Politics

Pentagon sending Ukraine $6B in military aid  — the largest package ever — with critical missile defenses

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin announced Friday that the US is sending Ukraine its largest aid package to date — worth $6 billion — that will include munitions for Patriot missile defense systems that Kyiv has said could change the course of the war, but not the systems themselves.

The massive package comes just two days after a separate $1 billion tranche for Ukraine was announced upon President Biden signing a $95 billion foreign aid supplemental funding bill into law.

“The announcements this week underscore America’s enduring commitment to Ukraine’s defense,” Austin said after a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, held virtually from the Pentagon.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at a congressional hearing in Washington on April 17. Michael Brochstein/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

The package also includes counter-artillery radar, ammunition for high-mobility rocket launchers known as HIMARS, 155mm and 152mm artillery rounds, demolition munitions and both small arms and small arms ammunition.

Notably missing are the Patriots themselves, which Ukrainian troops say are essential to any counter-offensive to regain territory taken by the Kremlin.

During the meeting of 50 nations that support Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked the United States for the package, and pressed all member nations to consider sending Patriot batteries — which defense experts consider the most powerful air defense systems in existence.

Austin confirmed that the group “pushed especially hard today to rush in more air defense systems, and interceptors,” despite the omission of the Patriots.

Still, the additional munitions for the systems will boost Kyiv’s ability to defend against Russia’s regular rocket barrages that target Ukraine’s major cities.

Russian rockets are launched against Ukraine from Russia’s Belgorod region, seen from Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Thursday, April 18, 2024. AP

Zelensky has said just seven more Patriots would effectively defend his country’s airspace, though more would be welcome.

“We are telling this directly — to defend, we need seven more Patriots or similar air defense systems, and it’s a minimum number,” Zelensky told NATO members last week. “They can save many lives and really change the situation.”

“I think going forward, we’ll be able to hopefully work with a number of countries to put together additional Patriot capability,” Austin said Friday.

In this image released by the US Department of Defense, German soldiers assigned to Surface Air and Missile Defense Wing 1 fire the Patriot weapons system at the NATO Missile Firing Installation, in Chania, Greece, on Nov. 8, 2017. AP

While some projectiles — particularly Iranian-made Shahed drones — sometimes slip through, Patriot and other advanced air defense systems are credited with allowing everyday Ukrainians to remain in their country rather than flee and preventing Russians from taking out important government buildings in Kyiv.

They are also particularly important on the front lines, where Kyiv’s forces cannot advance without air cover.

The lack of such protection contributed to the fall of the eastern city of Avdiivka to Russian troops early this year.

“Air defense has two tasks: first is protection of critical objects in the country, and the second is providing cover for troops advancing on the enemy,” a Ukrainian Patriot battery commander told The Post on the battlefield last month. “It is important both around the cities and important government objects, and of course, at the front lines.”

A woman gestures before a damaged apartment hit by recent shelling, what local officials called a Ukrainian military strike, in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, on April 26, 2024, amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict. AFP via Getty Images

The US sent one Patriot battery to Ukraine in a previous package, but rank-and-file troops agreed with their president that more are needed to protect civilians and warfighters alike.

We have a critically limited quantity and we cannot use it at the same time inside the country and on the front line,” a Ukrainian Patriot operator told The Post on the front lines on March 6. “We need to have [a] few around the biggest towns and about five on the front lines.”

“When we have a system which controls the airspace for hundreds of kilometers,” another Ukrainian soldier said at the time, “no one will fly there.”

Germany said on April 13, 2024, it will send an additional Patriot air defense system to Ukraine to bolster its hard-pressed military and help it fend off increased Russian aerial attacks. AFP via Getty Images

The troops spoke to The Post anonymously due to the critical nature of their jobs and the threat of retaliation if captured by Russian forces.

It will still be months before Ukraine receives equipment from the latest package, which will be sent through the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative that provides funds to order new weapons systems not already in stock.

Weapons from the $1 billion package announced Wednesday are expected to be delivered to Ukraine as soon as Monday, as those items will be sent from the Pentagon’s stockpile.

Ukrainian soldiers with the 71st Jaeger Brigade fire an M101 howitzer at Russian positions on the front line, near the city of Avdiivka in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, on March 22, 2024. AP

The latest package represents the 57th tranche of military equipment the Pentagon has sent Ukraine since the fall of 2021, when Russian President Vladimir Putin began preparing for his invasion launched on Feb. 24, 2022.