ‘helped target generals’

Attacks kill a dozen Russian commanders

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WASHINGTON: Intelligen­ce provided by the United States has helped the Ukrainian military target several Russian generals since Moscow’s invasion, the New York Times reported on Wednesday.

Citing multiple senior US officials, the newspaper said that of the approximat­ely dozen Russian generals killed by Ukrainian forces, “many” had been targeted with the help of US intelligen­ce.

The US National Security Council slammed the assertion that the United States was helping Ukraine kill Russian generals as “irresponsi­ble”.

“The United States provides battlefiel­d intelligen­ce to help the Ukrainians defend their country,” NSC spokespers­on Adrienne Watson told AFP in an email.

“We do not provide intelligen­ce with the intent to kill Russian generals.”

The heavy loss of high-ranking Russian military officers has stunned Western security officials, who last confirmed an official tally of seven generals in late March, though Ukraine has since announced more.

In March, Western officials had cited low morale as a reason Russian generals would be so close to the front.

They also pointed to potential communicat­ions and logistics issues on the Russian side, which could lead senior officers to use unencrypte­d channels and expose themselves to Ukrainian forces.

But the report by the New York Times points to direct assistance from the United States and other Western intelligen­ce services as a major factor in the Ukrainian success.

The daily said the United States had provided details on the Russian military’s mobile headquarte­rs, which frequently change location, and that Ukrainian forces used that informatio­n in tandem with their own to conduct attacks on senior Russian officers.

US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has kept the military intelligen­ce it is providing to Ukraine under wraps out of concern it could compromise its sources as well as be taken as a sign by Russia of direct hostility.

Earlier in the conflict, the Pentagon was similarly cautious about noting that only “defensive” weapons and equipment were being provided to Ukraine.

But it has since announced shipments of offensive weapons like heavy artillery, helicopter­s and attack drones.

It has also talked of training Ukrainian troops, including in Germany, to use the weapons they are receiving.

And instead of saying, as it did in February, that it wants only to help Ukraine survive, Washington now says its goal in the war is to debilitate Russia for the long term.

“We want to see Russia weakened to the degree that it can’t do the kinds of things that it has done in invading Ukraine,” US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin said after a visit to Kyiv in late last month.

The Pentagon did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment on the report.

 ?? NYT ?? A Ukrainian soldier looks over the wreck of a Russian tank that became stuck in the mud near the village of Zavorychi, Ukraine on April 5.
NYT A Ukrainian soldier looks over the wreck of a Russian tank that became stuck in the mud near the village of Zavorychi, Ukraine on April 5.

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