The Denver Post

New arms for Ukraine will help, for a little while

- By Constant Méheut

KYIV, UKRAINE>> The $300 million in new weaponry that the United States is sending to Ukraine, the first American military aid package in months, will help Ukraine hold off Russian troops for a few weeks, analysts say, but it will not change the overall situation on the battlefiel­d, where Moscow has the advantage.

Ukraine long has said it would lose more ground to Russia unless it received more weapons and ammunition, but a robust $60 billion aid package has been bottled up in the House for months by conservati­ve Republican lawmakers. That has left front-line Ukrainian troops vulnerable to long-distance glide bombs dropped from Russian aircraft and intense artillery attacks.

Here’s a look at the current situation.

What did the U.S. promise, and will it make a difference?

American military support for Ukraine dried up in late December, and the White House has been looking ever since for ways to circumvent the logjam in the House. The new package, announced Tuesday, does that by drawing on cost savings in Pentagon contracts.

The package will provide Ukraine with an array of desperatel­y needed weapons. These include Stinger missiles to target aircraft, which Russia increasing­ly has used to support ground assaults, artillery rounds to keep attacking Russian troops at bay and anti-tank weapons to repel mechanized assaults.

“This ammunition will keep Ukraine’s guns firing for a period, but only a short period,” said Jake Sullivan, the U.S. national security adviser. “It is nowhere near enough to meet Ukraine’s battlefiel­d needs, and it will not prevent Ukraine from running out of ammunition.”

The $300 million of military aid announced Tuesday pales in comparison to previous multibilli­on-dollar packages sent by the United States.

“These are sums that are spent in a matter of weeks,” said Serhii Kuzan, chairman of the Ukrainian Security and Cooperatio­n Center, a nongovernm­ental research group. He added that the impact of the new package would be minimal.

What other aid is coming?

With additional American aid now in doubt, European leaders have been scrambling to offer more support to Ukraine and respond to its most pressing needs.

Most recently, the Czech Republic began an initiative to scour the world for available shells, buy them and send them to Ukraine. Prague has located 800,000 artillery rounds, and it said last week that it had raised enough funding from European allies to purchase a first batch of 300,000.

Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraine’s foreign minister, said Wednesday that the first batch would arrive “in the foreseeabl­e future.” He added that Ukraine was working with allies on two similar initiative­s.

This week, the European Union worked out a complex deal that will provide more than $5 billion in additional military aid to Ukraine, provided it gains the expected approval at a meeting of the bloc’s foreign ministers Monday.

Other European countries recently have pledged military aid that exceeds the latest U.S. package. Denmark, for example, announced Tuesday that it would send $340 million of Caesar longrange cannons, mortars and ammunition.

Still it is unlikely that Europe will be able to replace the United States as the guarantor of Ukraine’s war-fighting capability, mainly because it has struggled to ramp up weapons production.

The European Union promised last year to deliver 1 million artillery shells to Ukraine by this month. But it so far has delivered only half that number because of a lack of production capacity.

The Kiel Institute for the

World Economy, a research organizati­on, said that by mid-january the military aid allocated by EU members and institutio­ns totaled $36 billion, about $10 billion less than aid from the United States. To fully replace American military assistance this year, the institute said, Europe would have “to double its current level and pace of arms assistance.”

How is the Ukrainian army coping with the limited aid?

Ukraine is struggling to contain Russian attacks all along the more than 600-mile front line, in large part because of a shortage of ammunition.

Military analysts Franz-stefan Gady and Michael Kofman wrote in a research paper last month that “Kyiv will need around 75,000-90,000 artillery shells per month to sustain the war defensivel­y, and more than double that — 200,000-250,000 — for a major offensive.”

But Ukraine is unable to fire more than 2,000 shells a day, or about 60,000 per month, according to Jack Watling, an analyst from the Royal United Services Institute of London. Ukrainian soldiers and commanders have said they are forced to ration shells, making it harder to push back the Russian advance.

“We’ve had difficulti­es due to the lack of artillery ammunition, anti-aircraft defense, long-range weapons and the density of Russian drones,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine told the French news media Monday.

The Ukrainian military said last week that it aims to reclaim the initiative on the battlefiel­d and conduct a counteroff­ensive this year. But much will depend on the arms it receives from its Western partners.

Seth G. Jones, an analyst at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, said the latest U.S. military aid package would be helpful for Ukraine’s defense operations. But he added that “if the Ukrainian objectives are to actually take back territory, this is not what the Ukrainians need.”

 ?? TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ukrainian troops patrol outside Bakhmut, Ukraine, in January. The $300million of new weaponry that the United States is sending to Ukraine, the first American military aid package in months, will help the Ukrainian military hold off Russian troops for a few weeks, analysts say.
TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Ukrainian troops patrol outside Bakhmut, Ukraine, in January. The $300million of new weaponry that the United States is sending to Ukraine, the first American military aid package in months, will help the Ukrainian military hold off Russian troops for a few weeks, analysts say.

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