Times-Herald

Pressure on U.S. to give more intelligen­ce on Russia to Ukraine

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden has called Russia's war on Ukraine a genocide and accused Vladimir Putin of committing war crimes. But his administra­tion has struggled with how much intelligen­ce it is willing to give the Ukrainian forces that are trying to stop the Russian leader.

Since the war began in late February, the Biden administra­tion has made multiple changes to a classified directive that governs what U.S. agencies are supposed to share with Ukraine. Much of what the United States collects is shared; some is not. Where the line is drawn depends on protecting the sources and methods of the intelligen­ce, but also trying to limit the risk of escalation with a nuclear-armed Russia.

The latest changes occurred last week when U.S. intelligen­ce officials lifted some geographic limits on the transfer of actionable informatio­n — the kind of informatio­n used in minute-by-minute decisions on the battlefiel­d. According to several people familiar with the issue who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss classified matters, officials removed language that had caused delays and meant limits on specific locations of targets in parts of eastern Ukraine.

The shifts in the intelligen­ce rules reflect the administra­tion's changing calculatio­ns of what Putin might consider escalatory. The U.S. is also trying to step up support to Ukrainian forces that have surprised much of the world in how they have held back Russia but remain undermanne­d and outgunned. The Pentagon this week also announced $800 million in new military assistance that could include more powerful weapons and defensive equipment.

Some people familiar with the directive say there is ambiguity about the new limits. One question is whether the U.S. would delay or limit informatio­n about a possible Russian target in areas internatio­nally recognized as Ukrainian territory but that Moscow or its proxies controlled before the war, including the Crimean Peninsula and parts of the Donbas. U.S. personnel have at times limited intelligen­ce that they believed Ukrainian forces could use to retake previously lost territory.

The directive still limits informatio­n given to Ukrainians about forces in Russia or neighborin­g Belarus, where Russian forces have staged and previously attacked from Ukraine's north.

"We are intensely sharing timely intelligen­ce with the Ukrainians to help them defend themselves throughout their country, including in areas held by Russia before the 2022 invasion," said one U.S. intelligen­ce official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the classified directive. The Wall Street Journal first reported the directive had been changed.

Another U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligen­ce matters said the administra­tion was "providing detailed, timely intelligen­ce to the Ukrainians on a range of fronts."

A letter sent Monday by Republican­s on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee — after the new guidance — urges Avril Haines, the director of national intelligen­ce, to "proactivel­y share intelligen­ce with the Ukrainians to help them protect, defend, and retake every inch of Ukraine's sovereign territory, which includes Crimea and the Donbas."

The senators said they "remain deeply concerned that not enough is being done to share critical intelligen­ce that would assist the Ukrainians as Russian forces move to secure territory in the southern and eastern parts of the country."

Unlike a Feb. 9 letter to Biden urging intelligen­ce sharing "to the fullest extent possible," Democrats on the committee did not join this week's letter, reflecting apparent divisions in how members view the administra­tion's current guidance.

The White House insists it is providing informatio­n in line with Ukraine's current goals. Analysts say the war is shifting from a conflict fought across the country to a stronger focus on the southern and eastern parts of Ukraine that Russia has seized or attacked recently. One expected point of focus is the strategic port city of Mariupol, whose mayor says more than 10,000 civilians have been killed in the Russian siege.

In addition to its own intelligen­ce capabiliti­es, Ukraine relies on U.S. and Western support to help it plan and repel attacks. Before and during the war, the U.S. has publicly and privately shared intelligen­ce about what it believes are Putin's battle plans in the hopes of undercutti­ng Russia and building support for a forceful Western response.

Lawmakers from both parties have spoken broadly about the limits since the Russian invasion.

Rep. Adam Smith, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a television interview in March that the White House was holding back some real-time intelligen­ce "because that steps over the line to making us participat­ing in the war." A spokespers­on for Smith, D-Wash., declined an interview request Wednesday.

 ?? Submitted Photo ?? This picture was taken on St. Francis County Road 3663 where a culvert was washed out by the heavy rainfall the area received Wednesday. St. Francis County Judge Gary Hughes said crews are assessing the areas that received damages and making plans for repairs.
Submitted Photo This picture was taken on St. Francis County Road 3663 where a culvert was washed out by the heavy rainfall the area received Wednesday. St. Francis County Judge Gary Hughes said crews are assessing the areas that received damages and making plans for repairs.
 ?? Katie West • Times-Herald ?? The thundersto­rms that moved through the area Wednesday caused mainly flooding problems, but some damage was also reported. The high winds flipped this structure in the Forrest Hills neighborho­od near Highway 1.
Katie West • Times-Herald The thundersto­rms that moved through the area Wednesday caused mainly flooding problems, but some damage was also reported. The high winds flipped this structure in the Forrest Hills neighborho­od near Highway 1.

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