Ukraine's Zelensky ups pressure for more Western weapons

    • Western allies have provided Ukraine with more and more sophisticated weaponry throughout the nearly year-old war, albeit often with fear of antagonising and getting into a full-blown war with nuclear-armed Russia.
    • Western allies have provided Ukraine with more and more sophisticated weaponry throughout the nearly year-old war, albeit often with fear of antagonising and getting into a full-blown war with nuclear-armed Russia. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Thu, Jan 19, 2023 · 09:16 PM

    UKRAINE President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday (Jan 19) ahead of a key donor meeting heaped pressure on Western allies to provide Kyiv with more heavy weapons to fight Russia.

    A day after a helicopter crash outside Kyiv killed one of his key ministers, the Ukrainian leader called out Germany, which has been hesitant to supply Ukraine with its modern Leopard tanks, unless the US also gives tanks.

    “There are times when we shouldn’t hesitate and shouldn’t compare,” Zelensky told the annual World Economic Forum gathering in Davos via video-link.

    “When someone says ‘I will give tanks if someone else will also share tanks’... I don’t think this is the right strategy to go with.”

    Zelensky’s latest impassioned plea for weapons comes a day before the US, Kyiv’s main backer, convenes a meeting of around 50 countries – including all 30 members of the Nato alliance – at the US-run Ramstein military base in Germany to discuss military aid to Ukraine.

    “The main message there (in Ramstein) will be more support and more advanced support – heavier weapons, and more modern weapons – because this is a fight for our values,” Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg said in Davos on Wednesday.

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    Many of Ukraine’s allies have announced plans to step up their military support to Kyiv this month, despite the risk of antagonising Russia. This includes Britain, which over the weekend became the first Western nation to pledge heavy tanks.

    The US has promised to send its powerful Bradley armoured fighting vehicles, while France has offered its highly mobile AMX-10 RCs – offensive weapons long seen as off-limits by hesitant Western nations.

    Sweden announced on Thursday that it would supply its modern long-range Archer artillery units.

    In Ukraine, air raid sirens wailed early on Thursday in Kyiv and throughout the country, a day after a helicopter crash outside the capital killed the interior minister and 13 others near a kindergarten.

    Zelensky said that an investigation into the accident was ongoing, with several theories being examined.

    The crash killed Interior Minister Denys Monastyrsky, 42, one of Zelensky’s key aides who was involved in the exchange of prisoners of war, among other tasks.

    He was the highest-ranking Ukrainian official to die since Russia sent troops into Ukraine on Feb 24, 2022.

    EU chief Charles Michel announced on Thursday that he was travelling to Kyiv to reiterate Europe’s support.

    “I am on my way to Kyiv,” Michel said in a video posted on his Twitter account, adding that he would discuss with Zelensky and his team “the concrete measures we can develop in order to make sure they are stronger and more powerful”.

    Western allies have provided Ukraine with more and more sophisticated weaponry throughout the nearly year-old war, albeit often with fear of antagonising and getting into a full-blown war with nuclear-armed Russia.

    Germany has been very cautious in providing heavy weapons, with Chancellor Olaf Scholz under rising pressure from European allies to authorise the export of the Leopard tank ahead of Friday’s meeting.

    A senior US congressman, Gregory Meeks, the top-ranking Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said that the German leader wanted Washington and Berlin to work together.

    “It’s basically got to be the US and Germany. There’s no question about that,” Meeks said, adding that the talks were continuing.

    But in Washington, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl said on Wednesday that the US was not “there yet” when it came to providing advanced Abrams tanks to Ukraine, citing difficulties in maintenance and training. AFP

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