The Denver Post

Putin says bases hosting F-16s for Ukraine could be targets

- By Illia Novikov and Barry Hatton

KYIV, UKRAINE>> Russian President Vladimir Putin scoffed at the possibilit­y of his country launching an attack on a NATO member, calling it “sheer nonsense,” but he warned that any Western air base hosting U.s.-made F-16 fighter jets that are slated for deployment in Ukraine would be a “legitimate target” for the Kremlin’s forces.

“Their statements about our alleged intention to attack Europe after Ukraine is sheer nonsense,” Putin said late Wednesday, referring to warnings in the U.S. and Western Europe that Russia could turn its sights on other countries unless it’s stopped.

He noted that the U.S. defense budget is more than 10 times higher than Russia’s.

“In view of that, are we going to wage a war against NATO? It’s ravings,” he told military pilots during a visit to an air base.

Ukraine is awaiting the delivery of F-16s, which will increase military pressure on Russia, from its Western partners. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said last year that 42 F-16s had been promised. Ukrainian pilots have been training in the West for months on how to fly the warplanes.

The F-16s require a high standard of runways and reinforced hangars to protect them from bombing attacks when they are on the ground.

It’s not clear how many Ukrainian air bases can meet those requiremen­ts, and Russia quickly would target a few that could accommodat­e them once the jets arrive.

Putin warned Ukraine’s Western allies against providing air bases in their countries from where the F-16s could launch sorties against the Kremlin’s forces. Those bases would become a “legitimate target,” he said.

“F-16s are capable of carrying nuclear weapons, and we will also need to take that into account while organizing our combat operations,” Putin added.

Military analysts have said the arrival of F-16s won’t be a game-changer in view of Russia’s massive air force and sophistica­ted air defense systems, although Ukrainian officials have welcomed them as an opportunit­y to hit back at Russia’s air dominance.

Putin insisted the F-16s “won’t change the situation on the battlefiel­d.”

“We will destroy their warplanes just as we destroy their tanks, armored vehicles and other equipment, including multiple rocket launchers,” he said.

F-16s can be used to bolster Ukraine’s capability to target Russian facilities with long-range missile strikes.

Ukraine’s counteroff­ensive last year came up short in part because it took place without air cover, placing its troops at the mercy of Russian aviation and artillery.

Russia has maintained air dominance in the war with Ukraine, although the provision of sophistica­ted Western air defense systems has forced Russian warplanes to avoid Ukrainian skies and launch attacks while remaining over Russia-controlled territory.

On Thursday, a Russian fighter jet crashed into the Black Sea off the Russia-occupied Crimean Peninsula, Sevastopol Gov. Mikhail Razvozhaye­v said. The pilot

ejected and was recovered by rescue teams about 200 meters from shore, he said. Razvozhaye­v provided no details about the possible cause of the crash.

The Kremlin has a battlefiel­d edge in weapons and troops, yielding recent incrementa­l gains at points on the around 620-mile front line, as Kyiv awaits more promised Western military support and mulls a broader mobilizati­on.

Russia fired salvos of drones and missiles overnight at southern and eastern regions of Ukraine, authoritie­s said Thursday, wounding more than a dozen people as the Kremlin’s forces persevered with attritiona­l attacks designed to wear down Ukrainian defenses.

Air defense systems intercepte­d 26 of 28 Shahed drones, Ukraine’s air force said. Russian forces also launched five missiles overnight, it said.

The regular bombardmen­t of Ukraine by the Kremlin’s forces during the war recently has gained momentum, with missile barrages of the capital, Kyiv, and strikes on energy facilities across the country.

The attacks also aim to weaken Ukrainian morale

and act as retributio­n for Ukrainian long-range strikes on Russian soil.

One of Russia’s goals is to “deplete Ukraine’s inventory of ground-based air defense,” according to a recent military assessment published by the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

That would erode some of Ukraine’s combat ability as it waits on pledged but delayed military support from the West, including ammunition for its artillery and air defenses.

“Kyiv is confronted by the threat that an attritiona­l war in the air domain will increasing­ly favor Russia without adequate support from the U.S. and its allies,” the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies said. “Ukraine’s ability to continue to counter Russian air threats and impose costs on the Russian Aerospace Forces remains important to the outcome of the war.”

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and Defense Minister Rustan Umerov pleaded with foreign allies Thursday to send more air defense systems and missiles.

The Ukrainian Mission to NATO said it convened

an extraordin­ary ambassador-level meeting of the Nato-ukraine Council at the alliance’s headquarte­rs Thursday in response to Russia’s missile attacks on critical infrastruc­ture.

“Ukraine urgently requires more air defense and intercepto­rs,” especially Patriot systems that can intercept ballistic missiles, Kuleba said in a video posted on X, formerly Twitter.

Ukraine is the only country in the world targeted by ballistic missiles almost daily, he said.

Authoritie­s in the Mykolaiv region, near the Black Sea in southern Ukraine, said 12 people were wounded and six residentia­l buildings were damaged in a Russian strike with a ballistic missile on the city Wednesday.

In an overnight attack on the southern Ukraine region of Zaporizhzh­ia, Shahed drones struck a residentia­l area, wounding two women ages 72 and 74, according to regional Gov. Ivan Fedorov. Rescue services said seven buildings were damaged.

The Black Sea city of Odesa repelled three missile and drone attacks, officials said.

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