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regular-article-logo Thursday, 16 May 2024

Russia-Ukraine war enters its third year, military aid from West key to Kyiv's victory

With Ukrainian forces on the back foot, short of ammunition and forced to retreat in some areas, Kyiv’s ability to repel Russia’s invasion depends heavily on western military, financial and political backing

Reuters Brussels Published 25.02.24, 11:55 AM
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy File picture

As the war in Ukraine enters its third year, the conflict will be determined not just on the battlefield but also in western capitals and other places far from the front lines.

With Ukrainian forces on the back foot, short of ammunition and forced to retreat in some areas, Kyiv’s ability to repel Russia’s invasion depends heavily on western military, financial and political backing.

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Here are some of the factors that may influence western support for Ukraine in the year ahead:

US aid package

A bill stuck in the US Congress that includes some $60 billion in aid for Ukraine — much of it military — is vital for Kyiv’s forces, western and Ukrainian officials say.

“Every week we wait means that there will be more people killed on the frontline in Ukraine,” Nato boss Jens Stoltenberg told a major security conference in Munich last weekend.

The US Senate passed the bill, which also includes aid for Israel and Taiwan, on February 13.

But it faces strong resistance from Republicans close to former President Donald Trump in the House of Representatives. House Speaker Mike Johnson has resisted pressure from the White House to call a vote on the bill.

Ammunition supply

Much of the war has descended into grinding artillery battles, with both sides firing thousands of shells every day.

Ukraine could fire more shells than Russia for much of 2023 but the tables have turned as Moscow has ramped up production and imported rounds from North Korea and Iran, analysts say.

Michael Kofman, a researcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a Washington-based think-tank, estimates Russian artillery is firing at five times the rate of Ukraine’s.

A vital factor for Kyiv this year will be “whether western partners can catch up to Russian artillery production and supply Ukraine with the shells and barrels they need”, said Prof. Justin Bronk, a researcher at British defence think tank RUSI.

Weapons decisions

Ukrainian leaders have also been pushing their western counterparts to deliver new weapons systems, above all longer-range missiles to strike further behind Russian lines such as US ATACMS and Germany’s Taurus.

“We can’t increase the production of ammunition overnight. But we can take decisions immediately to deliver to the Ukrainians weapons they really need,” said former Nato boss Anders Fogh Rasmussen, a close ally of the Ukrainian government.

The US has supplied only older, medium-range ATACMS but the Biden administration is now working towards delivering newer longer-range weaponry. However, any such move may depend on approval of the aid bill currently held up by the House.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has resisted entreaties from Kyiv and some Nato allies to supply the highly advanced Taurus system. German officials have cited concerns that the missiles could escalate the war inside Russian territory and could be seen as more direct German involvement in the conflict.

Gaza war

The war in Gaza, triggered by the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel, means western leaders have had less time and political energy to devote to Ukraine. If it deteriorates further or escalates into a regional war, that will be even more the case.

Also, leaders in the Global South have accused the West of double standards over its attitudes to the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, making it more difficult for Kyiv and its allies to rally support for a summit in support of Ukraine’s peace blueprint. “Russia is definitely benefiting from those developments,” said Vsevolod Chentsov, Ukraine’s ambassador to the EU.

“We work with the Global South, we try to engage them as much as possible in our efforts ... We keep working on that, it’s a difficult issue.”

Nato summit

The summit may not directly affect the battlefield but could affect the political mood and morale in Ukraine.

Ukraine and some of its supporters continue to push Nato to invite Kyiv to join the military alliance — whose members pledge to treat an attack on one of them as an attack on all — or at least bring the country closer to membership.

But the US, Nato’s predominant power, and Germany are among those resisting such a step, arguing it could draw the alliance closer to a direct conflict with Russia, diplomats say.

American elections

Trump was a fierce critic of Nato as President, repeatedly threatening to pull out of the alliance. He cut defence funding to Nato and frequently said that the US was paying more than its fair share.

On Russia’s war in Ukraine, Trump has called for de-escalation and complained about the billions spent so far, although he has put forward few tangible policy proposals.

President Joe Biden, 81, made the controversial decision to run for a second term in large part because he was convinced he would face Trump, 77.

But public opinion polls show him tied with Trump and Americans continue to worry about high prices and question his age, his economic plans and his policies on the border and in West Asia.

Reuters

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